• Want to help us with this year's BoS Trials?
    Let us know before 30 June. See this thread for details
  • Looking for HSC notes and resources?
    Check out our Notes & Resources page

Psychology (1 Viewer)

thejosiekiller

every me
Joined
Mar 20, 2004
Messages
2,324
Location
north shore./
Gender
Male
HSC
2004
hay im still lookin for the right course to study while at uni

i probably wont get the required uai- so ill have to transfer, but b4 i do this is it worth doing? cause i was initially thinking of med sci/bus at uts

i went to the unsw open day i saw the psychology lecture- the lecturer was a funny guy- yet im still not sure if its the right course for me

some ppl say just do the 4yr course and others say do the long haul 8 yrs. what to do?

what type of ppl excel in psychology? cause i find it interesting, but i dont want to be over my head in work

basically fill me out on your experiences for psychology and where you are and so forth.....


thanks
 

hipsta_jess

Up the mighty red V
Joined
May 30, 2003
Messages
5,981
Gender
Female
HSC
N/A
my bio demonstrator was telling me the other day that when people apply for med, they undergo psychometric tests, and those that fail coz their too evil for med, the great majority of them go to psych.
just a bit of trivia :p
 

Mambomeg

yay! custom!!!
Joined
Dec 29, 2002
Messages
852
Location
studying....always studying
Gender
Female
HSC
2002
i spent all day learning about courses and now i need to spit out all the info before i forget it all,
Psych is pretty much the scientific study of behaviour, looking at the way we think and act in groups and by ourselves. It is more sciency than arts but its not very sciency (i know that a bit confusing) You learn analysis skills, and u can work as a psychologist after further training, or as a med researcher, human resources, teaching, recruitment, government and public services.

At Usyd u can either do a B of Psych (4 yrs, UAI 96.1) or study it as a major in Liberal studies (91.4), Science (85.00), arts or economics social sciences degrees. So you can do it as well as other stuff if you arent sure whether or not you'll like it.

So if you dont want to do full on psych coz u are unsure, you can try it out in another course first to see if you like it or not.

heres the website for more info on psych at usyd
www.psych.usyd.edu.au
 

Survivor39

Premium Member
Joined
May 23, 2003
Messages
4,467
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
2003
Psyc is very boring. If you are interested in science, do something exciting. Psyc is just like Social science..... I did a psyc subject in the first session and hated it. :p
Lectures are interesting sometimes and most of the time it is as boring as hell...
And do you want to do 130 multiple choice question exam?? lol

if you are not sure, do B Science and try it out first. if you are not sure about science at all, do Arts/science.
 

Amryllis

Member
Joined
Jul 24, 2004
Messages
325
Gender
Female
HSC
2002
Actually, psych is a science, so you can't say that it's "not very sciency". If you get into BPsych or decide to major in psych, you're required to do statistics. If you're relatively good at maths, the stats won't be too much trouble.

Psych isn't boring. Although I must admit that some of it does bore the hell outta me and I have fallen asleep in a couple of psych lectures, but don't let a couple of dull topics discourage you. Psych is very broad - in first year, you learn a bit about everything and then in the following years, you get more specialised. MC final exams are awesome! Especially if you're not into writing short answers.

To register as a psychologist, you need to do the 4-year BPsych degree and then either:

- 2 years psych masters: clinical (the most competitive - they only accept about 15 of the top people at UNSW), organisational (where the big money is), or forensic (working with the law)

OR

- 2 years supervised training - you get to be more specialised but you don't get the breadth and experience like in masters

So that's 6 years altogether to become a psychologist..

If not... There's always PhD and become a "doctor", which is 3 years - it's research and this is mainly for people who want to be academics i.e. work at uni. You can either do this after the bachelor degree or after masters.

I think if you truly love what you do, you're more likely to excel. Psych is a relatively more relaxing course compared to computing at least. At least that's what I think. The workload is reasonable. And depending what other subjects you choose, the number of hours per week (if you're in BPsych or majoring in psych) is comparable to a commerce/economics degree (around 15 hours).

EDIT

About the MC final exams - the 130 questions if only for first year psych. In 2nd year, it's much less than that plus you have a few short answer questions as well. At least that's how it works at UNSW.

Funny guy lecturer? If he was American, he could have either been Bill von Hippel or Bart Anderson. But then again, there are several funny guy psych lecturers at UNSW. It helps to have a good lecturer (so you don't fall asleep).

There are lots of different areas in psych. 2nd year courses are basically and extension of first year intro stuff.

- Social psych: very applicable to everyday life e.g. attraction and affiliation, advertising strategies (!!!! Once you're aware of these, you'll be less likely to be sucked in!)

- Developmental psych: adult and child dev

- Learning: different models to explain learning e.g. classical conditioning

- Physiological psych: brain and chemicals + some on abnormal psych e.g. schizophrenia and other mental illnesses - definitely not my favourite

- Perception: lots about cool illusions e.g. colour afterimages and why/how that happens because of our visual system

- Cognition: how people think e.g. semantic networks for remebering things

- Assessment: basically the stats involved in psychological testing (warning!!! VERY BORING!!!)

