How to become a Residential Psych Counselor?

BA in Psych, BA in Economics and MA Org psych Degree?

  • I have only 1 semester to complete my psych degree (with soc minor and counseling minor). I made this choice at the end of my 2nd year, because I just wanted to pick something that I felt was easy and also I wanted to pursue something counseling/therapist related with intentions of going to graduate school. I decided I don't want to be a therapist or a counselor. Ever since my recent internships (one with org development and the second within HR, both pretty good companies), I've realized I have a strong interest in business. Benefits, recruiting, compensation, employee relations all completely turn me off. I feel a growing interest in the more "hard" business aspects, such as business development. I also care about money, so I don't feel comfortable knowing how low I'll be making with my psych degree before I get my masters degree. Before my internships, I wanted to get a org psych degree from Columbia and become a consultant. This still interests me, and I intend on getting this degree after having a year experience in a relevant job and then go to school part time while adding up 2-3 more years of work experience under my belt. I still want to do this, but now I am thinking about getting a 2nd BA in economics and then pursuing my MA. I am also thinking of pursuing an MBA a few years after the completion of my MA, when I'm more ground in my career. Should I get this 2nd degree? I'm afraid I won't find a decent business related job with my psych degree but I'm also wondering if I'll just be wasting time getting a 2nd degree when perhaps I can still get a business related job once I start my MA degree? What are the pros AND cons? What are prospective career options with these degree?

  • Answer:

    Yes you should get the BA in Economics, and then you put that on your resume and never tell anyone you've got a useless BA in psychology. A major in psychology is a like a flashing signal indicating that you are 1) dumb, 2) lazy, and 3) most likely mentally disturbed. It's interesting that you actually ADMIT that you chose psychology because you're lazy (you felt it was "easy". I'm sure it was. EVERYONE knows it was.) You know what's the major with the lowest average salary after graduation? Psychology. The good thing is that there is no law that says you have to list all of your educational credentials on a resume. Leave the psych off, get something else to put on your resume instead, and you just MIGHT be employable.

J. S. at Yahoo! Answers Visit the source

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I think you will be able to find jobs with decent income after your graduation. As you are so smart in learning, you should get a job in teaching at post secondary levels. Your diligent motivation to improve your educational qualification is plausible. However, you are still hesitating what you should do in your future career is dumb. I am just a retired toll truck driver and can't give you the detailed advice about your career perspectives. Go for tecahing as a professor should be your ultimate goal.

Guo Lo C

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