I was wondering if anybody knew of any accredited PsyD or PhD programs that (a) don't require GRE scores and (b) what the liabilities of such programs might be.
Thanks.
Thanks.
I was wondering if anybody knew of any accredited PsyD or PhD programs that (a) don't require GRE scores and (b) what the liabilities of such programs might be.
Thanks.
Hey. Is anyone aware of accredited PsyD or PhD programs that do not require the GRE?
I know Alliant (CSPP) and some of the related 150K type schools don't. Their poor reps have been well documented here though. I really would be careful about schools that dont. I might ask myself why 99% of programs use it and this program doesn't? I would worry about the quality of students they were getting as well. GRE is just part of the game. Its not fun, but we all had to do it.
And didn't you ask this question before and get several responses?
I was wondering if anybody knew of any accredited PsyD or PhD programs that (a) don't require GRE scores and (b) what the liabilities of such programs might be.
Thanks.
I agree that not requiring the GRE would through up red flags for me in terms of the program and the quality of students these schools are getting.
I would like to understand why people see it as a "red flag" when a school doesn't require a GRE score for admission. You do realize that GRE scores have NOTHING to do with the grad program quality, right?
I wrote a paper on the GRE my senior year as an undergrad. It is a very commonly misunderstood and misused test. It is ONLY designed to predict the likelihood of success during year 1 of grad school. It also demonstrates that you actually have verbal and quantitative skills. That's all it does. It is not an intelligence test or an assessment of the quality of your undergrad education.
Actually, research has shown that the single best predictor of grad school success is your undergrad GPA. (citations at home, BTW)
Yet, many school still mistakenly use the GRE as a measure of student quality.
That is not what it was designed for.
Oise's (ontario instute for studies in education) at u of toronto has a child clinical school psych program that is accredited by CPA and apa that doesn't use gre scores
Unfortunately, the APA has made their accred. pretty much meaningless by accrediting just about any school that will pay their dues....
I'm not sure if you meant to reply directly to the OISE comment with this-- I thought the school/clinical program was fairly high-quality? They seem to have quite selective admissions standards OTHER than the GRE, for instance, and seem to provide decent funding....
What about Fielding? Has anyone interviewed there? They require no GRE I believe.
New School for Social Research doesn't require the GRE, but you have to do your M.A. first and then must have a 3.5 GPA at the end of the M.A. to be eligible for consideration into the PhD program. APA accredited and only accept PhD students from M.A. pool of students.
It should be noted that New School doesn't fully fund you, either. They do give scholarships, though.
I was accepted there, but already had an MA in General Psych. They do have a program where they may recognize a MA from another program, but they don't evaluate that for a year. I was looking for a degree in General or Social, so I wasn't going for that.
I got into Rutgers' Social program, so it was moot anyway.
I must ask, what was your impression of NSSR? On paper they sound awesome.
I have a friend who earned her PhD in Clinical there, and she was quite happy. As someone who never had any intention of going into clinical, my perspective should be taken with a grain of salt.
Overall, I was put off by the attitude of much of the institution during the open house. There was a large information session which hosted people who were looking at NSSR for all types of degrees, not just Psychology. One of the things that one of the deans or directors said during the presentation to the group was essentially "Higher education costs a lot of money, don't complain about the cost." Granted, a good portion of the audience may have been seeking masters degrees, but that's still a hell of an attitude to take.
As for the Psychology department, there were a couple of faculty members I matched pretty well with, but the whole "you get accepted into the masters program, and if you're good enough you get accepted into the PhD" struck me as a bit of a scam, to be honest with you. I'm sure there's some logical reason for running it that way, but let's say for whatever reason it didn't work out with me. Now I have two MAs in Psych, and a good amount of debt. It's a big cost for an uncertain benefit.
The "advanced standing" option also bothered me, in that they would not evaluate MA credits/degrees for advanced standing until after you enrolled. Yes, the same is true for Rutgers, where I am now. The difference is if Rutgers doesn't accept my MA credits, I'm still funded. It's just more time to work on my research. At NSSR, it means thousands of dollars of additional debt.
NSSR tends to attract people from a more varied life and age background, which is good. I would not have been the only entering student over 30. And, y'know... being near Union Square is pretty cool (less so now that Zen Palate closed). But truthfully, my enrolling would have been dependent upon a) not getting into any of the other programs I applied to, b) some kind of overwhelming scholarship, c) pre-enrollment assurance that I'd be given advanced standing, and d) a virtual guarantee I'd be automatically accepted into the PhD program upon satisfactory completion of the prerequisite MA courses. The financial outlay would have just been too much otherwise, considering I'm not going for clinical.
I realize this may sound a bit arrogant, but I felt my scores and cv were solid enough to get me into a fully-funded program. If I didn't get in that round, I'd try again a year later with a modified strategy. If that failed, I'd take it as a sign and pick a new direction in life. I love psychology and I love psychological research, but I wasn't about to saddle myself with debts it would take me a couple of decades to pay back. Not starting at 31. I'm risk-adverse.
The NRRS has done just that to students before. One of my friends had a degree from NYU (an MA in psych) and they would not take her into the clinical psych program unless she did an MA their. So she agreed and paid the crazy amount of tuition, and then when she applied for the PhD program, they rejected her. She had a lot of clinical and research experience at the time as well. She asked them why and they said she was "rough around the edges and perhaps not suited for clinical work"....Who the heck are they to say that to a student?
I agree that the whole get an MA here before applying is a scam. Furthermore, they only give out one full scholarship a year, and most students have to take out at least a 18500 loan each year.
The NRRS thinks they are like Columbia or NYU, and they do not even have a library. I feel that many people go here if it is their only option, and if they "have to be" in NYC. Also, their PhD in clinical is more like a PsyD because their clinical students do not have a whole lot of publications, and most want to have only private practice.
I earned my MA in general psych at Hunter College (soooo much cheaper) and am now applying to doctoral programs.
So, everyone please be warned about NSSR!
I've spent my first and last semester , this past fall, at NSSR and decided to leave.
I wonder if there is some sort of financial dealing/benefit between ETS and schools that require the GRE...?
Anyway...Adler is the only one I knew of. Most Master's programs are no longer requiring it, I wonder if doctoral programs will soon follow. But I agree with T4C they need something else as a measuring stick...
Jon
Yeah, quality interviews would be a measure, such as in many other countries.😉
Is NSSR a competitive school? I'm interested in the General Psych Masters there. From the Graduate Schools in Psychology book, they listed minimum GRE 400 for V/Q and a 3.0 minimum? 😕
The publication/citation ranking system puts them somewhere in the mid 50s as far as PhD programs go. The reason the requirements are listed as so low is because they don't require the GRE's for admission into the Master's program. You must have at least a 3.5 GPA to transition from the M.A. to the PhD