Psychology is the study of human and animal behavior. Psychologists in academic settings teach and conduct research designed to increase our knowledge about behavior. Psychologists also work in governmental and industrial organizations carrying out basic and applied research and providing professional advice. Many clinical psychologists are employed in clinics or in hospitals or are engaged in private practice, focusing on the diagnosis and treatment of psychological disorders. Clinical psychologists are to be distinguished from psychiatrists, who are physicians (M.D.'s) with specialized training in the treatment of mental disorders. Job opportunities within the profession of psychology for those with only an undergraduate degree are quite limited. Most vocational opportunities in psychology require advanced professional training; usually through the Ph.D. degree and typically requiring 4 or 5 years of postgraduate work and including extensive work in research methods. Some opportunities for teaching psychology at the junior college or high school level, or for work as a psychologist in a business, school, or hospital, are available to those with a master's degree (2 or 3 years of postgraduate work).
in counseling centers in the correctional facility i think and also in colleges
There are several places where one can study Developmental Psychology in the US. Most university colleges (such as Columbia) run courses or modules in this field.
study of animal and human behavior
it is the study of people and how they think and behave.
UC Davis offers an Animal Science major
Psychology involves the scientific study of the human or other animal mental functions and behaviors.
A good place to start is to search the internet for colleges in your area, or online colleges with a degree program in that field of study
Fewer ethical issues and less expensive to do.
You can have physiology, the study of the structures of the body, or psychology, the study of the mind, but you do not have physiocology, that is just a linguistic mash-up.
I'm not sure that you can go to school specifically to be an animal trainer but most will need to have a working knowledge of biology, animal behavior, animal psychology (aka comparative psychology) as well as real world experience working with animals.
Look for courses in small animal keeping. Most agricultural colleges run them.
The study of psychology is a study in science. Psychology is the study of human behavior from a scientific perspective.