Psychology Department
Graduate Programs
The Master's of Arts: Option in Psychological Science
This program prepares students for doctoral work in psychology
and/or for teaching at the community college level. Content course
work is broad and encompasses major areas of academic psychology.
Graduate content courses and seminars include human development,
human learning, advanced general psychology, and contemporary
issues. Methodology courses are required in psychometrics, research
methods, and advanced statistics. A broad psychology background
is the preparation most desired by doctoral programs. A broad
psychology background is also the best preparation for teaching
a variety of academic courses at the community college level.
Research experience is emphasized in the research assistantship
and in the required thesis. Students acquire research experience
with a selected faculty member, becoming part of their ongoing
research activities. Teaching experience, including supervised
teaching in the classroom, is invaluable for a teaching career,
and most doctoral programs expect students to serve as teaching
assistants. The research emphases and teaching interests of the
faculty are diverse, encompassing both experimental and nonexperimental
orientations, and representing areas such as biopsychology, cognition
and learning, developmental, cross-cultural, perception, and social
and personality psychology.
Please see the course catalog for admission requirements,
procedures, and faculty coordinators and advisors.
Graduate Application (PDF)
University Catalog
Class Schedule