I just wanted to chime in from my own perspective. I attended a university PsyD program and it was definitely a full-time gig. Each week I did about 20 hours of clinical work, 20 hours of academic work, 20 hours of dissertation work, and 20 hours of applying for internships. I also had to walk ten miles in the snow to get there. So maybe i am exaggerating a bit but not a lot really. The 20 hours of clinical was a given every week and during the summer, too. I got paid for a couple of the practicum placements and also worked a bit as a graduate assistant for a MA level cognitive assessment class. When I was applying for internships, the PhDs and PsyDs had very similar amount of clinical experience and some of the PsyDs went to questionable programs that did not require dissertations. They tended to not get internships. Also, most people that don't like research have never really done it. Most of what is called research in undergrad or high school is just regurgitating secondary sources. I hated it, too. When I started doing the real thing, I fell in love to the point where I started teaching an undergrad research methods course so that others could find out what it really is to be a scientist in psychology.