
Washtenaw Career Technical Education (CTE)
What is CTE?
Washtenaw County is committed to providing a world-class education for all students – an education that equips students with the tools, opportunities, and agency to explore and create their own path for success.
That’s why, starting in preschool and continuing through high school, we offer applied and experiential learning opportunities that give students the chance to learn by doing. Through this approach, we unlock a world of discovery for students. They gain real-world skills connected to high-wage, high-skill, and in-demand careers and industries, and they also learn about what brings them joy and inspiration. Career Technical Education (CTE) is at the heart of this mission.
Our CTE programs are a launchpad for discovery, where learning is active, industry-connected, and designed to inspire the next generation of professionals. We believe that no matter where they are, students should be able to explore their purpose, passions, and potential through hands-on experiences, real-world opportunities, and pathways that lead to college and career success.
For students, CTE is where learning comes alive through hands-on projects, work-based learning, and industry-connected experiences. For Washtenaw County, CTE shapes and strengthens the workforce and economy. Students graduate with confidence and an informed postsecondary plan on their way to becoming the next generation of skilled workers, creators, and leaders.
CTE gives students a sense of fulfillment and purpose, and cultivates a lifelong love of learning. It puts students at the forefront of innovation. Through Washtenaw County’s CTE programs, we have a chance to prepare students for college and careers, while also helping them connect to their communities, solve problems, and become engaged citizens.
Current Programs
Washtenaw County currently offers more than 70 state-approved high school CTE programs housed in local high schools across four districts/consortia:
— Ann Arbor
— Whitmore Lake
— Ypsilanti
— South & West Washtenaw Consortium (representing Chelsea, Dexter, Lincoln, Manchester, Milan, and Saline)
These local districts/consortia run their CTE programs independently from one another, both from a funding and operations perspective.
Why Does CTE Matter to Washtenaw County?
CTE sparks students’ curiosity, discovery, and connection to the real world
Across Washtenaw County, CTE gets our students excited about learning – this is every educator’s goal and every student’s hope. With CTE, our students understand why they’re learning what they’re learning. By offering students innovative, hands-on learning experiences early, students can discover new, practical interests and explore what energizes and motivates them. When students are passionate about what they are learning and can connect it to the world around them, they are more engaged in school.
CTE integrates and enhances traditional academic concepts. For example, students learn math and physics in the classroom that they can apply as they design, build, and fly drones in their engineering CTE program. Other students enrolled in the health sciences CTE program have opportunities to directly connect their biology courses to patient care. All levels of rigor—standard, honors, dual enrollment, and Advanced Placement (AP)—are seamlessly blended and represented in Washtenaw’s CTE programs. This gives all students a competitive advantage as they consider their college and career paths.
CTE also helps students refine the intangible, human skills necessary to be productive, valued, and engaged, not only in the workforce, but also in their community. Real-world projects, internships, work-based learning, and CTE student organization competitions support development of leadership, critical thinking, problem-solving, communication, and teamwork skills.
To put it simply, this leads to meaningful, lasting impacts for our students:
- CTE builds curious, lifelong learners who think critically, embrace innovation, and solve problems creatively.
- CTE reinforces the interpersonal skills students need to communicate and collaborate effectively at work, at home, and in their community.
- CTE teaches students the importance of time management, work ethic, and attention to detail, all skills that easily transfer across projects, jobs, and pathways.
CTE helps students confidently plan for college, careers, and lifelong success
CTE has drastically evolved as the world has changed over the past decade. When Washtenaw students can access CTE programs, they have opportunities to earn certifications, college credits, and hands-on experiences – the first step to lucrative, fulfilling, and future-focused careers in engineering, business, healthcare, technology, and more. CTE students thrive because CTE launches them toward high-wage, high-skill, in-demand careers.
- Michigan CTE students achieve a higher median annual income across all levels of education attainment when compared to non-CTE students. (Source: Median Annual Wages by Educational Attainment and High School CTE Status, 2024)
- 86% of Washtenaw CTE students enroll in college after high school graduation. (Source: Washtenaw County CTEIS Report, 2025)
- 77.5% of students who complete at least one state-approved CTE program reported that they were using the skills learned in their CTE programs for postsecondary education or in their current job following high school.
Through CTE, students gain a competitive advantage by more effectively:
- building technical and soft skills through hands-on learning and industry and postsecondary partnerships.