- Personality: sounds like fun? It involves stats... But it can be interesting e.g. the Big Five framework which says that all personality traits can be categorised into 5 broad categories: extraversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness, emotional stability and openness to experience
 
Last edited:

sunny

meh.
Joined
Jul 7, 2002
Messages
5,350
Gender
Male
HSC
2002
I agree - its hard say whether a entire field of study can be boring based on several first year subjects, which mostly tend to be boring anyway.
 

Survivor39

Premium Member
Joined
May 23, 2003
Messages
4,467
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
2003
sunny said:
I agree - its hard say whether a entire field of study can be boring based on several first year subjects, which mostly tend to be boring anyway.
But they should at least aim to engage the students with first year subjects, so that they actually follow on with the psyc pathway.

it's like this, if you did maths in year 9 and 10 and you hated it because of the teacher or their teaching style and it is very boring to you, would you still keep on doing maths in year 11 extension 1, 2 in year 12??
 

sunny

meh.
Joined
Jul 7, 2002
Messages
5,350
Gender
Male
HSC
2002
Survivor39 said:
But they should at least aim to engage the students with first year subjects, so that they actually follow on with the psyc pathway.

it's like this, if you did maths in year 9 and 10 and you hated it because of the teacher or their teaching style and it is very boring to you, would you still keep on doing maths in year 11 extension 1, 2 in year 12??
Keep in mind that first year is there to lay foundations rather than to have fun - and as with most foundations, its boring :p

Remember that the university is a business - most lecturers there don't actually want to lecture and rather get on with their research, leaves the students with the short end of the stick.
 

Amryllis

Member
Joined
Jul 24, 2004
Messages
325
Gender
Female
HSC
2002
sunny said:
Remember that the university is a business - most lecturers there don't actually want to lecture and rather get on with their research, leaves the students with the short end of the stick.
Although a LOT of UNSW psych lecturers are totally awesome! I can guarantee that. In first year, you get a different lecturer every 2 weeks or so for a new topic, so you're never stuck with a boring lecturer for long.
 

thejosiekiller

every me
Joined
Mar 20, 2004
Messages
2,324
Location
north shore./
Gender
Male
HSC
2004
thanks for that- cause in the end i wana do a couple of things based on my marks of course and interest level.

science
med sciences
business
psychology

uve all helped out, but i guess i have to choose

either way im gonna do science first year and then transfer into psychology or med sci

or

get into med sci/ bus at uts

ill have to think about it- although psychology sounds really interesting
 

frazzle

Member
Joined
Mar 2, 2004
Messages
311
Location
Sydney
Gender
Female
HSC
2004
Survivor39 said:
Psyc is very boring. If you are interested in science, do something exciting. Psyc is just like Social science..... I did a psyc subject in the first session and hated it. :p
Lectures are interesting sometimes and most of the time it is as boring as hell...
And do you want to do 130 multiple choice question exam?? lol

if you are not sure, do B Science and try it out first. if you are not sure about science at all, do Arts/science.
that's good to hear for me, since i enjoy social sceinces more than science... how much would you say it's similar to society and culture in high school?

i want to do psych, but not as a single degree. but they don't have psychology combined courses =( so i'm thinking of doing it in an arts or science degree, more tempted to do the arts. what's the difference? and also, which uni? [i'm looking at mainly sydney and unsw]

cheers!
 

thejosiekiller

every me
Joined
Mar 20, 2004
Messages
2,324
Location
north shore./
Gender
Male
HSC
2004
when i was at the unsw lecture for psych the lecturer adviced ppl wishing to do Bpsy who didnt have the right uai to do science or adv science and major in psy rather than do arts and major in psy there------> psy has a lot to do with science and statistics as far as i know
 

frazzle

Member
Joined
Mar 2, 2004
Messages
311
Location
Sydney
Gender
Female
HSC
2004
thanks thejosiekiller, that's just as i feared. now i'm back to looking for a course *sigh* but hey, science can be combined with heaps of other courses right?

i can't find any combined courses with psych, otherwise i'd do that.
 

frazzle

Member
Joined
Mar 2, 2004
Messages
311
Location
Sydney
Gender
Female
HSC
2004
ahaha, and major in psych in both! i don't know, i want to do too many things, and they don't have combined courses for a lot of them, and i don't want to travel out of sydney *difficult*
 

thejosiekiller

every me
Joined
Mar 20, 2004
Messages
2,324
Location
north shore./
Gender
Male
HSC
2004
i dont think u can major in both

if u want major psy in science and do whatever u want in arts

they r offered at most unis
 

frazzle

Member
Joined
Mar 2, 2004
Messages
311
Location
Sydney
Gender
Female
HSC
2004
i still want to do architecture/arts at unsw, but that one focuses alot more on the architecture side, so if i decide to pursue the psych aspect i'd have to do post grad. you need to do 2 extra years for psych anyway with the straight?

have you decided what to do yet?
 

clairegirl

the name's Anne!
Joined
Mar 3, 2003
Messages
2,204
Location
Sydney
Gender
Female
HSC
2003
NSW is probably the best for psychology... so i heard n e way... but Macquarie comes into a clear second ...

i goto macquarie so i can tell you about the psychology course there....

you can combine... Arts-Psychology/Law
Arts-Psychology/Business
Science-Psychology/Law

Urrm... thats all i can remember lol so you can mix arts-psychology with lots of degrees...
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top