School Counseling · Georgia

School Counseling colleges in Georgia

School Counseling program coverage in Georgia is being verified. Use the filter-first search at /results to find related programs offered in the state.

School Counseling prepares you to support students' academic, social, emotional, and career development inside K-12 schools, building skills in counseling, assessment, and case coordination.

We're still verifying School Counseling programs in Georgia. Try a broader search at /results?q=School Counseling or browse all colleges in Georgia.

What you'll study in a School Counseling program

  • Counseling theories and individual counseling techniques for students of different ages
  • Group counseling design and facilitation in school settings
  • Human growth and development across childhood and adolescence
  • Crisis intervention, suicide and threat assessment, and referral protocols
  • Career and college readiness advising, including course planning and postsecondary transitions
  • Comprehensive school counseling program design aligned with the ASCA national model
  • Interpreting academic, behavioral, and standardized assessment data to guide interventions
  • Multicultural, ethical, and legal practice, including confidentiality and mandated reporting
  • Consultation and collaboration with teachers, administrators, families, and community agencies

Where a School Counseling degree can lead

  • School counselor
  • Guidance counselor
  • College and career advisor
  • Academic advisor
  • Student support services coordinator
  • Admissions counselor

Typical pay: Early-career wages vary by employer, region, and experience (BLS, 2024 educational, guidance, and career counselors and advisors median $65,140).

School Counseling applies counseling theory and guidance principles to the personal, social, educational, and vocational growth of students within elementary, middle, and secondary schools. Coursework typically covers human development, group and individual counseling techniques, crisis intervention, multicultural and ethical practice, and the design of a comprehensive guidance program aligned with frameworks such as the American School Counselor Association national model. Students learn to interpret academic records and assessment data, run classroom guidance lessons, advise on course selection and postsecondary planning, and coordinate with teachers, families, and outside agencies. Where Psychology centers on the science of cognition and behavior and Social Work prepares for licensed direct practice across many settings, school counseling is built specifically for the school environment. It also differs from broad Education and from Instructional Design, which focus on teaching subject content and building learning materials rather than counseling students.

Most school counselor positions call for a master's degree in school counseling or counselor education, along with a supervised practicum and internship in a school. State education agencies and licensing boards set their own certification or endorsement rules, and many programs are reviewed against standards from CACREP or accredited under CAEP, so requirements vary by state and should be verified directly. Graduates often work as school counselors in public or private K-12 settings, and related paths include academic advising, college and career advising, and admissions or student-support roles. Some continue toward clinical licensure or doctoral study. A degree builds a strong foundation in counseling and student support, but it is not a guarantee of a specific job, and demand differs by region, grade level, and school funding.

In federal data for the closely related occupation of educational, guidance, and career counselors and advisors, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $65,140 and projects employment to grow about 3.5% from 2024 to 2034; a master's degree is the typical entry-level education for that occupation. National figures are occupation-wide medians across all experience levels, not starting wages or graduate outcomes.

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