- earning industry-recognized credentials, certificates, and/or dual enrollment or articulated college credits connected to in-demand fields. This saves them time and money after graduation.
- graduating with confidence and more clarity about where they want to go and how they’ll get there.
We can’t afford to have a student approach the stage at high school graduation and say, “I’m great at math, but I don’t know what I’m going to do with it.” We can’t afford to have a student graduate saying, “I don’t know what I want to be.” We want all of our graduates to have an informed postsecondary plan, and CTE and applied learning experiences are how we do that. Whether college, a skilled trade apprenticeship, entrepreneurship, or a direct pathway into the workforce, our students deserve to be prepared for what’s next after high school.
CTE strengthens our businesses and communities
Today, careers and industries are constantly changing and require a rapidly evolving set of skills. With access to CTE programs, students are given hands-on experiences in industry-based settings that build their skills so they can meet and exceed those industry demands and contribute to our economy.
Our deep partnerships with local industries offer students mentorships, internships, and real-world learning opportunities that prepare them for the future. These partnerships shape our local industries and strengthen the future workforce by creating a strong talent pipeline for local industries.
Our Collective Vision for the Future
Over the last several years, local education leaders have worked with business and industry partners to identify a path forward together. In Washtenaw County, we’re working toward our vision where all students can explore their passion, purpose, and potential. That means we will:
- Eliminate gaps in CTE access and provide every student with the opportunity to immerse themselves in innovative learning opportunities;
- Increase student engagement at an early age, using CTE as a launchpad for early discovery;
- Increase the number of students who are curious, skilled, and confident about their next steps after graduation;
- Increase the number of students earning college credits and industry-recognized certifications on their way to college or career; and
- Shape the future workforce in our community.
Let’s reimagine a Washtenaw student’s education journey:
Here's what it looks like when we expand access to engaging, hands-on CTE experiences that foster curiosity, build skills, and set students up to thrive in college and career.
PreK - Wonder
Children utilize play and imagination, sparking curiosity about how the world works.
Grades K-5 - Awareness
Students discover personal interests and a sense of self, expanding their view of what is possible.
Grades 6-8 - Exploration
Students explore their interests and skills, and match them to potential careers pathways.
Grades 9-12 - Preparation
Students connect academic content to careers through real-world, applied and experiential learning and plan for their future.
Graduate with Confidence
Students have a plan for postsecondary success, leading to college, an apprenticeship or career training program, military enlistment, or directly into the workforce.
Washtenaw CTE in the News
- Ann Arbor Homebuilding students build a house in a school year (Concentrate, 5/28/25)
- Saline manufacturing students create adaptive tools to help people with disabilities (Concentrate, 5/22/25)
- Washtenaw CTE students are "powerhouse" achievers (Concentrate, 5/21/25)
- WISD CTE Summit unites education, industry, and community leaders (WISD Press Release, 3/21/25)
- Dr. Ryan Rowe addresses the Ypsilanti Community Schools Board of Education (WEMU, 2/11/25)
Meet Our WISD Team
Ryan Rowe, Ph.D.
CTE Director & CEPD 43/Region 23 Administrator
(734) 994-8100, ext. 1575
Email Ryan
Charlie Jones
CTE Data Entry & Reporting Specialist
(734) 994-8100, ext. 5113
Email Charlie
Andrew Munson, APR
Communications Specialist
(734) 994-8100, ext. 1571
Email Andrew
Marshaun Brooks
Coordinator of Career Technical Education
(734) 994-8100, ext. 1571
Email Marshaun
Eric Jackson
Coordinator of Career Technical Education, Work-Based Learning
(734) 994-8100, ext. 1572
Email Eric
Jackson Greenstone
Coordinator of Career Technical Education, Special Populations
(734) 994-8100, ext. 1573
Email Jackson
Elette Collins, MBA
CTE Grants Manager & Region 9 Fiscal Agent Coordinator for Adult Education
(734) 994-8100, ext. 1210
Email Elette
Local District CTE Directors
Tom Pachera
Ann Arbor Public Schools
Email Tom
Kara Stemmer
South & West Washtenaw Consortium
Email Kara
Jen Taylor
Whitmore Lake Public Schools
Email Jen
Zuqueta Brown
Ypsilanti Community Schools
Email Zuqueta