A key component of student health and wellbeing is mental health. The rates of diagnosable mental health concerns among students are high-the lifetime prevalence for at least 1 mental health disorder was nearly 50% in a large, nationally representative sample of adolescents from 2010, 1 and prevalence has increased among school-age children and adolescents in recent years. 2 Notably, only about half of youth with mental health concerns receive treatment, 3,4 and rates of treatment receipt are lower among marginalized or low-income youth. 3,5 When children and adolescents do receive mental health treatment, they frequently access these services through their preK-12 schools. [6][7][8] Compared to clinic-based settings, schools offer many advantages for mental health service provision, including promoting access to care and reducing stigma 9 particularly within underresourced settings. 10 Unfortunately, there are significant implementation challenges to the uptake and delivery, as well as the study, of mental health services within schools. The primary mission of schools is academic education, and many schools, particularly those serving marginalized or low-income students, frequently lack the resources to achieve their academic mission. As a result, there are often limited resources left to deliver mental health services, especially if they are not directly aligned with the schools' academic mission. 9 Furthermore, schoolbased mental health practitioners face multilevel