Psychology at Austin Community College District

Austin, TX · Public · Associate Degree · Psychology, General

with 25,969 students enrolled in Austin, TX.

Program Analysis

At $29,930 per year, Psychology graduates from Austin Community College District earn slightly above the $27,272 national median. The premium is real but not dramatic.

Every dollar of tuition returns an estimated 74.6x in decade earnings — an exceptional ratio that places this among the highest-ROI Psychology programs nationally.

Some AI exposure exists in Psychology's career paths, with 49% of job tasks potentially affected. The pessimistic scenario still projects solid returns, with a 20% gap from the optimistic case.

The median debt load of $9,000 represents less than half a year of starting salary — among the lightest debt-to-income ratios in vocational education.

At #8 of 36 nationally, this is a top-5% Psychology program. Financial outcomes consistently outperform the vast majority of peers.

Earnings grow from $29,930 to $37,449 over five years — a 25% increase that's moderate and in line with typical trade career progression.

One registered apprenticeship pathway (Health Information Management Privacy And Security Officer with a median wage of $136,550/yr) connects to Psychology careers, offering a paid training alternative to the classroom model.

58 /100
TradeSchoolOutlook Score
51
Low End
58
Score
61
High End
Earnings $29,930/yr (10% vs median)
AI-Proof Moderate (51% shielded)
Job Market Very Large (125,000 openings/yr)

Earnings Overview

Projected 10-Year Earnings
$390K
5.8% annual growth
Earnings Multiple (In-State)
76.5x
10-year earnings ÷ tuition
Viable Career Paths
6 of 6
Occupations with strong AI resilience

Projected 10-Year Earnings

Based on actual graduate salary data and Bureau of Labor Statistics growth projections.

Program Tuition (In-State)
$5,100
Out-of-state: $21,180
Median Debt at Graduation
$9,000
3.6 months of Year 1 earnings
Reported Earnings (5 Year)
$37,449
25% growth from Year 1

Top Career Paths

Top career paths for Psychology graduates by median salary.

Career Path Median Salary Growth AI-ProofAI
Managers, all other $136,550 +4.5% 53%
Psychologists, all other $117,580 +4.3% 56%
Industrial-organizational psychologists $109,840 +6.3% 51%
Managers, all other
$136,550
+4.5% growth 53% AI-proof
Psychologists, all other
$117,580
+4.3% growth 56% AI-proof
Industrial-organizational psychologists
$109,840
+6.3% growth 51% AI-proof

View all 6 career paths with full salary data →

Psychology Career Guide

What can you do with a Psychology credential from Austin Community College District? Our career guide maps every occupation path with earnings and growth data.

Read the full Psychology career guide →

Compare & Explore

Psychology Overview

Psychology at Other Schools

Other Majors at Austin Community College District

How Does a Bachelor's Degree Compare?

Four-year programs take longer but may unlock different career trajectories. See the data.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the TradeSchoolOutlook Score for Psychology at Austin Community College District?
At 58/100, Austin Community College District's Psychology program delivers middling returns. School cost and personal fit become important decision factors.
How vulnerable is Psychology to AI automation?
AI won't eliminate Psychology careers, but it may reshape them. At Austin Community College District, a score of 58/100 already accounts for the 49% task exposure — the ROI calculation factors in reduced employment probability.
Why does Austin Community College District rank so high for Psychology?
The #8 ranking out of 36 programs is driven by strong financial outcomes — graduates earn well, debt is manageable, and the job market supports this trade.
How many job openings are there for Psychology graduates?
Job availability for Psychology is strong — 125,000 positions open annually across the mapped career paths. For Austin Community College District graduates specifically, local market conditions in TX may shift the picture.
Data from College Scorecard, BLS, and AI resilience research. Methodology & sources →