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Psychology

If you are fascinated by how the mind works, and you like to help people overcome their problems, then psychology could be just the degree for you.
 
When you study psychology, you examine such things as personality, intelligence, motivation, mental disorders, memory, dreaming, hypnosis and biofeedback. You also explore how people’s everyday experiences affect their family, education, work and play. This pre-major program provides the general education requirements needed to transfer to a four-year university or college.
 
Whether your goal is to counsel people as a practicing psychologist—or you want to apply your psychology education to a career in business, marketing, social work or other field—this program can lead you to a wide range of career opportunities.
 
Many people who study psychology go on to pursue careers or additional education in mental health, medicine, social work, public health, teaching or related fields.

Spokane Community College believes that you should graduate with the knowledge, skills, and abilities that further your educational goals, increasing your value in the workforce and contributing to a vibrant community.
 
Our AA-DTA degree program learning outcomes align to our five College-Wide Key Literacies.

Applied Content Literacy
Students will develop knowledge, skills, and abilities in all transfer distribution areas or program elements/areas. Students will build a foundation of information relevant to their program or focus of study while increasing knowledge and competency in their chosen field.

Communication Literacy
Students will develop the ability to create meaning and make connections between themselves and their audience, incorporating awareness of the social nature of communication, including, but not limited to, the impact of ethnicity, age, culture, gender, sexual orientation, and ability on communication styles and results. Students will learn to listen, read, speak, and write effectively using a variety of mediums and modalities.

Information Literacy
Students will develop knowledge and abilities allowing them to identify, locate, and evaluate information pertaining to the problem under consideration. Students will learn how to responsibly research, use, share, and produce accurate, relevant information gleaned through skilled research methods.

Intercultural Literacy
Students will develop an intersectional understanding of modern social realities, which will help enable effective participation and communication in cross-cultural professional, academic, and social settings. This may include, but is not limited to, biological sex, gender identity, socio-economic status, race, sexual orientation, religion, country and culture of origin, and political stance.

Quantitative Literacy
Students will develop and expand the ability to understand numeric information through the gathering, examination, modeling, manipulation, analysis, interpretation, and representation of quantitative and/or scientific data.

Breaking Ground on Your Pathway


Plan Your Courses

Meet with our counselors to customize this plan just for you. You can also search the quarterly schedule for class days and times.

Prepare for College-level Math

Math placement is required for this program. If your math placement is below MATH& 146, you’ll need to take the following sequence of courses, starting from the level you placed into:
AE 48 → MATH 87 → MATH 88 → MATH& 146

Placement

English placement is not required for this program.

Associate in Arts (AA) is the community college degree designed to transfer to most bachelor's of arts degrees at all public and many private Washington four-year institutions. A candidate for the AA-DTA degree must complete 90 quarter credits in academic courses numbered 100 and above with a cumulative grade point average of at least 2.0 and meet specific distribution requirements.

Program Map for

Print/Download

Choose program map:

Total Program Credits: 93


Program Courses

First Quarter

Course ID
Course Title
Credits
ENGL&101
English Composition I  
5
GUID 102
Strategies for Success  
3
PSYC&100
General Psychology  
5
 
Math Electives  
5
Total Credits
 
18
Math Electives: Choose 5 credits Math Electives: Choose 5 credits  
MATH&107
Math in Society  
5
MATH&146
Introduction to Stats  
5

Second Quarter

Course ID
Course Title
Credits
ENGL&102
Composition II  
5
HLTH 104
Stress Management  
3
 
Health/PE Group B Electives   1
2
 
Math/Science Group A Electives  
5
Total Credits
 
15

Third Quarter

Course ID
Course Title
Credits
BIOL&160
General Biology with Lab  
5
CMST 227
Intercultural Communication  
5
PSYC&200
Lifespan Psychology  
5
Total Credits
 
15

Fourth Quarter

Course ID
Course Title
Credits
SOC& 201
Social Problems  
5
 
Humanities Group B Electives  
5
 
Psychology Electives  
5
Total Credits
 
15
Psychology Electives: Choose 5 credits Psychology Electives: Choose 5 credits  
PSYC&180
Human Sexuality  
5
PSYC 204
Research Methods in Social Science  
5
PSYC&220
Abnormal Psychology  
5

Fifth Quarter

Course ID
Course Title
Credits
HIST 105
Historical Roots of Contemporary Issues  
5
SOC 221
Race and Ethnic Relations  
5
 
Foreign Language Electives  
5
Total Credits
 
15

Sixth Quarter

Course ID
Course Title
Credits
ENVS&101
Introduction to Environmental Science  
5
PHIL 110
Introduction to Ethics  
5
 
General Electives  
5
Total Credits
 
15
ANTH&100
Survey of Anthropology  
5
ASL& 122
Am Sign Language II  
5
BUS& 101
Intro to Business  
5
GEOG&100
Introduction to Geography  
5
POLS 125
Introduction to Global Issues  
5
POLS&202
United States Government  
5
PSYC&180
Human Sexuality  
5
PSYC 204
Research Methods in Social Science  
5
PSYC&220
Abnormal Psychology  
5
SOC& 101
Intro to Sociology  
5
SOC 230
Sociology of Gender  
5
SPAN&122
Spanish II  
5

Foreign Language Electives  

Course ID
Course Title
Credits
ASL& 121
Am Sign Language I  
5
SPAN&121
Spanish I  
5

General Electives  

Course ID
Course Title
Credits
ANTH&100
Survey of Anthropology  
5
ASL& 122
Am Sign Language II  
5
BUS& 101
Intro to Business  
5
GEOG&100
Introduction to Geography  
5
POLS 125
Introduction to Global Issues  
5
POLS&202
United States Government  
5
PSYC&180
Human Sexuality  
5
PSYC 204
Research Methods in Social Science  
5
PSYC&220
Abnormal Psychology  
5
SOC& 101
Intro to Sociology  
5
SOC 230
Sociology of Gender  
5
SPAN&122
Spanish II  
5

Health/PE Group B Electives  

Course ID
Course Title
Credits

Humanities Group B Electives  

Course ID
Course Title
Credits
ART& 100
Art Appreciation  
5
MUSC&105
Music Appreciation  
5

Math Electives  

Course ID
Course Title
Credits
MATH&107
Math in Society  
5
MATH&146
Introduction to Stats  
5

Math/Science Group A Electives  

Course ID
Course Title
Credits
MATH&107
Math in Society  
5
MATH&146
Introduction to Stats  
5

Psychology Electives  

Course ID
Course Title
Credits
PSYC&180
Human Sexuality  
5
PSYC 204
Research Methods in Social Science  
5
PSYC&220
Abnormal Psychology  
5
1 Select any two-credit PE class

Estimated costs for completing this program

 
WA Resident
Non-Resident
International
Tuition
$ 9,733
$ 11,570
$ 22,036
Books
$ 1,087
$ 1,087
$ 1,087
Course Fees
$ 12
$ 12
$ 12
Institutional Fees
$ 672
$ 672
$ 3,195
Total Costs
$ 11,504
$ 13,341
$ 26,330

Costs for completing a degree or certificate can vary. For more information about costs, visit our How Much Does it Cost? page.

Have a question? Let's hear it.

Michael Buckley

Social Sciences & Humanities Department Chair
Michael.Buckley@scc.spokane.edu
509-533-8845