Dec 30, 2024  
2022-2023 Graduate Catalog 
    
2022-2023 Graduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Psychology, M.S.


Return to {$returnto_text} Return to: Degrees Offered by Colleges and Departments

For the graduate programs in Clinical Psychology, Family Therapy, Health Service Psychology, School Psychology and Industrial/Organizational Psychology, please see their respective sections.

The graduate program in psychology leads to the Master of Science degree. The program is a vehicle for the advanced study of human behavior and provides students with a variety of theoretical perspectives from across psychology such as social, cognitive, developmental and neuroscience. The program is designed for students planning to work in social service or research centers, teach at the community college level or pursue doctoral programs. This program does not prepare students for licensure to provide therapy services.

The Master of Science in Psychology requires 36 hours with a thesis or project as the master’s option or 39 hours with the internship or comprehensive exam as the second master’s option. Any undergraduate prerequisite hours not completed before enrollment will become additional requirements. Concentrations are available in the following areas: Human Factors Psychology and Neuroscience and Behavior. Students accepted into concentration areas may be required to take additional hours. For more information about concentration opportunities, refer to individual concentration sections in this catalog.

GRE completion is not required for applicants to this program. Applicants with a last 60-hour GPA of 3.5 or higher or those who have completed advanced degrees will be automatically admitted. Those with a last 60-hour GPA below 3.5 will be individually reviewed by program faculty who will make an admission decision based on the application file.

Prerequisites

The following prerequisites are required for this degree.

  1. PSYC 2301  or equivalent (3hours).
  2. Course in statistics. Students whose undergraduate work does not include hours in statistics must take PSYC 4370 or PSYC 4371.
  3. Students are expected to demonstrate graduate-level writing ability. Those students whose writing is deemed unacceptable will be advised to take remedial courses.

Grades

Only grades of B- or better will count toward the Master of Science in Psychology. Grades of C+ or below are not acceptable.

Degree Requirements


Research and Statistics (6 hours)


Choose TWO of the following courses.

Electives (12 hours)


Twelve additional hours are selected from Psychology and/or other relevant disciplines. Up to nine hours may be come from a combination of ANTH, CRCL, or SOCI. Courses from other disciplines may be approved by the faculty adviser.

Psychological Diversity


Students completing the Graduate Internship or Comprehensive Exams Master’s Option will choose one of the following options. Another comparable class may be approved by the faculty adviser.

Master’s Option


Choose ONE of the following options. For thesis and project, complete 6 hours. For internship, complete 6 hours plus a psychological diversity course. For the comprehensive exam, complete one additional psychology core course, one additional PSYC elective and a psychological diversity course.

Additional Information


A psychology faculty member must agree to supervise a thesis or project and may choose to cease supervision if a student does not make satisfactory progress. Master’s projects, theses, and internships require continuous registration during each fall and spring semester until completion for a minimum of six hours. If students do not maintain continuous registration in the master’s project, thesis, or internship, previously accumulated master’s option credits will not count toward the Master’s Degree.

Coursework with a comprehensive exam option is available to students. In addition to the Research and Statistics courses, students should complete 15 hours of Psychology core, 15 hours of Electives, 3 hours of Psychological Diversity, and PSYC 6909  in the last semester of the degree. The comprehensive exam will consist of questions from the five core courses in psychology and research/statistics; therefore, it is suggested that no course substitution be made.

Return to {$returnto_text} Return to: Degrees Offered by Colleges and Departments