TITLE:
Leadership against Standards Conflation: A CTC-Based Framework for Differentiating CTE and Adult Education Preparation
AUTHORS:
Viktor Wang
KEYWORDS:
Standards Conflation, CTC Program Standards, Designated Subjects CTE, Designated Subjects Adult Education, Standards-to-Evidence Alignment
JOURNAL NAME:
Open Journal of Leadership,
Vol.15 No.1,
January
26,
2026
ABSTRACT: This article argues that effective leadership in educator preparation requires resisting “standards conflation” between the California Commission on Teacher Credentialing (CTC) Designated Subjects Career Technical Education (CTE) and Designated Subjects Adult Education pathways. Anchored in the author’s experience with CSULB’s longstanding nine-unit preparation models (dating to 1949), the analysis explains how conflation can blur competency claims, weaken standards-to-evidence alignment, and increase student risk through unclear advising, inconsistent assessment, and procedurally vulnerable program documentation. Using CSULB as an illustrative case, the article shows how a single institution can sustain two distinct designated-subject credential programs while maintaining coherent governance, candidate support, and continuous improvement. It then proposes a leadership-facing framework for compliance and program integrity: maintaining separate standards maps and evidence sets for CTE and Adult Education; permitting shared “foundations” only when supported by an explicit, documented crosswalk; formalizing governance, approval pathways, and teach-out/transition protections; and institutionalizing a standing advisory process to prevent ad hoc substitutions. The contribution is practical, offering a defensible, student-centered approach to aligning curriculum, assessment, and documentation with CTC expectations while preserving the distinct purposes and outcomes of CTE and Adult Education preparation.