Walk into most Indian schools and ask: "Can I speak with the career counsellor?" The most common response is still being directed to a subject teacher who has been informally designated to "handle career guidance" without specific training, tools, or time allocated to the role.

The gap between what Indian students need and what schools currently provide is one of the most significant unmet needs in Indian education. Over 1.4 million secondary schools serve approximately 200 million students in Classes 6–12. The number of qualified school career counsellors is estimated at under 20,000 — a ratio of 1 to 10,000 or worse.

For trained career counsellors, this gap represents a profession with near-unlimited demand. This guide maps the requirements, realistic compensation, and practical pathways into school career counselling in India.

The Role of a School Career Counsellor: What It Actually Involves

First, it is important to distinguish between two overlapping but distinct roles that Indian schools conflate:

School Counsellor (general): Provides social-emotional support, mental health first aid, and personal guidance to students. Requires psychological training.

Career Counsellor (specialist): Provides career exploration, subject-to-career pathway guidance, university application support, and career readiness programmes. Can be provided by non-psychologists with specific career training.

Many schools want one person to do both. The realistic scope, particularly in understaffed schools, is a blend. Being clear about your training and role boundaries is important for professional ethics.

In a well-resourced school, effective career counselling includes:

  • One-on-one career exploration sessions (typically starting in Class 8–9)
  • Group career guidance programmes (classroom sessions, career exploration weeks)
  • University application support (particularly for students targeting domestic competitive exams, UK, US, Canada, Australia)
  • Parent information sessions (helping families understand new-age careers)
  • Career assessments (interest inventories, aptitude screenings)
  • Alumni engagement (connecting current students with alumni working in various fields)
  • External visitor programmes (industry professionals visiting school)

The counsellor role is both direct service (student sessions) and programme management.

CBSE Requirements and Guidelines

The Central Board of Secondary Education issued a circular in 2018 acknowledging the importance of counselling in schools and encouraging affiliated schools to appoint trained counsellors. Key points from the guidelines:

  • Schools with 500+ students are encouraged to appoint full-time counsellors
  • Suggested minimum qualification: Master's degree in Psychology or Social Work, or equivalent with counselling training
  • CBSE itself runs a Telemanaskan helpline and periodic counselling training for teachers
  • CBSE guidelines for Kendriya Vidyalayas (central government schools) specify more detailed requirements

The practical reality: CBSE's guidelines are advisory, not mandatory with enforcement. Many affiliated schools do not comply. This means that schools with forward-thinking management are the opportunity — and demonstrating the value of career counselling to sceptical school leaders is often the first sales job a new school counsellor must do.

State Board Requirements

Requirements vary significantly by state:

Delhi (Directorate of Education): Has an established school counselling programme, with counsellors in government schools. Positions require a postgraduate degree in psychology.

Maharashtra: Some government schools have counsellors; private school requirements vary. Specific Maharashtra state training programmes exist.

Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Kerala: Growing awareness of school counselling but limited mandated requirements at government level.

International schools (IB World Schools): The International Baccalaureate requires trained counsellors as part of school authorisation. This is one of the few settings in India where a clear minimum standard is enforced.

Qualification Pathways for School Career Counsellors

IGNOU Certificate in Guidance and Counselling (CGAC)

The most accessible and widely recognised qualification specifically for school counsellors in India.

Programme details:

  • Duration: 1 year (distance learning)
  • Cost: Approximately ₹15,000–20,000
  • Eligibility: Graduate degree in any discipline
  • Curriculum: Educational guidance, career guidance, personal counselling skills, assessment basics, group counselling
  • Delivery: Study materials + contact sessions + practical work

Who it suits: Teachers moving into counselling roles, graduates who want to enter school counselling affordably, professionals looking to formalise informal counselling experience.

Limitation: Not sufficient alone for premium private schools or international schools. Works best as a foundation credential layered with additional training.

Jamia Millia Islamia Diploma in Guidance and Counselling

A one-year postgraduate diploma from a central university, more intensive than IGNOU's certificate and carrying stronger institutional recognition.

Cost: Very affordable for a central university programme (fees under ₹20,000) Eligibility: Graduate in any discipline Strong for: Government school positions in Delhi and NCR region

University of Delhi M.A. in Guidance and Counselling

For those wanting a full postgraduate qualification specifically in this domain:

  • 2-year full-time M.A.
  • Strong theoretical foundation
  • Limited intake — competitive admission

B.Ed Supplemented with Career Guidance Training

Many school counsellors enter through the B.Ed pathway (teacher training) and supplement with:

  • IGNOU CGAC
  • Short courses from NIMHANS, TISS, or private providers
  • ICF coaching certification
  • Dheya mentor certification (provides career-specific training and platform access)

International School Pathway: Additional Requirements

For IB World Schools and Cambridge schools (typically paying the highest salaries), additional credentials are valued:

  • ASCA School Counselor Competencies training (American School Counselor Association framework, increasingly adopted by international schools)
  • CDI UK Level 4 or Level 6 in Career Guidance (for UK curriculum schools)
  • College Board AP Counsellor training (for schools offering US curriculum tracks)
  • MCC Mark (UK) for schools with significant UK university placement programmes

