Hello. I have looked at Walden, SNHU, and Capella. Are there any other recommendations for online master's degrees in psychology that are in the United States, low cost, competency-based education (CBE), and can be accelerated?
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Master's in Psychology - Low Cost & CBE Suggestions Needed
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05-23-2024, 06:43 PM
(This post was last modified: 05-23-2024, 07:03 PM by Jonathan Whatley.)
The University of Phoenix has a subscription-priced CBE (Direct Assessment) MS in Psychology. Direct assessment programs tend to be accelerable.
Kairos University has a CBE MA in Marriage and Family Therapy (COAMFTE accredited) and MA in Counseling (not CACREP accredited). As they’re licensure preparation programs with practica and around 60 semester hours, they’ll be less accelerable than a non-licensure master’s in psychology, other factors held constant. Kairos and a student would have to be comfortable with each other in the context of Kairos’s strong Christian bent. WGU, which is all CBE, has been hiring for a master’s in the psychology/counseling space that might launch soon. (05-23-2024, 06:21 PM)Wiser Indigenous Wrote: Hello. I have looked at Walden, SNHU, and Capella. Are there any other recommendations for online master's degrees in psychology that are in the United States, low cost, competency-based education (CBE), and can be accelerated? Kairos University gives me a good vibe. I forgot if they got psychology, but they got mental health counseling which is probably even more specific and career oriented. Most psychology programs that are cheap seem like bs to me that you could learn via free classes. But the curriculum of the Kairos program is amazing at that price point. It even goes into pharmacology, and In the end you end up potentially as a licensed counselor.
05-23-2024, 11:39 PM
@Wiser Indigenous, Have you completed your undergrad yet? I hope you're almost done if not complete already. I would focus on that first, if you have the energy or time to research options for Psych, you may want to take a look at similar roles and see if there are certification or licensing needs for those health related professions. I just skimmed through your previous thread from January here: https://www.degreeforum.net/mybb/Thread-...ime-caller
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05-24-2024, 04:31 AM
(This post was last modified: 05-24-2024, 04:35 AM by studyingfortests.)
A lot here will depend on what you intend to do with your psychology degree. If you want to be a therapist, competency-based education is, for the most part, going to be of the table due to licensure and programmatic accreditor requirements. If you do manage to find one, it will most likely not have programmatic accreditation from CACREP or COAMFTE, the accreditors for LPCs and LMFTs, respectively.
About half of current MFT/LPC (licensable psych degrees) are not accredited by one of the above accreditor. That might be OK if your state does not currently require graduation from an accredited program. But more and more states are requiring accreditation. Additionally, in general, non-accredited programs are substantially inferior, even if, as they often do, they make claims such as "Our program and curriculum is in compliance with accreditation requirements of CACREP or COAMFTE". Rarely are these claims actually true in pare because, if they were, the school would likely be accredited. Here's the thing: thing: If you are wanting to be a therapist, I'll give my standard pitch for the MSW degree over a licensable psychology degree. Reasons include:
All three are great professions, and I know highly capable and qualified therapists with all three licenses, and equally terrible therapists that among the |
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