img7207If you’re a graduate student in the mental health field planning on going into private practice, here are a few things that you won’t learn during your program. Most of what I learned about psychotherapy and private practice came after I graduated.

After 17 years of practice, here are a few things I wish I’d known earlier:

1) Clients don’t care about your degree

I’m rarely asked what degree I hold or what school I attended. I’ve found that very few clients know the difference between an MSW, MFT, PhD, MFCC, PsyD or any other degree. What clients really want to know is that you’re qualified to do therapy, and if you can help them.

2) You’ll learn more from supervisors than coursework

Getting my MSW was a license to actually do what I wanted, but the most valuable learning came from my post-graduate school clinical supervisor. It’s important to seek out an amazing supervisor and mentor to train you in how to actually do therapy and how to run a practice. Seek out a  private practice internship setting that closely resembles what you envision yourself doing in the future.

3) Keep all of your research papers and course syllabi

Even though you may want to purge yourself from anything related to graduate school, you may want to hang on to those papers. I just used a research paper from my MSW program as my writing sample for my PhD program. You can also re-purpose papers for future blog posts and articles to publish.

If you ever decide to go apply for a doctoral degree or an advanced training certificate down the road that requires transcript evaluation, you may be required to submit your course syllabi to provide details of the course content. Also, keep a copy of the official course description in the school catalog for the years you attended. When I applied for doctoral programs, some programs had difficulty determining what my classes were and required official course catalog descriptions.

4) Stay in touch with your supervisors and colleagues

I can’t tell you how many times I’ve asked my former supervisor for letters of recommendation for various certifications and applications through the years. Keep connected with a select your professional relationships. They’re not only good referral sources but to provide job references and professional recommendations.

5) Take business courses

A common sentiment among mental health private practitioners is “I wish I knew more about business.” It is rare that mental health graduate programs offer business courses, so students interested in going into private practice need to seek out workshops and courses.

What did you learn after grad school? Do you have any advice for graduate students? Post your comment below.

Creative Commons License photo credit: Proctor Archives

 


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From Psych Central's website:
PsychCentral (February 3, 2012)

Mental Health Social (February 3, 2012)

From Psych Central's website:
PsychCentral (February 3, 2012)

From Psych Central's World of Psychology:
Best of Our Blogs: February 7, 2012 | World of Psychology (February 7, 2012)

Sharon (February 9, 2012)




    Last reviewed: 7 Feb 2012

APA Reference
Hanks, J. (2012). What They Don’t Teach You In Grad School. Psych Central. Retrieved on May 21, 2013, from http://blogs.psychcentral.com/private-practice/2012/02/what-they-dont-teach-you-in-grad-school/

 

 

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