Donna Rain-O

Donna Rain-O'Dell

Location: westmoreland county, pennsylvania (just east of pittsburgh)
No additional information available.

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As the school year winds down, maintaining student engagement can become increasingly challenging—especially for early-service CTE instructors. Schedules shift, motivation dips, and students begin looking ahead to summer. However, this time of year also presents an opportunity to reinforce skills, celebrate growth, and create meaningful, hands-on experiences that keep learning relevant.

The key isn’t to overhaul your instruction—it’s to be intentional.

High-quality resources can help instructors refresh lessons, introduce new strategies, and maintain momentum without adding unnecessary stress. Whether it’s project-based learning ideas, real-world applications, or quick engagement strategies, having a toolkit of support can make all the difference in… >>>

Career and Technical Student Organizations (CTSOs) are a defining component of CTE—but for many early-service instructors, they can feel like just another box to check.

A meeting here. A competition there. Maybe a bulletin board.

But CTSOs were never meant to live on the sidelines.

They are designed to extend learning, develop leadership, and connect students to real-world skills in meaningful ways. When integrated well, CTSOs aren’t separate from your program—they are your program in action.

The shift happens when CTSOs move from “events” to “experiences.”

Leadership activities become classroom roles. Competitive events become project-based assessments. Meetings become opportunities for… >>>

As spring break approaches and the end of the school year comes into view, even the most engaged classrooms can start to feel different. Energy shifts. Focus drifts. Routines get tested.

For early-service CTE instructors, this time of year can be especially challenging.

But this stretch of the year also offers opportunity.

It’s a chance to reset expectations, re-engage students with hands-on work, and finish strong. Classroom management in the spring isn’t about tightening control—it’s about maintaining consistency, relationships, and purpose.

Students still need structure. They still need relevance. And they still need to know that what they’re doing matters.… >>>

For many early-service CTE instructors, NOCTI can feel like just another requirement to “get through.” But when approached intentionally, it becomes much more than a test—it’s a tool for validating student learning, strengthening program credibility, and aligning instruction to industry standards.

NOCTI isn’t just about the score. It’s about what the score represents.

When students understand the purpose behind the exam, they begin to take ownership. When instructors use the data, instruction becomes more targeted. And when programs highlight results, it reinforces the value of CTE pathways.

Preparation doesn’t have to mean test drills. It can mean reinforcing skills, making… >>>

One of the greatest strengths of CTE is that learning doesn’t have to stay inside four walls. Work-based learning (WBL) bridges the gap between classroom instruction and career readiness—but for new instructors, expanding into the community can feel overwhelming.

Partnerships, job shadows, internships, clinicals, guest speakers, school-based enterprises, service projects—there are many entry points. The key is remembering that work-based learning doesn’t have to start big. It starts with connection.

When students see their skills valued beyond the classroom, engagement rises. Confidence grows. Programs gain visibility. And instructors build relationships that strengthen curriculum relevance.

Work-based learning isn’t an “extra.” It’s… >>>

Industry certifications can be a powerful motivator in CTE programs. They provide students with tangible proof of skill, strengthen employability, and align programs with workforce needs. But certifications can also become stressful—for both instructors and students—if they turn into a single high-stakes moment rather than part of a larger learning journey.

For early service instructors, certifications often raise big questions:

How do I prepare students without “teaching to the test”?

How do I build confidence in students who doubt themselves? How do I track progress and celebrate growth along the way?

When approached intentionally, certifications aren’t just about passing an… >>>

Comment on Lise Rich's post: I completely understand where you're coming from, Lise!  We have TEN sending school districts, and of course they are all different schedules with different testing windows.  Definitely a good idea to focus on industry certification prep.  This is where MTSS can fit nicely into the CTE classroom - Focusing on individual needs and reteaching.

Thank you so much for sharing your responses to the questions!  I am glad the leadership roles seemed to spark your interest. We are always here to help!

January through early spring can feel like the longest stretch of the school year. The newness has worn off, routines feel stale, and students who were once engaged may start pushing boundaries, zoning out, or testing patience. In CTE classrooms and labs—where energy, focus, and teamwork matter—this “mid-year slump” can show up as off-task behavior, low motivation, or declining pride in work.

Rather than pushing harder with the same strategies, this season is often a signal to reset. Small shifts—new roles, fresh challenges, short-term goals, or student voice—can re-energize a class without overhauling everything. Sometimes it’s about revisiting why the… >>>

Snow days, weather closures, power outages, or unexpected virtual days are becoming part of the new normal — but in Career & Technical Education, remote learning presents unique challenges because so much of what we do is hands-on.

This week’s question: When you have to shift to remote or virtual learning, what strategies do you use to keep instruction meaningful for students?

Consider sharing:

  • What types of activities work well in your program area
  • How you keep students engaged without access to tools/equipment
  • Ways you balance flexibility with accountability
  • Lessons you’ve learned since the pandemic
  • Any “go-to” virtual plans
  • >>>

When supporting early-service CTE instructors, having access to high-quality, relevant resources can make a meaningful difference. Websites such as ACTE’s CTE Learn and Advance CTE offer CTE-specific professional learning, webinars, and practical tools that help new teachers strengthen instruction, navigate systems, and build confidence over time. Resources from the National Mentoring Resource Center and the New Teacher Center provide research-based frameworks for mentoring, coaching, and relationship-building—useful for anyone designing or refining support structures for new educators. Platforms like Teaching Channel and Edutopia offer accessible videos, articles, and peer-shared strategies that can spark reflection, normalize challenges, and encourage professional growth. Together,… >>>

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