Current location - Education and Training Encyclopedia - Educational institution - What career can I pursue after studying psychology?
What career can I pursue after studying psychology?
The occupations that psychology majors can engage in are: being a teacher, a psychological counselor, a civil servant, an enterprise, a hospital and a clinic.

First, be a teacher. Now in ordinary colleges and universities, there are teachers who teach psychology as a public course.

Second, psychological counselors. There is also psychological education in primary and secondary schools, mainly providing psychological counseling to some problem students.

Third, civil servants. Generally, the public security system and education administrative departments recruit psychology graduate students as civil servants: public security bureau, reeducation-through-labor center, prison, border inspection station, etc. Are all possible places.

Fourth, enterprises. The enterprises that psychology graduate students go to are mainly headhunting talent evaluation institutions, enterprise consulting and human resource management, and planning and design companies.

5. Hospitals and clinics. Students majoring in clinical psychology and medical psychology can go to hospitals or psychological clinics to engage in psychological counseling and treatment.

Psychology includes basic psychology and applied psychology, and its research involves many fields such as perception, cognition, emotion, thinking, personality, behavior habit, interpersonal relationship, social relationship, artificial intelligence, personality and so on, as well as many fields of daily life-family, education, health, society and so on.

On the one hand, psychology tries to explain the basic behavior and psychological function of individuals with brain operation, and at the same time, psychology also tries to explain the role of individual psychological function in social behavior and social motivation; In addition, it is also related to neuroscience, medicine, philosophy, biology, religion and other disciplines, because the physiological or psychological effects discussed by these disciplines will affect the individual's mind.