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At some point in many school counseling careers, something subtle shifts.
Students stop coming to see you…. Instead, they get sent to you.
The difference might feel small at first. A quick request from an administrator. A teacher asking you to check on a student. A behavior referral that lands in your office because you are “the feelings person. You say yes because you care. You say yes because the student needs support. You say yes because refusing feels like abandoning a kid.
Then one day you realize something important. You are no longer functioning primarily as a school counselor. You have become the system’s pressure valve.
How Role Creep Actually Happens
Very few schools intentionally decide to overload their counselors. There is rarely a meeting where someone says, “Let’s shift behavior management and crisis containment to the counseling office.” Instead, role creep happens quietly. One request at a time.
A student disrupts class and gets sent out. Someone applies a trauma-informed frame and emphasizes compassion over consequences. That instinct can be appropriate. The next step is where the system often goes sideways. Someone says, “Send them to the counselor.” After all, counselors help with feelings. The referral lands in your office. You calm the student down. The crisis passes.
Next week, the same thing happens.
Soon the student becomes part of your daily workflow, not because anyone formally assigned the responsibility, but because the system discovered that sending the student to you works. Institutions are very good at turning informal solutions into permanent structures.
Three Jobs That Are Not the Same
One reason this pattern becomes so confusing is that schools often blend three very different professional roles. Behavior intervention focuses on structure, consequences, and behavioral plans. Trauma treatment involves clinical therapy delivered by licensed professionals using evidence-based protocols. School counseling is short-term, goal-directed support that helps students engage and succeed in school.
All three functions are important. All three functions are not the school counselor’s responsibility. When schools blur those lines, counselors absorb work that was never designed to sit inside their role.
The Power of a Clarifying Question
Many counselors want to help. The challenge is that saying yes without clarification creates an implicit agreement about your role. Imagine an administrator asks, “Can you check on Marcus? He got sent out again.” It feels natural to respond, “Sure.” The more sustainable response sounds slightly different.
“What are you hoping I can address for him today?”
That question changes the conversation. It moves the request from vague support to a defined purpose. If the answer is simply “calm him down,” it becomes easier to explain that a fifteen-minute conversation cannot resolve a larger behavioral pattern. You are not refusing to help. You are having a professional conversation about what success actually looks like. Over time, those conversations begin to reshape expectations.
When Counselors Become Behavior Containment
Teachers face enormous pressure. When a strategy works, they naturally repeat it. If calling the counselor quickly resolves a dysregulated student, the habit forms. The teacher is not being manipulative. They are trying to stabilize the classroom.
Unfortunately, this dynamic can turn the counseling office into a behavior containment system. The student never practices regulation skills in the moment they are needed. The teacher never develops additional classroom strategies. The cycle repeats because the immediate crisis keeps getting solved.
Changing that pattern requires a different type of conversation. Not during a crisis, but before the next one happens.
A counselor might say, “I want to make sure the time I spend with this student is actually counseling and not just removal from class. Can we build a plan together for what happens before I’m called?” The conversation is uncomfortable. It is also necessary.
The Ethical Trap of Bridging Every Gap
There is another version of this dynamic that many counselors recognize immediately. You know a student needs therapy.You know the family cannot access services. Maybe they lack insurance. Maybe they distrust the system. Maybe providers simply do not exist nearby.
So you step in.
You meet with the student longer. More often. You try to provide the stability and support they deserve. The instinct comes from genuine care, yet this is where school counselors often find themselves in an ethical trap.
Providing long-term clinical support without supervision or appropriate training rarely resolves the underlying need. At the same time, your presence can unintentionally remove the urgency for families or systems to find outside care. The student does not get the level of treatment they deserve. The system does not change because the gap appears covered.
Holding the boundary is one of the hardest parts of school counseling work. Continuing to recommend outside services, documenting those recommendations, and providing support within your scope is not abandoning a student – it is ethical practice.
Why Pressure Valves Prevent Change
A pressure valve exists for one reason. It prevents the system from breaking.
In schools, counselors often become that valve. They absorb behavioral referrals, emotional crises, and service gaps that the larger system has not solved. The work feels meaningful. The impact feels immediate. The unintended consequence is that nothing else in the system is forced to change.
The moment counselors begin asking clarifying questions, documenting patterns, and holding their professional scope, the system encounters pressure again. That pressure is not failure, it is the beginning of change.
This week’s School for School Counselors podcast episode, Your School’s Pressure Valve Has a Name. It’s You., explores how counselors slowly become the release mechanism for overwhelmed school systems and what it looks like to reclaim a counseling practice that actually belongs to you.
If you are navigating these dynamics in your own building, the School for School Counselors Hub, the blog, and the Mastermind exist for exactly this kind of work. They offer a place to sharpen your language, strengthen your clinical thinking, and connect with counselors who are learning how to hold these boundaries together. When you need tools, clarity, or community, you can always return there.
If you are looking for a place to keep these conversations going without the noise and chaos of traditional social media, we have also created a free community space inside our Skool group. It is a place where school counselors can ask questions, share challenges, and talk through the real dynamics happening in their buildings with other professionals who understand the work. The focus stays on thoughtful discussion, practical ideas, and supporting one another in the profession. If you need a quieter corner of the internet to think through your practice and connect with other counselors doing the same work, you are always welcome there.

It’s like you stepped into my overwhelmed brain and put into words everything I was feeling but didn’t know how to say. Ive stepped out of the school counseling office for this very reason. So validating to read my own thoughts so beautifully strung together