During her career, Tolman was a prominent figure in the subfield of
clinical psychology. Following her marriage, she stayed on as a
research associate and instructor at UCLA (1927–1929) before teaching at
Occidental College (instructor of psychology; 1930–1932) and
Scripps College (lecturer in psychology; 1934), also receiving her
M.A. in psychology from Occidental in 1930. Shortly before completing her
Ph.D. in clinical psychology at the
University of California, Berkeley in 1937, she became the senior psychological examiner for the
Los Angeles County Probation Department (1936–1940). While writing six books and helping to create an early treatment for
post-traumatic stress disorder, she was also the first woman ever to be elected to the
Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues (SPSSI). Tolman was proactive in helping other women achieve the same goals as she had. Throughout World War II, she served on a committee called the Service of Women Psychologists in the Emergency Committee on Psychology (ECP). The organization's purpose was to help prepare women psychologists to fill the role of male psychologists who were away, serving in the military, and to help address the discrimination felt by female psychologists. As the war commenced, Tolman was recruited by government agencies that were then hiring psychologists. After the Tolmans temporarily relocated to
Washington, D.C., she spent a year (1941–1942) as an associate social science analyst with the Program Survey Section of the
Department of Agriculture. This led to a two-year stint (1942–1944) as a public opinion analyst with the
Office of War Information. Her last assignment (1944–1945) was that of clinical psychologist with the
Office of Strategic Services (OSS), which was the forerunner of the
Central Intelligence Agency. The role required her to devise tests to assess the psychological stability of field agents. Following the war, she and her husband returned to California. There, Tolman became head of clinical psychology training at the
Veterans Administration's local office from 1946 to 1954, treating soldiers who were suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (then characterized as "battle fatigue"). This effort greatly advanced her career and made her a noteworthy figure. From 1953 to 1957, she also served as a
clinical professor of psychology at UCLA while maintaining an affiliation with the Veterans Administration's local Mental Hygiene Clinic (1954–1957). For her contributions, Tolman was elected a Fellow of the
American Psychological Association. == Personal life ==