Instructional Coordinator Career

instructional-coordinator-5Instructional Coordinators help set the requirements for a specific course. These are the people who decided that you should learn multiplication in the 3rd or 4th grade, or that maybe Spanish 101 shouldn’t start with expecting students to be able to translate “El Cid” immediately.

However, it is not just school districts that employ Instructional Coordinators. A number of companies earn money by training and teaching adults, and they too need Instructional Coordinators to help set curricula and make sure that needs are being met.

Instructional Coordinators work a typical 9 to 5, just as you might expect. However, do not think that just because they work in education that they will be getting the summer off. It is during the off months that Instructional Coordinators are working to be sure that everything matches up, as well as attending conferences across the country.

Instructional Coordinator Career Snapshot

Further details on a career as a instructional coordinator are listed below (statistics from the May 2015 Bureau of Labor Statistics and Onet Online):

$62,270

is the average salary for instructional coordinators.

7%

increase in employment between 2014 and 2024.

73%

have a Master’s degree while 20% have a Post-master’s certificate.

Instructional Coordinator Education

The vast majority of Instructional Coordinator positions require a Master’s degree in education, specifically Instruction and Curriculum Design. Some larger employers will hire more specialized coordinators, but these too are required to have a Master’s degree in a specific field.

Also, be advised that some Master’s programs prefer to see applicants with a teaching qualification, so as to ensure that their graduates will better understand the teaching profession.

Instructional Coordinator Job Duties

At their most basic level, Instructional Coordinators work to help design and improve curricula. This could mean helping kindergarten teachers better teach reading, or helping an auto shop teacher find a better way to explain valve covers to his students. It is not just about designing and improving, however. Instructional Coordinators work with colleagues from across the state and around the country to find best practices to be sure that they are finding the best way possible to help teachers to teach.

Instructional Coordinator Salaries

While demand for Instructional Coordinators may be a bit lower than demand for all educational positions, the pay is significantly higher. With a 2015 median pay of $62,270 according to the BLS.gov, Instructional Coordinators make nearly $15,000 more per year than the average for all education positions. Do not expect to get too wealthy as an Instructional Coordinator, however – the top 10% in the profession make $97,770, and those tend to be employed by private companies.

Instructional Coordinator Job Outlook

Like other jobs in the education sector, demand for Instructional Coordinators is expected to continue to grow over the next ten years. While the rate of 7% for Instructional Coordinators is a bit slower than the 8% for all educational positions, it is faster than the 6% for all new job growth.

Instructional Coordinator Skills & Traits

Instructional Coordinator Skill Set:Required Abilities:Tools Used by Instructional Coordinator:Typical Work Activities:
• Reading Comprehension
• Speaking
• Learning Strategies
• Writing
• Active Learning
• Written Comprehension
• Oral Comprehension
• Oral Expression
• Written Expression
• Deductive Reasoning
• Smartphones
• MP3 players
• Laptop computers
• Photocopying equipment
• Interactive whiteboards
• Communicating with Others
• Training/Teaching Others
• Getting Information
• Monitor Processes
• Using Relavant Knowledge

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