High School Counselor Week
Weekly stories, facts, trends, and other information from around the country
May 28, 2026
Don’t make students choose between college or career — preparation for both is crucial
The Hechinger Report – May 25, 2026
High schools have been working hard to expand and diversify prospects for students. Walk through any building and you’ll see a plethora of enriching experiences: students earning college credits, mastering technical skills and exploring careers. But these programs typically provide limited opportunities to integrate pivotal skills — too often the kids enrolled in them are tracked into two categories: “college” or “career.” Academic knowledge and technical skills aren’t opposing forces; they’re complementary building blocks. Preparation for both is crucial.
This big university system is embracing AI. Students and faculty aren’t all on board
NPR – May 25, 2026
Colleges across the country – from Syracuse University to Dartmouth College to the University of Minnesota – have inked similar deals with AI companies, but as the largest public four-year system in the U.S., the CSU’s partnership stands out.
The U.S. Education Department fired thousands of workers. Now, it’s on a hiring spree
NPR – May 21, 2026
Plans to close the U.S. Department of Education have run headlong into an awkward reality: The agency does important work that still needs doing. After losing roughly half its staff in last year’s big reduction-in-force, the department’s student loan office is in a hiring boom. The Office of Federal Student Aid (FSA) is adding around 380 new workers, according to internal documents obtained by NPR.
How to make the most of your high school senior’s last summer before collegePost – May 20, 2026
College Advice & Timely Tips with Lee Bierer
Meeting your students where they are: How social media can help
ACCIS AdmitAll Blog – May 21, 2026
Working with teenagers means being up-to-date with social media trends that have caught their attention. From TikTok dances to meme trends, finding ways to meet students where they are is a great way to showcase a school’s college counseling program while also having fun with colleagues.
A New Digital Divide: College Search in the Age of Social Media
The 74 – May 27, 2026
Depending on the algorithms, students can receive helpful information on admissions or a steady diet of college-bashing posts.
How to Find a College That Prioritizes Student Mental Health
U.S. News & World Report – May 21, 2026
Pointers on making the most of campus tours and developing necessary soft skills for college.
Seizing the Summer Before Senior Year
U.S. News & World Report – May 21, 2026
The summer before senior year of high school can feel daunting because of the outside pressure to be the most productive in your college search. As a recent college graduate, I’m here to give some pointers on making the most of the school break – and not letting it be consumed by the college process.
How Mandatory College Fees Like SMU’s $8,080 Catch Families Off Guard
The College Investor – May 26, 2026
Buried in the fine print, the mandatory student fee can add $1,000, $4,000, or even $8,000 to the annual bill before housing and food. These are the costs that make true apples-to-apples comparisons between schools almost impossible without a spreadsheet. But why not just roll these into tuition and not surprise families? Well, several forces push schools to keep these charges separate.
How Much Student Loan Debt Can You Afford Calculator
The College Investor – May 21, 1989
Paying for college often means borrowing student loans, but families rarely get a clear picture of how much debt is reasonable before committing. A new interactive calculator aims to close that gap. The tool goes beyond simple loan estimates by linking borrowing amounts to projected earnings after graduation, to determine if debt load will be manageable.
The ‘sibling discount’ is gone: How families with multiple college students can navigate college funding gaps
SunHerald – May 26, 2026
The change was designed to level the playing field for families who have multiple children without overlapping years in college, but it’s a drawback for those with multiple children in college at the same time. Here’s what the parents we surveyed had to say about how they navigated the problem.
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Teens need to press pause on late-night doomscrolling
CNN – May 26, 2026
Teens’ glued-to-their-phone habits are turning many of them into night owls on school nights — at a time when they need all the sleep they can get. But more than half of teens in the United States are spending up to an hour or more on their phone between the hours of 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. on school nights…
Surgeon General Advisory Wants Kids to Live ‘Beyond the Confines of Screens’
EdSurge – May 21, 2026
The U.S. Surgeon General’s office issued a warning yesterday about the harms of extended uses of screens on children, raising concerns about its impact on academic performance, physical health and mental well-being. It also urges schools to teach digital citizenship and digital literacy along with offering students social and physical activities that don’t involve screens.
Autistic students who make it through college face a bigger challenge: getting jobs
The Hechinger Report – May 24, 2026
Today’s college graduates are entering one of the tightest job markets in years, and the market is even tougher for young adults with autism, who have long had one of the highest rates of joblessness among individuals with disabilities. To help, some colleges are offering career-readiness classes and one-on-one career coaching; some are also working with employers, Some major corporations have also stepped up, forming partnerships with colleges to recruit neurodivergent students for internships and jobs. Still, only around 150 colleges have autism support programs, and only a subset of them provide job preparation.
How schools are using AI and VR to train the next generation of nurses
PBS News – May 26, 2026
There’s real concern about the growing prevalence of the use of artificial intelligence and other technologies in higher education. But some schools have found benefits as well. In the case of nursing programs, more and more are integrating immersive technologies like generative AI and virtual reality into their curricula
VR Gives North Dakota Kids an Early Career Jump Start
EdSurge – May 20, 2026
In North Dakota, the virtual reality program works directly with employers in the state in an effort to bring awareness to careers and fields students may be unfamiliar with or have misconceptions about. Because the state is largely rural, students’ face significant travel hurdles to visit job sites that could be several hours away.




