Skip to Main Content

BS-PSYC - Psychology Major (B.S.)

Download as PDF

UndergraduateBS - Bachelor of Science

Program Requirements

These guidelines apply to students in the class of 2028 and thereafter. For students in the class of 2027 and earlier, please see the 2024 Bulletin for major requirements.

For the B.S. degree, students are required to take 12 courses in psychology and earn a grade of C- or better in each. In addition, students must take two laboratory experiences attached to core courses, Brain and Behavior, or in special cases, an advanced course. Any student who must repeat a required course to attain the required grade of at least C- will be allowed only one opportunity to do so. Students should consult with their adviser to choose a set of courses that is consistent with the students’ goals and that offers broad exposure to the discipline of psychology, as well as depth in one or more of the diverse sub-areas. Psychology majors are strongly encouraged to take cognate courses in the humanities, arts, and natural and social sciences that enhance topics and issues in psychology that interest them. Students are expected to arrange their course work according to the following system:

Foundation courses: PSYC 101. Introduction to Psychological Science, PSYC 220. Research Methods and Statistics for Psychological Science I, PSYC 222. Research Methods and Statistics for Psychological Science II, PSYC 261. Brain and Behavior, are required foundation courses. Students are advised to complete these courses by the end of their sophomore year, but must have taken PSYC 220, 222, and 261 by the end of their junior year.

Core courses: Students must complete three core courses, two of which must include a laboratory. The lab of PSYC 261 may be counted toward the lab requirement. The core course requirement is designed to provide students with a multifaceted perspective on human behavior. Thus, students are encouraged to sample courses from different sub-areas of psychology. Students may not count both PSYC 270 and PSYC 273 as core courses. The following core courses count for this requirement:

  • PSYC 226. Social Psychology*

  • PSYC 255. Cognitive Psychology*

  • PSYC 270. Clinical Psychology or PSYC 273. Psychopathology (formerly Abnormal Psychology)

  • PSYC 293. Perception*

  • PSYC 295. Child Development*

* These courses are ordinarily offered with laboratories.

Advanced courses: Students must complete three advanced courses that have as prerequisites core courses from the section immediately above. Students are required to select these courses from three different categories listed below (listed A through G). A course may appear in more than one category. The psychology prerequisites that apply to an advanced course within a specific category are in parentheses. The Writing Intensive Part II requirement is fulfilled by one of the following advanced courses in categories A through G below. The following advanced courses apply:

A. Neuroscience

  • PSYC 302. Behavioral Neuroscience (261)

  • PSYC/NESC 320. Neuroscience Across Lifespan (261 or NESC 201)

  • PSYC 339. Developmental Psychopathology (261)

  • PSYC 345. Mind, Brain, & Society (261)

  • PSYC 360. Neuro Frontiers of Neuro Disorders (261)

  • PSYC/NESC 364. Neuropsychopharmacology (261 or NESC 201)

  • PSYC 365. Cognitive and Social Neuroscience (261)

  • PSYC 392. Human Neuropsychology (261)

B. Social/personality

  • PSYC 315. Development and Culture (226)

  • PSYC 331. Social Relationships (226)

  • PSYC 346. Intergroup Relations (226)

  • PSYC 384. Cultural Psychology (226)

C. Cognition

  • PSYC 334. Boundaries of the Mind (255 or 293)

  • PSYC 350. Executive Functioning (255)

  • PSYC 365. Cognitive and Social Neuroscience (255)

  • PSYC 391. Psychology of Language (255)

  • PSYC 392. Human Neuropsychology (255)

D. Development

  • PSYC 315. Development and Culture (295

  • PSYC 339. Developmental Psychopathology (295)

E. Clinical

  • PSYC 339. Developmental Psychopathology (270 or 273)

  • PSYC 343. Multicultural Clinical Psychology (270 or 273)

  • PSYC 344. Evaluation and Treatment of Addictive Behavior (270 or 273)

  • PSYC 370. Psychotherapy (270 or 273)

  • PSYC 375. Development, Progression and Treatment of Psychosis (270 or 273)

F. Assessment

  • PSYC 332. Psychological Assessment (221L or the 220/222 sequence and four other courses in psychology)

G. Perception

  • PSYC 334. Boundaries of the Mind (255 or 293)

  • PSYC 348. Focusing the Mind: Psychology of Attention (293)

  • PSYC 349. Focusing the Mind: Psychology of Attention w/Lab (293)

  • PSYC 382. Perception for a Beautiful World (293)

Specialized/electives: Students must complete one specialized course from the following options.

