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No I didn't. I'mlooking at Medicine moving into psychiatry, though if I end up hating med I may just end up in that new course...Originally posted by Patricio
lexicographer, you said something about doing psych in another thread, were you talking about psychiatry or psychology?
Hopeless? Not at all! Just bloody difficult to get in to.Originally posted by FLR-IT
dam, so just a degree is physchology is hopeless?
This course has really caught my interest - could you please post more information? I can't seem to find any reference to it on their website.Originally posted by Patricio
Now USyd offers medical psychology, and within years clinical psychologists will be prescribing drugs (psychology students will do the final year/2 years in the med faculty)...
yeh sure, well in America, the American Psychological Association lobbied to get prescription rights for Clinical Psychologists/Doctorate level Psychologists. The American Medical Association has completely backed and supported this (which I found surprising cos they already back psychiatrists who prescribe psychotropic drugs). Military Psychologists in the US already prescribe meds. Its being trialled in New Mexico at the moment (clinical psychologists have med training at the end of their degree, and are now combining therapy with prescriptions etc there), and this will then be in place across the US (if all goes according to plan).Originally posted by Lexicographer
This course has really caught my interest - could you please post more information? I can't seem to find any reference to it on their website.
ok so what do these jobs involve?Originally posted by Patricio
what kinda jobs? Well I've never heard of a psychologist who is a 'counsellor' -thats for ppl who study counselling at tafe or whatever, counselling is more about 'listening' to ppl's probs (not so much treating those probs).
For jobs, you can become a clinical, forensic, organisational psychologist (main 3), sports psychologist, criminal psychologist. Consulting is also good if you want the big $$.
try this:Originally posted by iambored
ok so what do these jobs involve?
its not thaaat hard, its just a UAI not like a UMAT test, thank godOriginally posted by Lexicographer
Hopeless? Not at all! Just bloody difficult to get in to.
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.krakatoa said:is it hard to get a job as a psychologist?
so you have to be a master/doctor to get a job?
his last post is on 7th july 2004 and his join date is 8th july 2004 :/redslert said:how is this possible?!
Patricio join date is July 2004 but he posted messages on sept 2003?!
I wouldn't say 3rd yr stats in psych is easy. Perhaps at USyd it is but at UNSW, from what i've heard there's a big difference between 2nd and 3rd year statistics. I know people who are doing 3rd yr stats in psych and they struggled through it.1Time4thePpl said:at usyd it seems that you don't need too much maths knowledge. you don't really have to do 'maths' courses for psych, although stats is taught withing psych. Pretty simple stats as well.