Psychology degree steers different career paths
Bloomsburg
Posted
During Bloomsburg University鈥檚 4th annual College of Liberal Arts Symposium, a panel of psychology alumni returned to talk about how they took their degree in different directions.
鈥淚f I could give you any advice about pursuing a career path in psychology, it would be challenge,鈥 said Alphonso Nathan, vice president and lead home-based clinician at Brightside Counseling Services LLC, who talked about the importance of experimenting in different departments. 鈥淭ry different roles, because you don鈥檛 know what you鈥檒l fall in love with. You can do so much with this degree. Take it and make it yours!鈥
Janet Rarig, BU鈥檚 executive director of wellness, elaborated on the topic.
鈥淏e open to opportunities!,鈥 Rarig said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a process, and everything works out the way it should. Don鈥檛 be afraid of new doors opening.鈥
The conversation soon turned to a different question. Panelists were asked why earning a degree in psychology helped propel them forward in their current occupations.
鈥淓arning a degree in psychology helped me with my job,鈥 said Salvatore Nardini, prevention coordinator at the Center for Humanistic Change. 鈥淚t makes everything you learned in school so real in the field. Instead of just reading it in a textbook, you meet people and take everything you learned to help them,鈥
Andrew Corbin, a therapeutic recreation services supervisor at Danville State Hospital, added how psychology aided him in his current job.
鈥淓arning my degree helped me in my field as a supervisor in a hospital,鈥 Corbin said. 鈥淚t helped me to learn how to write a lot better, which helps me every single day! It allowed me to break down everything I鈥檝e learned and learn continuously and write it out factually.鈥
Although all the panelists currently work in different job fields, they collectively agreed that earning a psychology degree helped them to further their career and allowed them to choose the path they wanted to go down.