SYCHOLOGY has long appealed to students and to laymen. Today this interest is even greater than before, and, occupationally speaking, the future of psychology is very promising. An increasing number of people are seeking the services of psychologists.Public and special schools, various types of institutions, hospitals, clinics, welfare agencies, business organizations, industries, the armed services, government departments and agencies arc demanding more psychologists each year. More college and university students are studying psychology today than ever before, and many of them are asking: What must one do to become a psychologist? Psychologists are themselves becoming alert to the occupational needs and possibilities of their science. Journal articles dealing with opportunities, training requirements, and certification of psychologists have come as a flood during and since World War II. At its last annual meeting, the American Psychological Association decided to publish a brochure presenting the occupational opportunities in the various fields of psychology.Since at the present time there is no bibliography that summarizes adequately the occupational aspects of the various fields of psychology, it is my purpose to present here a selected bibliography of recent literature on the topic.The references included were selected from among several hundred that arc occupational in nature or that are occupationally significant. Practically all of the references included were published since 1940. Only 21 of the 157 references were published before that date, and some of these were included for historical reasons. More than three-fourths of the titles appeared during the last five years, and nearly one-fifth of them during 1946. Psychology teachers and counselors may be interested in knowing that half of the journal articles included here are found in the Journal of Consulting Psychology.