Multiculturalism has demonstrating its ubiquitous influence over the last decades. The reflections of these influences in the area of counseling have been observed mainly in the provision of counseling services. Providing counseling services to clients of different cultural backgrounds has required extra competencies beyond basic counseling competencies. As a result of this necessity, the American Counseling Association mandated that multicultural counseling competencies training and counselor program curricula be integrated with multicultural counseling courses (Utsey, Gernat, & Bolden, 2003 as cited in Chae, Foley, & Chae, 2006). Briefly, while multicultural counseling competencies consist of cultural self-awareness, knowledge, and skills, a culturally competent counselor acquires these competencies in order to work both effectively and ethically with different cultural groups (Sue, Arredondo, & McDavis, 1992). As Hill (2003) has mentioned, the integration of