Actually, my daughter had been working in an infant psych lab since high  
school, continued through college and graduate school and did her dissertation  
research in the lab. My point was only to underscore that for grad school in  
clinical psych and in medicine, it is not necessary to major in psych or be  
premed. She was interested in psych since at least high school and was miffed  
when people told her she went into psych because of her mother being a  
psychologist.  Many of these schools value breadth of knowledge and  
experience, not 
necessarily a major.  Of course, both schools require  excellent scores on 
qualifying exams, which tends to seriously limit the  diversity of the student 
body.
 
 
In a message dated 10/3/2008 9:40:41 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

But do  you honestly believe that ANY APA approved university based clinical  
program these days takes students who don't have demonstration of research  
experience? None of our students over at least the last 10 years have  gotten 
in 
without that. In fact, I know of two students who were told to  do a master's 
program, write and publish their master's thesis, and  reapply. They were top 
candidates EXCEPT for missing demonstrated research  competency. Even in the 
non-clinical domain research experience seems to  be required these days.  I 
would never get into a program these days  with the background I had!

I know there are free-standing programs that  are not as rigid. I know that 
PsyD 
programs are not as rigid, but it is my  very clear impression that 
DEMONSTRATED research experience is required.  

Does anyone have evidence that it is otherwise? I can only go by my  own 
students' experiences.

Annette


Annette Kujawski  Taylor, Ph.D.
Professor of Psychology
University of San Diego
5998  Alcala Park
San Diego, CA  92110
619-260-4006
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

---- Original message  ----
>Date: Fri, 3 Oct 2008 08:31:04 EDT
>From:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]  
>Subject: Re: [tips] Is a BA  in  Psychology?  
>To: "Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)"  
<[email protected]>
>
>   Though it is  probably easier to get into grad school
>   with a psych  major, my eldest daughter went to a
>   school which, at the  time(nearly 20 years ago), did
>   not have a strong psych  major, so she double majored
>   in English and Jewish  studies.  She was accepted to
>   several APA-approved  clinical programs and is a
>   practicing licensed  psychologist.
>    
>   Riki  Koenigsberg
>   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>     
>   In a message dated 9/26/2008 11:51:26 A.M.  Eastern
>   Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED]  writes:
>
>     In my clinical grad school cohort  (many years ago
>     at Purdue University) there were 22  students, 3 of
>     whom were not psych majors.   One had been "pre
>     med" and one had been political  science.  The
>     third was an English major from  Harvard who had
>     taken two psych courses as an  undergrad - Intro
>     and Abnormal.  
>
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