You capitalize "School Counselor" when it is used as a specific title before a person's name or when referring to a specific position within a formal context. For example, "I spoke with School Counselor Jane Smith." However, when used generically, such as "The school counselor is available to help students," it should not be capitalized.
You don't capitalize it except if it is the beginning of a sentence
Some of the students at the school received advice from the guidance counselor.
Our school counselor was very diplomatic in getting the students to attend the school dance.
You do not capitalize chickenpox in a sentence. The exception is if the word is the first in the sentence.
No, you do not capitalize "first birthday" in a sentence.
You only capitalize 'deceased' if it is at the start of a sentence.
The sentence has a punctuation error, specifically a missing comma after the introductory clause "When in high school." It should read: "When in high school, your guidance counselor talked to you about career options." This comma helps clarify the structure of the sentence and improves readability.
Yes, you should capitalize the letter after a comma in a sentence.
Yes, you should capitalize the word after a comma in a sentence.
No. School district is not a proper and should only be capitalized when placed at the beginning of a sentence, such as this one.
Yes, you always capitalize a day of the week.
Yes, "Licensed Professional Counselor" is typically capitalized as it is a specific title or professional designation.