School Counselor vs. School Psychologist: What's the big difference?
These two roles are often confused — but both are vital. Here's a clear breakdown of what each professional does, what training they need, and why schools truly need both.
In a school building, most staff roles are easy to distinguish. A school nurse handles physical and medical needs. Teachers deliver academic instruction. But when it comes to professionals who support students emotionally, mentally, and behaviorally, two roles often get confused: the school counselor and the school psychologist. Both are desperately needed — and significantly different.
School Counselor
Master's degree in School Counseling
- Social-emotional support & SEL lessons
- Short-term counseling for behavioral/mental needs
- Trauma-informed support
- MTSS team collaboration
- College & career planning (high school)
- Drug & bullying prevention
School Psychologist
Specialist degree in School Psychology
- Special education evaluations & assessments
- IEP & 504 eligibility decisions
- Crisis intervention
- Mental, behavioral & academic support
- Child Find collaboration
- Individualized IEP/504 minutes
01 The School Counselor
School counselors provide critical social-emotional support across every grade level. Their role evolves significantly as students grow — making them uniquely positioned to meet students where they are, from kindergarten through graduation.
Requirements
- Complete a master's degree focused on school counseling.
- Complete the program's required practicum and/or internship hours.
- Pass the state-level licensing exam.
- For national certification, follow the steps outlined by ASCA or the National Board of Certified Counselors.3,8
Role by grade level
A counselor's day-to-day responsibilities shift depending on the grades they serve. Explore each level below:
- Support students who need help developing social skills.
- Implement social-emotional classroom lessons.
- Provide counseling for behavioral or mental health needs.
- Support students who have experienced trauma.
- Collaborate with school psychologists, social workers, and principals on SEL screeners.
- Work alongside the MTSS team to implement SEL with fidelity.
- All elementary responsibilities above, plus:
- Help implement sex education lessons.
- Counsel students struggling with self-esteem.
- Support bullying prevention alongside the principal.
- Support students navigating puberty.
- All elementary and middle school responsibilities, plus:
- Help students plan for college and apply for scholarships and financial aid.
- Implement drug prevention programming.
- Support students at risk of dropping out.
02 The School Psychologist
School psychologists operate at a deeper clinical level. Their primary focus is guiding special education evaluations — but their scope extends far beyond that into advocacy, crisis response, and individualized intervention.
Requirements
- Complete a specialist degree program in school psychology.
- Complete mandatory internship and practicum hours.
- Complete a thesis or research project (varies by program).
- Pass the state-level licensing exam.
- For national licensure, follow NASP's steps to become a Nationally Certified School Psychologist (NCSP).10
What school psychologists do
While their cornerstone role is conducting and interpreting evaluations — cognitive assessments, academic achievement tests, behavior rating scales, classroom observations, and parent interviews — school psychologists also intervene for mental health, behavioral, academic, and crisis needs.7 NASP outlines 10 domains of practice that define their full scope.6
03 The IEP & 504 question
One of the most practical — and commonly misunderstood — distinctions between these two roles is their eligibility to provide minutes on an IEP or 504 plan.
Can a school counselor provide minutes on an IEP or 504 plan?
According to ASCA, school counselors should not be written into a student's IEP or 504 plan.2,5 Counselors are best suited for short-term goals. Students requiring intensive or ongoing support should be evaluated through MTSS to determine whether additional services are warranted.
Can a school psychologist provide minutes on an IEP or 504 plan?
Yes. School psychologists can provide individualized minutes on both IEPs and 504 plans — covering social skills, executive functioning, coping skills, life skills, and more.9 They typically do so when a student cannot be adequately supported through MTSS and general counseling alone.
04 Side-by-side comparison
| Factor | School Counselor | School Psychologist |
|---|---|---|
| Degree required | Master's in School Counseling | Specialist degree in School Psychology |
| Primary focus | Social-emotional support & SEL | Special education evaluations |
| IEP/504 minutes | Not recommended | Yes |
| Short-term counseling | Yes | Yes |
| Crisis intervention | Yes (general) | Yes (specialized) |
| Cognitive assessments | No | Yes |
| National credential | ACSC (ASCA) / NCSC (NBCC) | NCSP (NASP) |
| MTSS collaboration | Yes | Yes |
| Child Find duties | Supporting role | Primary role |
05 Does a school need both?
A school counselor is just as vital to a school building as a school psychologist. They should work in tandem to support all students.
The answer is an unequivocal yes. School psychologists typically carry large caseloads — evaluations, Child Find obligations, IEP team collaboration — leaving limited bandwidth for broader counseling support. School counselors fill that gap, serving students identified through MTSS who need more than a classroom teacher can provide but don't yet require a formal IEP.
Both professions are currently facing significant shortages. Districts that invest in both roles — and build systems for them to collaborate — are better positioned to provide a truly supportive learning environment for every student.
If you're a college student considering either career: you will always have a job, and you will make a lasting impact — not just in a school district, but in the lives of countless students.
Works Cited
- AllPsychologySchools.com. "School Counseling Job Description." allpsychologyschools.com
- ASCA. "The School Counselor and Section 504 Plan and Process." schoolcounselor.org
- ASCA. "ASCA-Certified School Counselor (ACSC)." schoolcounselor.org
- ASCA. "Careers in School Counseling." schoolcounselor.org
- Greiner & Hatton. "The School Counselor's Role in Serving Students with Disabilities." ASCA, May 2023.
- NASP. "NASP 2020 Domains of Practice." nasponline.org
- NASP. "Who Are School Psychologists." nasponline.org
- NBCC. "NCSC Certification." nbcc.org
- IRIS Center. "Psychological Services." iris.peabody.vanderbilt.edu
- NASP. "School Psychology Credentialing Resources." nasponline.org