  • PSYC 205. Neuroscience, Learning, & Memory

  • PSYC 206. Environmental Psychology and Sustainability

  • PSYC 207. Developmental Disabilities and Mental Health

  • PSYC 208. Black Women's Mental Health

  • PSYC 212. Landscape Planning and Environmental Education for the Brain

  • PSYC 219. Science and Practice of Well-Being

  • PSYC 225. Memory in Everyday Life

  • PSYC 236. Adolescent Psychology

  • PSYC 237. Health Psychology

  • PSYC 240. Parenting, Interpersonal Relations & Mental Health

  • PSYC 241. Interpersonal Relationships

  • PSYC 243. Emerging Science of Consciousness

  • PSYC 244. Human Sexuality

  • PSYC 246. Community Psychology

  • PSYC 248. Nature and Brain Health

  • PSYC 265. Drugs and Behavior

  • PSYC 294. Forensic Psychology

  • PSYC 297. Child Development and Public Policy

  • PSCY 310. Psychology of Gender Differences

  • PSYC 345. Mind, Brain, & Society

  • PSYC 390. Research Internship

  • PSYC 397. Psychology of Art

  • PSYC 399. Independent Study

  • PSYC 490. Research Assistantship

  • CPSC 352. Artificial Intelligence

  • ECON 344. Behavioral Economics

  • EDUC 218. Special Education

  • ENGR 311. Electrophysiology of the Central Nervous System

  • HFPR 201. Health Fellows Program: Topics in Health Care

  • MUSC 248. Psychology of Music

  • MUSC 249. Music Therapy Principles & Practices

  • NESC 101. The Brain

  • NESC 103. Adolescence and Drug Use

  • NESC 107. The Divided Brain

  • NESC 109. Your Brain on Nature

  • NESC 205. Neurons, Learning & Memory

  • NESC 305. Neurolaw

  • NESC 306. Social Neuroscience

  • NESC 313. Emotion and Motivation

  • NESC 325. Hormones and Social Behavior

  • RELG 260. Meditation, Medicine, and Mind

From time to time new courses will be added or substituted for those in the above listings. Students should consult with the chair concerning courses taken at other institutions or other matters pertinent to requirements for the major.

Capstone/senior project: To fulfill the senior exercise requirement, students must complete one senior seminar (PSYC 401 in the fall or 402 in the spring) or a year-long senior thesis. In exceptional cases the chair may allow students to substitute for these options an internship in which they engage in research. Students who choose the internship option must secure written approval from the chair and the faculty internship supervisor before commencing this activity.

  • Senior seminar: Each senior seminar, a one-semester course, will adopt an integrative perspective to examine major issues in several different subdivisions of psychology. The purpose of the seminar is to give students the opportunity to discern common themes that give coherence to psychology. To be properly prepared, students should have completed the three core courses and most of the other requirements of the major.

  • Senior thesis: The senior thesis is a two-semester research project sponsored by a member of the psychology department. The senior thesis also entails enrollment in the two semester Senior Thesis Colloquium with a prospectus presentation during the fall and a final presentation to the psychology department in the spring, along with a poster presentation at the all-college research symposium in early May.

ADDITIONAL OPPORTUNITIES

Internships: The College’s beautiful campus in a metropolitan setting offers the opportunity for testing cutting-edge theories and practices learned in the classroom. Trinity is only blocks from Connecticut’s state court system, as well as city offices and health-care providers—such as Hartford Hospital and Connecticut Children’s Center and the Institute of Living—ensuring rich ground for internships and independent study and research in walking distance of the College. For example, internships at the Institute of Living have involved the teaching and counseling of adolescents, involvement in a variety of research studies on different aspects of mental health and the testing of individuals with brain damage using fMRI. Classroom experience is also enhanced by collaboration with the community through Community Learning, in courses such as Community Psychology, Child Development, Human Neuropsychology, Psychology of Aging and various first year and senior seminars.

Study away: The Psychology Department encourages its majors to study away. With careful planning, it should be possible for most students to study away, if they so choose. Students wishing to count psychology courses from an approved study-away site must get the approval of the chair of the Psychology Department. Typically, the department will allow up to two courses to be counted toward the major—one course from the core category and one course from the specialized category.

Research opportunities: Trinity undergraduates conduct research with faculty members in courses, course labs, independent studies, research assistantships, summer research, the interdisciplinary science program (ISP—a first-year gateway program), and senior theses. These research opportunities often result in joint conference presentations or publications with faculty. Research conducted during the school year is presented in the all-college research symposium poster session in early May. Summer research is presented in September.

Honors: Students with at least a B+ average in psychology, an overall grade point average of B or better, and six courses (of at least one credit each, taken at Trinity’s Hartford campus) toward the psychology major with a grade of A- or better (excluding PSYC 498-499) are eligible for a program in which they might earn the distinction of honors in psychology. To graduate with honors, students must enroll in PSYC 498-499 and earn a grade of A- or better. Students must also enroll in the two-semester Senior Thesis Colloquium (PSYC 491-492) and receive a grade of P. Honors students will present a preliminary account of their work during the fall semester and a summary of their thesis results during the spring semester to the psychology department. They must also present their work at the all-college research symposium poster session in early May. Honors students will present a summary of their thesis at a departmental meeting during the spring semester. Students who believe that they have attained eligibility for honors should consult with their adviser during the spring semester of their junior year to plan for enrollment in PSYC 498-499. The two course credits earned from this sequence fulfill the requirements for the senior exercise and the specialized course.