Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A bachelors in psychology is essentially worthless. It’s a degree that requires grad school to turn into any sort of career in the field. I have BA in psych. I intended pursue a psyD, but life happened and I never went back. I have worked a variety of jobs from retail to preschool teacher to ABA therapist, but have never made over $40k.
Got a Psych degree and worked in Fintech right out of college. Psychology was useful especially when I become a manager.
You just proved the point that you can’t work in the psych field with only a bachelors.
There are psych BA jobs, but they don't typically pay well. We hire psych BAs to be behavior health techs at my hospital. They make about $20 an hour.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was a psych major and now work in market research for a Fortune 500 company. I am VERY glad I got my psych degree- having that background knowledge has helped me in so many ways with my job (designing, administering, and analyzing surveys/survey results, analyzing consumer behavior, considering demographics, etc.) I did end up getting my MBA, but that would have been necessary to move up in the field even if I would have majored in something more applied like marketing or business or statistics.
I agree that if you want to work in the psychology field specifically then a graduate degree is necessary (clinical psychologist, psych professor, school psychologist, therapist etc.) but I disagree completely that it is useless on its own. there are many many fields where having a grasp on human behavior and an understanding of research methods and statistics are enormously helpful.
There is a difference between something that is useful to you in doing your job vs. something that is desired or respected by employers looking to hire. A psych degree is useless in applying for jobs. That's what most of us mean by "useless."
Now, maybe you use your understanding of psychological concepts in manipulating consumers' behavior, in interacting with the public as a police officer or investigator, or in understanding your employees -- so an individual can find some applications for what they learned through their psych degree. But, in terms of getting a job, I feel very certain in saying that a psych degree has not been "useful" in getting an interview or being hired. Almost any other degree would be more "useful" in getting the attention of an employer than a psych degree.
Anonymous wrote:Understanding people. How their minds work. How they influence each other and what influences their behavior.
Those seem like pretty useful insight for organizations made up of people, don't you think?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was a psych major and now work in market research for a Fortune 500 company. I am VERY glad I got my psych degree- having that background knowledge has helped me in so many ways with my job (designing, administering, and analyzing surveys/survey results, analyzing consumer behavior, considering demographics, etc.) I did end up getting my MBA, but that would have been necessary to move up in the field even if I would have majored in something more applied like marketing or business or statistics.
I agree that if you want to work in the psychology field specifically then a graduate degree is necessary (clinical psychologist, psych professor, school psychologist, therapist etc.) but I disagree completely that it is useless on its own. there are many many fields where having a grasp on human behavior and an understanding of research methods and statistics are enormously helpful.
There is a difference between something that is useful to you in doing your job vs. something that is desired or respected by employers looking to hire. A psych degree is useless in applying for jobs. That's what most of us mean by "useless."
Now, maybe you use your understanding of psychological concepts in manipulating consumers' behavior, in interacting with the public as a police officer or investigator, or in understanding your employees -- so an individual can find some applications for what they learned through their psych degree. But, in terms of getting a job, I feel very certain in saying that a psych degree has not been "useful" in getting an interview or being hired. Almost any other degree would be more "useful" in getting the attention of an employer than a psych degree.
How so? When we hire entry level analysts, we definitely seek out psych majors. It depends on the school but usually the psych background is a fantastic fit for what the job entails.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was a psych major and now work in market research for a Fortune 500 company. I am VERY glad I got my psych degree- having that background knowledge has helped me in so many ways with my job (designing, administering, and analyzing surveys/survey results, analyzing consumer behavior, considering demographics, etc.) I did end up getting my MBA, but that would have been necessary to move up in the field even if I would have majored in something more applied like marketing or business or statistics.
I agree that if you want to work in the psychology field specifically then a graduate degree is necessary (clinical psychologist, psych professor, school psychologist, therapist etc.) but I disagree completely that it is useless on its own. there are many many fields where having a grasp on human behavior and an understanding of research methods and statistics are enormously helpful.
There is a difference between something that is useful to you in doing your job vs. something that is desired or respected by employers looking to hire. A psych degree is useless in applying for jobs. That's what most of us mean by "useless."
Now, maybe you use your understanding of psychological concepts in manipulating consumers' behavior, in interacting with the public as a police officer or investigator, or in understanding your employees -- so an individual can find some applications for what they learned through their psych degree. But, in terms of getting a job, I feel very certain in saying that a psych degree has not been "useful" in getting an interview or being hired. Almost any other degree would be more "useful" in getting the attention of an employer than a psych degree.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A bachelors in psychology is essentially worthless. It’s a degree that requires grad school to turn into any sort of career in the field. I have BA in psych. I intended pursue a psyD, but life happened and I never went back. I have worked a variety of jobs from retail to preschool teacher to ABA therapist, but have never made over $40k.
Got a Psych degree and worked in Fintech right out of college. Psychology was useful especially when I become a manager.
You just proved the point that you can’t work in the psych field with only a bachelors.
Anonymous wrote:I was a psych major and now work in market research for a Fortune 500 company. I am VERY glad I got my psych degree- having that background knowledge has helped me in so many ways with my job (designing, administering, and analyzing surveys/survey results, analyzing consumer behavior, considering demographics, etc.) I did end up getting my MBA, but that would have been necessary to move up in the field even if I would have majored in something more applied like marketing or business or statistics.
I agree that if you want to work in the psychology field specifically then a graduate degree is necessary (clinical psychologist, psych professor, school psychologist, therapist etc.) but I disagree completely that it is useless on its own. there are many many fields where having a grasp on human behavior and an understanding of research methods and statistics are enormously helpful.