This article applauds the strength-based model (SBM) of counseling but calls for an extension. In the existential or humanistic tradition, the SBM builds on emerging trends in psychology to highlight the importance of individual strengths in counseling interventions. However, a role strain and adaptation (RSA) approach extends the SBM to systematically address diversity, multilevel, and life-span issues among at-risk youth. Guided by cross-cultural research, the RSA extension of SBM explains how universal (etic) and ethnic-specific (emic) strengths facilitate coping. Building on ecological studies, the RSA extension also clarifies the operation of risk and protective factors at the individual, family, and community levels. Moreover, the RSA extension provides a life-span framework to examine risk factors and protective strengths as adolescents prepare for early, middle, and elder adulthood. Finally, the RSA extension can help psychologists and other professionals better distinguish between three empowerment goals in interventions with at-risk populations-therapeutic, resiliency, and systemic.The strength-based model (SBM) provides psychologists, counselors, educators, health experts, social workers, and other human service professionals with an integrative conceptual framework for examining human strengths within helping relationships (Smith, 2006 [this issue]). Indeed, in contrast to the prevalent pathology model, the SBM signifies a dramatic paradigm shift toward a competence-development approach to theory and practice. In the existential or humanistic counseling tradition, the strength-based theoretical framework builds on principles from several emerging trends in contemporary psychology and related fields (counseling psychology, positive psychology, youth development, prevention research, public health, social work, etc.). An especially useful contribution of the SBM is a systematic specification of core concepts, propositions, stages, and techniques that bridge theoretical ideas with professional practice. The SBM's practical relevance is further illustrated both by the case study of an at-risk youth and by the "competence continuum" for professional training.