Narrative language abilities are among the strongest predictors of academic achievement and social communication. Accordingly, speech-language pathologists routinely assess and treat narrative skills in ways considered best suited to help students navigate the demands of the school environment. While this approach is important and necessary, research from narrative psychology and philosophy suggests that narrative language (storytelling) serves broader purposes that extend beyond academic and social competence. The goal of this project is to gain a better understanding of school-based SLPs’ perspectives on these broader purposes, including self-authorship, meaning-making, narrative identity, moral imagination, and character development. We created a short educational video that introduces these broader purposes, along with a survey with Likert-scale questions for pre- and post-video self-reflection. SLPs were asked to evaluate their familiarity with and understanding of the expanded vision, and to offer their thoughts on whether they find this vision relevant and attainable in their work. Data collection is in progress. We expect the content to resonate positively with SLPs and their current practices, despite it being somewhat new for some. SLP input about feasibility and barriers to implementation will shape future efforts to support the broader purposes of narrative in their work.