Is Education & Training a Good Job Market in Indianapolis-Carmel-Greenwood, IN?
Produced by Callings.ai on April 22, 2026
Executive Verdict
Market rating: balanced | Confidence: High
Indianapolis is a balanced market for Education & Training over the next 3-6 months: metro unemployment was 2.9% in January 2026, Education and Health Services employment was 191.1 thousand and up 2.2% year over year, and we observed more than 200 postings across more than 75 companies in the last 90 days, trending up.[2][14][15] The catch is that the opportunity set is concentrated in school-based work: about 90% of sampled postings sit in education, about 65% are entry level, and about 95% are on-site.[16][17][18] The market is easier for candidates who match district needs than for people aiming only at remote instructional design, higher-ed, or six-figure L&D jobs, and the typical active posting has been open around 50 days.[19]
Best positioned: The best-positioned candidate right now is someone open to on-site K-12 or childcare work who can show classroom management, curriculum development, and either high-needs, Special Education, or ENL experience.[18][20][21]
Main caution: Do not anchor on national six-figure training-manager pay; local posted pay centers on about $50k to $60k, and the clearest premium pay pockets are narrower roles such as leadership, Special Education, or high-needs assignments.[22][23][21]
What Changed Recently
- Education and Health Services employment in the metro reached 191.1 thousand in January 2026 and was up 2.2% year over year.[14]: That is a supportive backdrop for school, healthcare-training, and student-services hiring.
- IPS locked in a higher salary floor, with a $54,800 minimum for 2025-26 and $55,600 for 2026-27, while base raises step down from $1,510 to $2,470 in 2025-26 to $1,010 to $1,690 in 2026-27.[24][25][21]: That gives applicants a clearer floor, but it also suggests next year's pay momentum may be steadier than explosive.
- The hiring mix remains heavily local and in-person: about 95% of sampled roles were on-site, and less than 5% were hybrid.[18]: If you are holding out for remote work, you are screening yourself out of most of the current market.
- National hiring cooled even as openings held up: U.S. hires fell -9.1% year over year to 4,849 thousand in February 2026, while the job openings rate held at 4.2%.[26][27]: Locally, that usually means slower interview cycles and more selective employers, especially for corporate training or instructional design roles.
- More than 50% of districts were using AI tools during teacher hiring as of April 2026.[28]: Resume wording, keyword alignment, and clean evidence of fit matter more before a human interview happens.
What This Means for You
Entry-Level Candidates
Difficulty: Moderate if you are open to on-site work and school calendars; harder if you want remote or highly selective higher-ed roles.
Best target: On-site district, charter, or childcare roles where classroom management, lesson planning, and childcare certification show up often in postings.[20][34][18]
Biggest mistake: Applying with a general education resume and not showing concrete classroom control, planning, and student-support examples.
Next step: Make sure your resume clearly shows a bachelor's-level credential if you have one, because bachelor's degree requirements are the most common stated education bar in the local sample.[39]
Mid-Career Candidates
Difficulty: Moderate to competitive.
Best target: Special Education, ENL, high-needs school, curriculum-lead, and teacher-coach roles where IPS offers up to $3,000 in annual stipends and up to $7,000 for leadership work.[21]
Biggest mistake: Positioning yourself as a generic experienced teacher instead of as someone who solves a shortage, compliance, or leadership problem.
Next step: Rewrite your resume around student growth, curriculum implementation, intervention work, leadership assignments, and any schoolwide systems you improved.
Career Switchers
Difficulty: Competitive unless you bridge through training specialist, onboarding, or instructional-design work.
Best target: Training specialist, onboarding, and instructional-design roles tied to healthcare services or workplace learning, not just classroom-teaching jobs.[16][35][33]
Biggest mistake: Leading with subject expertise alone and not translating it into facilitation, adult learning, project work, and measurable learning outcomes.
