Menu

What Is Psychology?

Psychology is the pursuit of a comprehensive, scientific understanding of human behavior and mental processes through theoretical knowledge and practical experiences. Innovations in the field bring us closer every day to a clearer picture inside the kaleidoscope of our minds and what we can do to optimize personal well-being. With new insights into human behavior, cognition, and emotion, practitioners are able to address increasingly common societal challenges such as mental health issues, spiritual crises, addiction, trauma, and social injustice.

The Differences Between Psychology and Clinical Psychology

Our Psychology programs prepare you for a career as a practicing psychologist or faculty member. Many of our graduates use their degrees to explore unique career paths based on their passions, beyond the traditional licensed psychologist or professor route. Using their specializations, they creatively apply their specific expertise to start their own practice or augment an existing career in settings such as research centers, wellness facilities, nonprofits, corporate settings, and more.  

What Can You Do With a Degree in Psychology?

Our psychology graduates have enjoyed success in a variety of notable career roles and organizations:

Career Settings

  • Health care
  • Education
  • Corporate environments
  • Community organizations
  • Private practice
  • Research organizations
  • Clinical organizations
  • Medical centers, hospitals, primary care
  • Integrative wellness centers

What Sets Saybrook’s Psychology and Clinical Psychology Programs Apart?

The uniqueness of Saybrook University’s psychology programs lies in our heritage of humanistic, existential, transpersonal, and phenomenological inquiry. Our founders understood human beings to be interconnected with the world around them, that their entire lived experience contributes to an individual’s overall well-being. This humanistic, interdisciplinary approach still guides our psychology programs today.

Expanding beyond traditional boundaries of the field, Saybrook’s psychology curriculums incorporate complementary fields of study that provide a more complete picture of someone’s life, including consciousness, spirituality, integrative health, creativity, innovation, leadership, and more. Through this line of study, faculty and students continue to push psychology forward by questioning, critiquing, and offering alternatives to many of the axioms of mainstream academic psychology.

With programs offered entirely online or through a hybrid-online format, graduate students have the freedom to study from anywhere in the world and the flexibility to earn a degree without sacrificing life’s other responsibilities.

Student on a video call on her computer

Our Shared Humanistic Legacy

At the Old Saybrook Conference in 1964, Gordon Allport, Rollo May, Carl Jung, and Abraham Maslow articulated the need for a whole-human approach to psychology. They, alongside other innovative thinkers like Charlotte Bühler, Clark Moustakas, James Bugental, and Carl Rogers, formed an approach to psychotherapy that examined a person’s entire experience rather than reducing their past into separate fragments.

Adhering to our founder’s original vision, the Department of Humanistic Psychology and the Department of Humanistic Clinical Psychology embody a truly expansive view of the prosocial human who seeks meaning and well-being in the context of social justice, sustainability, and deeper spiritual connection.

man in park meditating

UNBOUND: Psychology

Discover the unique ways psychology students, alumni, and faculty apply their education to cultivate support and strength so others may flourish in the latest from UNBOUND, our online magazine. 

Photo of a rainbow.

Saybrook Learning Model

Our psychology programs offer an enriching, asynchronous online experience with occasional synchronous elements that bring us together as a community for connection and collaboration. Although most of your time will be online, in-person attendance may be necessary at a University Learning Experience depending on your program’s requirements. Visit the Saybrook Learning Model page to learn more about University Learning Experiences.

Students in a conversation outside

Find Out More