krakatoa said:
is it hard to get a job as a psychologist?
so you have to be a master/doctor to get a job?
It's not hard to get a job as a psychologist, you just gotta know where to look, coz psych jobs are often not advertised in newspapers. I heard that if you narrow down to something really specific and you go call companies up and sell yourself to them, you can get a good job like that.
To register as a psychologist, you need 4 years (including honours) + masters or 2 years supervised experience. So altogether 6 years to register.
You don't necessarily have to have masters/PhD to get a job. Many people with just the undergrad psych degree can get good jobs in things like human resources or consulting.
However, having a masters degree puts you ahead because you get practical experience (job placements - I think it's 1000 hours) at several companies throughout the masters program.
The 3 main psych masters:
- Clinical is EXTREMELY competitive to get into - you need a first class honours (high distinction average) to get in. This category is mainly the one that people think of when you think of psychology.
- Organisational - where the big money is coz you can work for large corporations. Focuses on helping "normal" populations in the workplace. Coming out of org psych masters, it's very flexible and you won't be able to find many jobs that actually look for "psychologists" specifically. But you can look at what you want to do, and sell to companies what you can offer them based on your qualifications. (I know this because I took 3rd year Behaviour in Organisations - one of the 3rd year psychology electives at UNSW).
- Forensic - combining psych and law. "Profiling" is only a tiny proportion of what forensic psychologists can do, but it's grossly misrepresented and mistaken for the main field of work because of popular TV shows.
For Org and Forensic you need at least a 2nd class, 1st division honours to get in.
If you do a PhD, it will be focussed on one particular field of interest and therefore will be much more in depth and narrow, compared to masters. The traditional type of work from a PhD degree is working at university - lecturing, tutoring, researching...