Next step: Create two portfolio samples: one classroom lesson converted into an adult-learning module, and one AI-assisted learning asset that shows judgment rather than automation for its own sake.[37]
Salary Reality
moderate pay broad access
Observed local postings center on about $50k to $60k, with a broader band of about $45k to $65k; hourly roles center on about $16 to $19 / hour.[22][29] For a concrete local employer benchmark, IPS set minimum teacher salaries at $54,800 for 2025-26 and $55,600 for 2026-27.[24][25] Higher-end figures do exist, but they come from narrower paths such as IPS's reported $94,000 max teacher salary or national training-management roles.[30][23]
In this metro, most Education & Training pay looks solid but not outsized. The local posting center and IPS floor both sit close to Indiana's reported teacher pay benchmarks, including a $60,100 state median teacher salary and a $52,000 first-quartile average.[22][24][25][31]
The tradeoff is access versus upside: about 65% of local postings are entry level and about 95% are on-site, so the faster route to higher pay is usually through shortage areas, added duties, or management rather than simply waiting for a generic teaching role to pay more.[17][18]
Best-paying path: The strongest upside appears in leadership and workplace-learning management. IPS leadership stipends can reach $7,000, and the national median wage for training and development managers was $127,090 in May 2024.[21][23]
Caution: Do not treat six-figure manager pay or a top district max salary as typical local outcomes. The common local pay signal is still about $50k to $60k, and the evidence on corporate training, professor, and library openings is thinner than the evidence on school-based roles.[22]
Where the Opportunities Are Concentrated
Real opportunity is concentrated first in K-12 and school-adjacent work. In the local posting sample, more than 200 Education & Training jobs appeared across more than 75 companies over the last 90 days, trending up, but about 90% of them were in education and only about 10% were in healthcare services.[15][16] Hiring is fragmented rather than dominated by one employer, although Hseschools stood out with more than 30 postings, and IPS has also been signaling active teacher hiring under its 2025-27 contract.[13][32][24] That makes this a market where fit matters more than blanket application volume. About 65% of sampled roles are entry level, the most common requirement is a bachelor's degree, and the most requested skills cluster around classroom management, curriculum development, curriculum implementation, teaching, and lesson planning.[17][39][20] Smaller but still useful side doors exist in healthcare training and workplace learning, especially because metro Education and Health Services employment was up 2.2% year over year in January 2026, but local evidence for higher-ed faculty, professor, and library roles is much thinner than the evidence for school-based hiring.[14]
- K-12 district and school-support roles (high): This is the best-documented local hiring pool, led by education employers and repeated school-system demand.[15][32][16][24]
- Early childhood and childcare (moderate): This is a practical entry route with a smaller pay ceiling, and childcare certification is the clearest local certification signal in the sample.[29][34]
- Special Education, ENL, and high-needs schools (high): This is a premium pocket inside K-12 because IPS offers extra stipends for these settings.[21]
- Corporate training, instructional design, and workplace learning (moderate): These are real but thinner local paths; the best local angle is through healthcare services and employer training teams rather than a pure remote search.[16][14][35]
Where to focus: If you need a job in the next 90 days, focus first on on-site K-12 and school-support openings, then run instructional-design or workplace-learning applications as a parallel track rather than your only plan.
