Bachelor of Science (Psychology)/Bachelor of Science
Despite popular belief most psychology graduates work with people who are mentally healthy. Psychological graduates tend to find employment in three areas: as psychologists, in general graduate positions, and as psychological scientists (often in applied research settings). The three year degree is the launch pad for all of these career paths. The psychologist career path involves at least six years of training.
The main areas in which psychologists are employed include clinical, organisational, health, community, counselling and educational/developmental psychology. The general graduate career path involves at least three years of training.
Psychology is an excellent preparation for broader graduate employment. Psychology graduates gain analytical, quantitative, report writing and communication skills that are focused on the issues and problems confronting human beings. The psychological science career path involves four or more years of training.
Psychological science is an exciting career option with employment opportunities in the private and public sector as well as in universities and can involve designing interventions to solve human problems and researching how people function in different environments.
The information published on the Study at ANU 2009 website applies to the 2009 academic year only. All information provided on this website replaces the information contained in the Study at ANU 2008 website.




