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Psychology explores the study of human and animal behavior through a scientific lens. Students pursuing a psychology degree gain a comprehensive, science-focused liberal arts education. Graduates with a Bachelor of Science in psychology find diverse opportunities across business, education, and mental health sectors. Advanced degrees are essential for professional psychology careers. The University of Florida's psychology program equips students with a solid foundation for psychology careers or advanced studies in fields like law or medicine. The curriculum highlights psychological principles and their real-world applications, blending natural and social science perspectives. Psychology majors can choose between two tracks: general psychology or behavioral and cognitive neuroscience. Both paths require psychology, statistics, math, and biology coursework, with optional senior thesis projects. The specializations differ in their course requirements. General psychology covers four core discipline areas plus psychology electives, while behavioral and cognitive neuroscience emphasizes natural science-oriented psychology courses and approved neuroscience-related electives. The neuroscience track also mandates additional math and biology courses compared to the general psychology program.
Students must have completed a secondary and college or university credentials from non-U.S. institutions.
The university will require the following minimum scores on the redesigned SAT: SAT Reading = 24, Writing and Language = 25 and Math = 24. On the ACT, a minimum score of 19 on the Reading section and 19 on the Math section.
Minimum scores requirements are as follows:
TOEFL: Paper-Based: 550; Internet-Based: 80
IELTS: 6
MELAB: 77