Skills and Credentials Worth Pursuing
- Classroom management (table stakes): It is the single most common skill signal in local postings at about 35%.[20]
- Curriculum development (differentiator): Curriculum development shows up in about 15% of local postings and pairs well with curriculum implementation and lesson planning.[20]
- Lesson planning and instructional techniques (table stakes): These appear repeatedly in local postings and help both classroom and training candidates prove they can turn content into instruction.[20]
- Special Education / ENL / high-needs school experience (premium): IPS roles supporting Special Education, ENL, or high-needs schools may receive annual stipends of up to $3,000.[21]
- Teacher leadership, coaching, and systems improvement (premium): IPS leadership stipends can reach $7,000, so leadership-capable educators have a clearer pay and differentiation path than classroom-only applicants.[21]
- Childcare certification (differentiator): It is the most commonly named certification in the local posting sample, even if it is still a small share of postings.[34]
- Project management and communication (differentiator): These are core requirements for training and development specialists and help career switchers translate teaching into adult-learning work.[35]
- AI workflow tools and ethical AI use (differentiator): Education organizations had an 86% generative-AI adoption rate by 2025, and educators are already using tools such as MagicSchool.ai, Gradescope, ChatGPT, Google NotebookLM, and Canva AI in daily workflows.[28][36]
Adjacent Roles to Consider
- Training and Development Specialist (both): Teaching, facilitation, curriculum, and communication skills transfer well, and national demand is projected to grow 12% through 2033.[35]
- Instructional Designer / Learning Experience Designer (pivot): This is a natural pivot for curriculum-heavy educators, and AI-enabled design tools can cut development time by up to 70%.[37]
- Training and Development Manager (bridge): It is a realistic later-stage move from specialist work, and managers work in nearly every industry.[35][23]
- Librarian / Library Media Specialist (pivot): Strong research, curriculum, and student-support backgrounds can transfer well.[38]
30 / 60 / 90-Day Plan
First 30 Days
- Split your resume into two versions: one for school-based teaching/support roles and one for training/L&D roles.
- Build a four-piece proof set: classroom management example, lesson plan, curriculum unit, and one measurable learning outcome story, because those are the local skill signals employers ask for most often.[20]
- If you want fast traction, prioritize on-site district and childcare openings first rather than remote searches, because about 95% of the local sample is on-site.[18]
- Apply early to repeat school-system hirers such as Hseschools and to districts with a defined salary floor such as IPS.[32][24][25]
Days 31-60
- Add one premium angle to your profile: Special Education, ENL, high-needs school experience, or teacher-leadership work.
- Complete a short AI-in-education or learning-design credential and show one ethical, AI-assisted work sample; Purdue launched Indiana-relevant certificates in Technology Integration for Learning and Workplace Learning in January 2026.[33]
- For career-switch paths, convert one classroom lesson into an adult-learning module with facilitator notes, a quiz, and a simple evaluation plan.
- Rewrite interview stories around outcomes: behavior improvement, curriculum implementation, onboarding, training adoption, or coaching impact.
Days 61-90
- If school-based roles are not landing, widen into healthcare training, onboarding, workplace learning, and training specialist roles rather than waiting for the perfect title.
- Expand your commute radius or school-type mix; this market is mostly on-site and fragmented across employers, so flexibility matters.[18][13]
- Re-anchor your salary targets to the local posting center and district floors, not just national six-figure management examples.[22][24][25][23]
- If you are aiming at early-childhood roles, add childcare certification; if you are aiming at L&D, add project-management and adult-learning language to every application.[34][35]
Methodology and Confidence
This March 2026 report was generated on April 22, 2026. Latest direct national data: April 2026. Latest direct Indianapolis-Carmel-Greenwood, IN data: April 2026.
Confidence: Overall confidence: High. Local labor data is recent, and the report also includes supporting salary, hiring, and policy signals.
Limitations
- Most hard local labor data in this report only runs through January 2026, so the spring school hiring wave may be moving faster than the government series shown here.[40][41]
- This category covers teachers, professors, librarians, instructional designers, corporate trainers, and related roles, but the strongest local evidence is for school-based hiring rather than for higher education or library openings.[16][32]
- Some pay figures are employer-specific benchmarks from Indianapolis Public Schools contracts and reporting, not metro-wide wage averages, so they are best used as negotiating anchors rather than as the market average.[24][25][21]
- The Callings.ai job database is a partial, deduplicated sample of online postings, so demand direction, leading employers, and skill patterns are more reliable here than exact counts or shares.
- Several local year-over-year labor-market figures may still be revised, and broader metro layoff notices can change applicant competition even when they are outside education itself.[41][42][43][10][11]
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