Psychology PhDs have skills broadly relevant for teaching, industry, and government. They are integral to producing basic research and evidence-based solutions for policy and industry. Only about half of psychology PhDs are hired in academia, but psychology graduate training in the United States has largely retained the classic graduate training model of a direct path to an academic job. It's time to change that, says APS President Wendy Wood.
Shaping Kinder Kids Through Parental Example
Parental Engagement Enhances Children’s Therapy Experience and Outcomes
Twisted Tales: Unraveling the Surprising Benefits of Irony
What Comes Next? The Joy of Anticipating Melodies
Couples Who Laugh Together, Stay Together
Community Engagement in Psychological Research
Information Avoidance in the Modern Age
Linking Developmental Delays and Parenting Strategies With Inclusivity in Mind
Is Our Early Attachment Our Destiny? Finding the Link Between Attachment Patterns and Personality Disorders
Guilty as Charged: How We Contribute to Polarizing Content on Social Media
Getting Your Research Published: Insights on Academic Publishing with Simine Vazire
Do Risky Drinkers Think Differently? Insights From Cognitive Experiments
Do Lockdown Drills Create Anxiety? New Research Says No
Cautionary Notes: The Science of Trigger Warnings
Feeling Young at Heart Comes With Well-Being Benefits
The Tale of Two Cities: Water Access Influences Human Decision Making
Loneliness Across the Globe: A Life-Span Approach
Best Of: Revisiting Episodes on the Myers-Briggs Test, the Grieving Brain, and More
Understanding Childhood Adversity Across Time and Cultures
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