“…First, assessment has long occupied and continues to occupy an important place in counseling psychology. This may go without saying, but considering some of the hard times upon which assessment has fallen in past decades (Millon, 1984;Weiner, 1972), it seems worth repeating that assessment is still very much alive and, at this particular point in time, is experiencing a renaissance of sorts (Abeles, 1990;Watkins, 1991). The importance of assessment can be seen reflected in documents about the counseling specialty (AACD, 1988;APA, 198l), in recent role and function studies (Bubenzer et al, 1990;May & Scott, 1989), and in publications that increasingly attempt to address the assessment-counseling interface (Hood & Johnson, 199 1 ;Watkins & Campbell, 1990a, 199Ob).…”