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Overview . What is Org/Occ Psychology?Masters CoursesSubjects covered in Masters coursePossible CareersWhat do Org/Occ psychologists doOther careers open to occupational psychologistsMore Information. What is Org/Occ Psychology?. Referred to variously as Occupational / Organisational / Work
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1. Careers in Occupational and Organisational PsychologyRuth MullallyOrganisational PsychologistAllied Irish Banks (AIB)www.aib.ie
2. Overview What is Org/Occ Psychology?
Masters Courses
Subjects covered in Masters course
Possible Careers
What do Org/Occ psychologists do
Other careers open to occupational psychologists
More Information
3. What is Org/Occ Psychology? Referred to variously as Occupational / Organisational / Work / Industrial Psychology
Org/Occ psychology is mainly concerned with 2 things:
(i) maximising the performance and efficiency
(ii) maximising the level of satisfaction & engagement
Why Organisational/Occupational? Occupational psychology is mainly concerned with 2 things;
(i) maximising the performance and efficiency of individuals and organisations
(ii) maximising the level of satisfaction enjoyed by individuals at work and as a result, improving organisational morale
Why Occupational?
Appeals to those who enjoy working with people within in a business setting. Uses similar models to other areas of psychology but key difference is the focus on improvement / potential - not problem focussed. Positive and dynamic work area which is results oriented.
Referred to variously as Occupational / Organisational / Work / Industrial Psychology.
Occupational psychology is mainly concerned with 2 things;
(i) maximising the performance and efficiency of individuals and organisations
(ii) maximising the level of satisfaction enjoyed by individuals at work and as a result, improving organisational morale
Why Occupational?
Appeals to those who enjoy working with people within in a business setting. Uses similar models to other areas of psychology but key difference is the focus on improvement / potential - not problem focussed. Positive and dynamic work area which is results oriented.
Referred to variously as Occupational / Organisational / Work / Industrial Psychology.
4. Masters Courses in Org/Occ Psych Dublin City University - MSc Work and Organisational – 2 year part-time. Next intake 2009.
University of Limerick - MSc in Work & Organisational Psychology (1 year full time and 2 years part time options)
University of Cork – Proposed MA in Occupational & Organisational Psychology (1 year full time and 2 years part time options)
University College Dublin – MA Social and Organisational – 1 year full-time (no intake for 2009)
Entry requirement 2:1 honours degree plus work experience preferable. (2:2 plus 3 years experience also considered)
UK courses – contact www.bps.org.uk
e.g. Leicester – 2 year MSc by distance learning
www.le.ac.uk/graduateoffice/pgprospectus/courses/distance/psychology/occupational.html
5. What Masters subjects do you study? Organisational Behaviour & Psychology
Human Resources Development
Psychometric Testing
Recruitment, Selection and Assessment
Performance Appraisal & Career Development
Counselling and Vocational Guidance
Social Psychology
Industrial Relations / Employee Relations
The Changing Face of Work & New Technology
Health Psychology and Stress
Design of Environment and Work: Health and Safety / Ergonomics
6. Career Opportunities for Occ/Org Psychologists large multi-nationals – Banking / Financial Services – often work in the areas of Human Resources or Learning and Development
Public Sector Departments such as the Public Appointments Service, (manages recruitment of Civil Servants)
Private sector consultancy / management consultancy
Associates / Consultants (self-employed)
7. What do Org/Occ Psychs do……? Work with individuals and organisations at each stage of the career life cycle designing and delivering programmes including:
Recruitment and Selection Programmes
Career Development Programmes
Ongoing Professional (and Personal) Development including Coaching, Mentoring and Leadership Programmes
Induction Training / Training and Development
Workplace Counselling including Stress Management
Employee Assistance Programmes
Redundancy Counselling / Outplacement Programmes
Workplace Research and internal consultancy
Organisational Change / Organisational Development
Designing a selection centre with a job analysis of role & appropriate questions
Developing & conducting training programmes, & evaluating their effectiveness
Responsible for talent management within an organisation
Coaching and mentoring employees
Teaching the skills necessary for leadership, teamwork, negotiation, assertiveness, conflict management
Assessing how individuals cope with unemployment, redundancy, retirement or job seeking & helping them to deal with such changes
Assisting with industrial relations between management & employees
Evaluating job performance to give a person a deeper understanding of their strengths, weaknesses and special interests
Ergonomics - exploring the interactions of people with their working environment to ensure it is a safe, healthy and effective one
Diversity - increasing awareness of ethnic minorities, women & people with special needsDesigning a selection centre with a job analysis of role & appropriate questions
Developing & conducting training programmes, & evaluating their effectiveness
Responsible for talent management within an organisation
Coaching and mentoring employees
Teaching the skills necessary for leadership, teamwork, negotiation, assertiveness, conflict management
Assessing how individuals cope with unemployment, redundancy, retirement or job seeking & helping them to deal with such changes
Assisting with industrial relations between management & employees
Evaluating job performance to give a person a deeper understanding of their strengths, weaknesses and special interests
Ergonomics - exploring the interactions of people with their working environment to ensure it is a safe, healthy and effective one
Diversity - increasing awareness of ethnic minorities, women & people with special needs
8. Some real examples of workplace projects include…… Designing a selection centre with a job analysis of role & appropriate questions
Developing & conducting training programmes, & evaluating their effectiveness
Responsible for talent management & succession planning within an organisation
Coaching and mentoring employees
Teaching the skills necessary for leadership, teamwork, negotiation, assertiveness, conflict management
Assessing how individuals cope with unemployment, redundancy, retirement or job seeking & helping them to deal with such changes
Assisting with industrial relations between management & employees
Evaluating job performance to give a person a deeper understanding of their strengths, weaknesses and special interests
Ergonomics - exploring the interactions of people with their working environment to ensure it is a safe, healthy and effective one
Diversity - increasing awareness of ethnic minorities, women & people with special needs
9. How do they do this?
Using psychological theory and research, occ/org psychologists work in much the same way that psychologists from other disciplines operate
Typically, they
Investigate the situation
Diagnose the issue
Develop/design an appropriate intervention
Deliver the intervention
Monitor and evaluate the outcome / result
And then start again!
10. Other careers open to Org/Occ Psychologists……
Human Resource Management
Ergonomics – design of the Workplace
Marketing / Market Research – Consumer Behaviour
Research – Workplace Research
Graduate / Management Careers including Sales, Retail, Hospitality and Business Management
11. More information on Occ/Org Psych PSI
Visit www.psihq.ie for further information
Get involved….with DWOP, the Division of Work and Organisational Psychology www.psihq.ie/MEMBERS_DWOP.asp
Also a new Coaching Psychology Group as part of DWOP
BPS - See www.bps.org.uk
12.
Thank you!