CTE Jobs: Career Opportunities in Career and Technical Education
Explore CTE jobs including CTE coordinator, CTE director, CTE specialist, and CTE administrator roles. Salaries, requirements, and how to get started.

What Are CTE Jobs?
CTE jobs are career and technical education positions in school districts, state agencies, community colleges, and workforce development organizations. These roles support the programs that prepare students for careers in fields like healthcare, technology, manufacturing, agriculture, and skilled trades.
The field is broad. CTE jobs range from classroom instructors and program coordinators to district-level administrators and state directors who oversee entire CTE systems. If you want to work in education but have industry expertise in a technical field — or if you're already an educator who wants to move into CTE leadership — there are clear pathways into these roles.
This guide covers the main CTE job titles, what each role involves, typical salaries, and what qualifications you'll need to compete for them.
CTE Teacher / Instructor
The foundation of CTE is the classroom. CTE teachers instruct students in specific career clusters — healthcare science, information technology, construction trades, culinary arts, automotive technology, and many others. Unlike academic subject teachers, CTE instructors are typically hired for their industry experience first and their teaching credentials second.
Most states have alternative certification pathways for CTE teachers with industry backgrounds. A licensed electrician with 5+ years of experience can often qualify to teach electrical trades through a vocational license or career and technical certificate even without a traditional education degree.
Typical salary: $45,000-$75,000, with significant variation by state and district. States with strong demand for CTE instructors — particularly in healthcare and IT — often offer competitive salaries and signing incentives.
Requirements: Industry experience relevant to the subject area, plus state-specific CTE teaching credentials. Some states require a bachelor's degree; others do not for industry-based CTE licensure.
CTE Coordinator
The CTE coordinator role sits between classroom instruction and district administration. A CTE coordinator manages multiple CTE programs within a school or district — handling curriculum alignment, instructor support, work-based learning partnerships, industry advisory committees, and compliance reporting.
It's a hybrid role. Coordinators spend time in classrooms supporting teachers, time with business partners developing internship and apprenticeship opportunities, and time in front of computers handling data reporting requirements under the Perkins V Act (the federal law governing CTE funding).
If you enjoy both the programmatic side of education and direct relationship-building with industry partners, CTE coordinator is a highly engaging role. It's also a common stepping stone to CTE director positions.
Typical salary: $55,000-$85,000 depending on district size and responsibility scope
Requirements: CTE teaching or industry experience plus administrative experience. Many coordinators hold a master's degree in education leadership or a related field, though it's not universally required. The CTE pathways guide explains the program structures coordinators are typically responsible for managing.
CTE Director
CTE directors lead the career and technical education program for an entire school district or multi-district region. The director position involves strategic oversight — developing program offerings, managing budgets (including federal Perkins V grants), hiring and supervising coordinators and instructors, and representing CTE programs to school boards and community stakeholders.
CTE director positions are competitive, typically requiring significant prior CTE experience at the coordinator or assistant director level plus formal education leadership credentials.
Typical salary: $75,000-$120,000+, with larger districts at the higher end
Requirements: Master's degree in education administration or CTE, plus substantial experience in CTE coordination or teaching. Many states require a district-level administrative license for this role.
CTE Administrator
The term "CTE administrator" is used somewhat interchangeably with CTE director in smaller districts but can also refer to specific administrative roles supporting a CTE department — managing budgets, facilities, equipment procurement, and data systems. In larger districts with multiple CTE campuses, there may be site-level administrators who report to a district CTE director.
CTE admin roles that focus on compliance and grant management (Perkins V reporting, data collection, accountability) are distinct from instructional leadership roles — they require attention to federal regulatory requirements and data accuracy rather than pedagogical expertise.
CTE Specialist
CTE specialist positions typically sit at the district, regional education agency, or state level. Specialists focus on a particular aspect of CTE — curriculum development, work-based learning, industry certification alignment, or a specific career cluster area like STEM or healthcare. They provide technical assistance to schools and teachers rather than managing day-to-day programs.
State department of education CTE specialist roles tend to be highly competitive — the pool is small, salaries are reasonable, and the work offers variety across many districts and programs.
Typical salary: $55,000-$90,000 depending on level (district vs. state) and specialization
Work-Based Learning Coordinator
Work-based learning (WBL) coordinators build and manage the connections between schools and employers — developing internships, apprenticeships, job shadow programs, and cooperative education arrangements. This is one of the most employer-facing CTE roles, requiring strong relationship-building and communication skills alongside program management ability.
With federal emphasis on WBL outcomes increasing under Perkins V, many districts have expanded these positions. If you have a background in HR, business development, or workforce development, this is a natural entry point into CTE administration without a traditional teaching background.
CTE Law Enforcement / Criminal Justice Instructor
CTE law enforcement programs prepare students for careers in public safety — policing, corrections, fire service, and emergency management. CTE law enforcement instructor positions require prior professional experience in the field (typically sworn law enforcement or corrections officer background) plus state CTE teaching credentials.
These programs have grown significantly as K-12 districts have expanded public safety career pathways. Academy-model programs that include simulation training and POST-aligned coursework are becoming more common at the high school level.
How to Find CTE Jobs
CTE job listings appear across multiple sources:
- District websites: Most school districts post openings directly on their HR or employment pages
- State department of education job boards: Many states maintain centralized educator job listing systems
- ACTE (Association for Career and Technical Education): The national CTE professional association posts leadership and specialist positions
- Indeed and LinkedIn: Useful for filtering by title (CTE coordinator, CTE director) and location
- Regional Education Service Agencies (RESAs/ESDs): These intermediate agencies often post CTE specialist and coordinator positions
Qualifications and Certifications for CTE Careers
CTE career requirements vary significantly by state and role level. A few consistent patterns:
- Teaching positions: industry experience + state CTE teaching credential (pathways vary — many states have industry-based licensure tracks)
- Coordinator/specialist: teaching or industry background + demonstrated program management experience
- Director/administrator: graduate degree in education administration + substantial CTE experience + state administrative license
Professional certifications from ACTE and participation in CTE leadership development programs (like the National Alliance for Partnerships in Equity or state CTE leadership academies) strengthen applications for competitive district and state roles.
CTE Job Salary Ranges at a Glance
- CTE Teacher/Instructor: $45,000 - $75,000
- CTE Coordinator: $55,000 - $85,000
- CTE Specialist (district/state): $55,000 - $90,000
- Work-Based Learning Coordinator: $50,000 - $80,000
- CTE Director: $75,000 - $120,000+
- State CTE Administrator: $70,000 - $110,000
About the Author
Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist
Yale Law SchoolJames R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.