Life at RDC

Humanities and Social Sciences - Psychology Careers

Psychology Careers

What Skills Does a Psychology Degree Provide?

Many employers are interested in the skills that psychology majors bring to collecting, analyzing, and interpreting data, and their experience with statistics and experimental design. Psychology graduates possess research and writing skills, and are good problem-solvers. Critical thinking skills are an essential tool for employability.

Where Can a Psychology Grad Work?

Psychology has a bright future. Opportunities for work in psychology are expanding in number and scope. The move toward preventing illness, as well as diagnosing and treating it, requires people to learn how to make healthy behaviour a routine part of living. Many social problems today are problems about behaviour: for example, drug addiction, poor personal relationships, and violence. Psychologists contribute solutions to problems through careful collection and analysis of data, and the development of intervention strategies.

Many psychology graduates find jobs in administrative support, advertising, public relations, social services, government and civil service, business, sales, health, law enforcement and corrections, management, real estate and computer programming.

The study of psychology is also good preparation for many other professions. With further graduate work, studies in psychology lead some students to careers as chartered psychologists: professionals who work in clinical settings with clients who have emotional problems or mental illness. Other students choose careers such as research psychologists in child development, social psychology, cognitive psychology, neuropsychology, forensic (criminal) psychology, industrial organizational psychology, personality, perception, and many others. A degree in psychology is also a good pre-law degree and a solid base for many other areas.