Postgraduate Courses in Psychology - 1776 Courses - Results 201-225
- Medical Science (MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit) Master of Philosophy - MPhil PhD with Integrated Study
- Biological Science (Psychology) by thesis Master of Philosophy - MPhil
- Coaching MSt
University of Cambridge
Psychiatry
- Foundations of Clinical Psychology Master of Philosophy - MPhil
- Clinical Neuropsychology Postgraduate Diploma - PgDip
- Clinical Neuropsychology Practice Postgraduate Certificate - PgCert
- Clinical Psychology DClinPsy
- Psychological Therapies: Cognitive Behaviour Therapy Postgraduate Diploma - PgDip
- Advanced Practice in Healthcare MSc
- Dietetics MSc Postgraduate Diploma - PgDip
- Forensic Psychology MSc
- Forensic Psychology (Practitioner Programme) Postgraduate Diploma - PgDip
- Health Psychology MSc
- Psychology of Applied Behaviour Change MSc
- Sport Coaching MSc
- Sport Psychology MSc
University of Chester
Psychology
- Applied Psychology MSc
- Family and Child Psychology MSc
- Psychology Master of Research - MRes
- Psychology Conversion MSc
- Clinical Counselling MA
- Clinical Counselling MA MA
- Psychological Trauma Postgraduate Certificate - PgCert
- Psychological Trauma Postgraduate Certificate Postgraduate Certificate - PgCert
University of Coimbra
Joint
- International Management Master of Science - MSci
- Master of Business Administration (London) MBA
- Master's of Business Administration (Lancaster) MBA
- Counselling and Psychotherapy MA Postgraduate Diploma - PgDip
- Psychology: Environment, Health and Wellbeing MSc
- Psychology: Legal and Criminological Master of Science - MSc (PG)
- Psychology: Research Methods and Statistics Master of Science - MSc (PG)
- Contemporary Psychosexual Therapy MSc
- Psychosexual Therapy (Doncaster) PgDip (Initial Qualification)
- Development Psychology part time MSc
- Developmental Psychology MSc MSc
- Psychological Research Methods MSc MSc
- Psychological Research Methods part time MSc
- Psychology (3 years) (part-time) Doctor of Philosophy - PhD
- Psychology (4 years) (part-time) Doctor of Philosophy - PhD
- Psychology (Conversion) MSc MSc
- Psychology (Conversion) [part-time] MSc MSc
- Psychology (non-graduating) (research) Postgraduate Credits
- Psychology PhD (3 years) Doctor of Philosophy - PhD
- Psychology PhD (4 years) Doctor of Philosophy - PhD
- Psychology of Language MSc MSc
- Psychology of Language part time MSc
- Psychology of Mental Health (MSc) MSc
- Psychology of Mental Health (part-time) (MSc) MSc
- Applied Positive Psychology & Coaching Psychology MSc
- Applied Positive Psychology & Coaching Psychology (via Distance Learning) MSc
- Applied Positive Psychology & Organisations & Leadership (via Distance Learning) MSc
- Applied Positive Psychology (via Distance Learning) MSc
- Counselling and Psychotherapy (Distance Learning) MA
- MSc Applied Positive Psychology & Organisations & Leadership MSc
- Occupational & Organisational Psychology MSc
- Educational and Child Psychology Professional Doctorate
- International Relations MSc
- Sport Psychology MSc
- Applied Positive Psychology (MAPP) MSc
- Autism Spectrum Conditions and Learning Postgraduate Certificate - PgCert
- Business Psychology MSc
- Clinical Psychology DClinPsych
- Counselling Psychology Professional Doctorate
- Counselling and Psychotherapy MA Postgraduate Diploma - PgDip
- Integrative Counselling and Coaching MSc Postgraduate Diploma - PgDip
- Occupational and Organisational Psychology MSc
- Psychology Doctor of Philosophy - PhD MSc
About postgraduate psychology
A postgraduate degree in psychology provides you with the specialist training and skills you need to pursue a career as a chartered psychologist.
Working in psychology is highly rewarding and involves diagnosing and treating psychological difficulties to improve the wellbeing and lives of others.
Postgraduate psychology involves the study of the mind and human behaviour. While some psychology courses are generalist programmes others cover a range of specialisms and allow you to focus on the area of psychology that interests you the most, whether that is counselling, clinical, forensic, child, or criminal psychology.
Many students pursue postgraduate psychology to build their experience and research skills with courses offering a pathway into professional training in other areas like social work, nursing, speech and language therapy or law.
The two main types of postgraduate psychology courses are the Masters of Arts (M.A.) and the Master of Science (M.S.). Some courses prepare you for professional practice, such as counselling or forensic psychology, while others prepare you for further study at the doctoral level. Entry usually requires a degree in psychology, however some institutions offer a conversion course which means you don’t need to have studied psychology to apply.
Why study postgraduate psychology?
With a postgraduate degree in psychology, you can pursue a career that improves the lives of other people in a range of different sectors. Postgraduates can become therapists, clinical psychologists, health psychologists, education psychologists or researchers. You may work in the NHS, the private sector, education, the criminal justice system or in social work.
If a career in psychology sounds rewarding to you, then explore our range of psychology masters here at Postgrad.