The ASCA Model Adapted for India

The American School Counselor Association (ASCA) National Model provides a comprehensive framework for school counselling programmes that is increasingly referenced by premium Indian schools:

Four components:

  1. Foundation — defining the programme's mission, vision, and beliefs
  2. Management — use-of-time recommendations (counsellors should spend 80% of time in direct student services)
  3. Delivery — direct (individual counselling, group work, classroom guidance) and indirect services (consultation, collaboration, referral)
  4. Accountability — measuring programme outcomes

ASCA counsellor-to-student ratios: ASCA recommends 1:250. Indian schools are typically at 1:500–5,000+ where counsellors exist at all. International schools in India aim for 1:300–400.

The ASCA model is not mandated in India but provides a useful evidence-based structure for building a school counselling programme and demonstrating its value to school management.

Realistic Salary Expectations

Honest salary data is critical for career planning. Here is what the market actually pays:

Government schools (where positions exist):

  • Entry level: ₹25,000–35,000/month
  • Mid-level: ₹35,000–50,000/month
  • Benefits: Job security, pension, school holidays
  • Limitation: Limited positions, competitive entry, slow advancement

Private CBSE/ICSE schools (mid-segment):

  • Entry level (IGNOU + some experience): ₹25,000–40,000/month
  • With 3+ years experience: ₹40,000–65,000/month
  • Senior counsellor/HOD: ₹65,000–90,000/month
  • Benefits: Typically 12-month salary, school holidays

Premium private schools (CBSE/ISC):

  • Entry with strong credentials: ₹45,000–70,000/month
  • Experienced counsellor: ₹70,000–1,00,000/month
  • Head of Counselling: ₹1,00,000–1,50,000/month
  • Benefits: Often includes health insurance, professional development funding

International schools (IB/Cambridge):

  • Entry level: ₹60,000–90,000/month
  • Experienced counsellor: ₹90,000–1,50,000/month
  • Head of Guidance: ₹1,50,000–2,50,000/month
  • Often includes school fee concessions for counsellor's children

Freelance/visiting counsellor model: An alternative to full-time employment is working as a visiting career counsellor for 3–5 schools, charging ₹30,000–80,000 per school per month for a set number of sessions. This model can yield ₹1.5–4 lakh per month for experienced practitioners with strong school relationships — significantly more than full-time employment.

How to Get Your First School Position

For Entry-Level Candidates

  1. Complete IGNOU CGAC or equivalent while building your profile
  2. Volunteer with a school or NGO providing career guidance — practical experience matters more than certificates alone
  3. Build a portfolio documenting any guidance work: workshops conducted, students helped, assessments administered
  4. Target progressive schools — schools with international affiliations, active parent communities, or expansion plans are more receptive to investing in counselling
  5. Network through teachers — your existing connections to teachers are referral pathways to school leadership

For Experienced Professionals

If you bring corporate HR, psychology practice, or teaching experience, position your value proposition clearly:

  • Corporate HR professionals: Emphasise your knowledge of how hiring actually works and your industry connections for student exposure
  • Psychologists: Emphasise your assessment training and mental health first aid capability
  • Teachers: Emphasise your student relationship skills and classroom management in group counselling contexts

The Visiting Counsellor Model as a Starting Point

Many practitioners find it easier to start as a visiting career counsellor for 1–2 schools while building their practice. A school that cannot afford a full-time counsellor may enthusiastically contract a visiting counsellor for 2 days per week at ₹25,000–40,000/month.

This model allows you to:

  • Build your school counselling portfolio while earning
  • Understand what schools actually need before committing to full-time
  • Develop a scalable model (multiple schools) rather than being limited to one employer's salary ceiling

Building Your School Counselling Programme

When you enter a school, you will likely find minimal systems in place. Building from scratch is the norm. A structured approach:

Year 1: Foundation

  • Establish confidentiality protocols and referral pathways
  • Introduce yourself to all classes (visibility matters enormously)
  • Administer baseline career interest assessments (Class 9 and 11 are typically the priority)
  • Begin one-on-one sessions with students who approach or are referred

Year 2: Programme Development

  • Design a curriculum-based career guidance programme (one session per month per class, minimum)
  • Launch parent information evenings on career pathways
  • Establish a resource library (books, career databases, alumni profiles)
  • Build alumni engagement system

Year 3: Scale and Evidence

  • Measure outcomes (student satisfaction, placement outcomes, stream selection quality)
  • Present data to school leadership to demonstrate value
  • Seek additional resources (assessment tools, database subscriptions, conference attendance)
  • Begin mentoring younger students or teacher-counsellors

The Dheya platform provides career assessment tools specifically designed for school settings, including the NCDAP-powered student assessment system that school counsellors can deploy across an entire student cohort efficiently.

[Join Dheya as a Mentor →] to access school-specific assessment tools and connect with India's largest network of career guidance professionals.