Achievement First reviews

3.0

35% would recommend to a friend

(998 total reviews)
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Fatimah Barker

39% approve of CEO

21% positive business outlook

Achievement First has an employee rating of 3.0 out of 5 stars, based on 998 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Achievement First employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Education industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

998 reviews
1.0
Aug 15, 2015

0 Stars if I could

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I worked with some pretty amazing people. The kids are really great and 99% of the parents in your room will be very supportive as long as you are great with communication.

Cons

It's hard to know where to start here so I'll organize my thoughts into branches. Professional Development & Culture: If you are a teacher (have trained to be a teacher), have taught anywhere public or otherwise, this is not the place for you. You will question everything they are doing (and they don't like to be questioned). There is little to no autonomy in your classroom. The professional development is not development at all if you trained to be a teacher. It is simply going through the curriculum and taking off school days to do it. If everyone was certified and trained, that wouldn't be necessary. For the trained and experienced it's a waste of time and boring to sit through. The amount of PDs is crazy. Every Friday from 1-4pm nd now from July 28 until Aug. 24. from 8am-4pm That's too much. And its not even helpful. Student academics: They use a phonics program from the 1980s from when they thought it was best for students to learn by rote memorization. The phonics program is not progressive. They use bits and pieces of all these different curriculums and systems but never the whole thing so it isn't as effective as it should be (i.e. choral responses as in Whole body training but they don't use the whole system, they don't even use the whole phonics system). Some schools don't have spelling or grammar embedded in their curriculum. Teachers aren't given curriculum maps it's like a secret. Teachers who aren't qualified to teach are teaching subjects they don't know anything about. A lot of the curiculum skips around and doesn't build on top of each other foundationally. I just closed my door and taught what I needed to taught my way. No one was coming in to observe me anyways after my first few observations i got feedback from the administration (which is lacking in experience and certification) that was actually wrong. WRONG feedback for an academic lesson from a leader in my school on three different occassions. Moral and Ethical Issues: The administration encourages cheating on reading tests. It isn't stated so boldly as that, but they do not follow protocols on how to administer, correctly, reading tests to students. They simply want to reach their school goals so they can look better in the network and then earn more money. (schools that get in the top 5% and 10% earn bonuses). As a charter school there is not a union to protect you. If you work here, please find a private union to join. I did the second month I started working when I realized just how insane their practices are. Please read more In special services. Special Services: In most schools there is no true ELL program. They say there is, but there isn't. They do nothing different for these students than they do for any other student. They do not have a system for positive behavioral management. (PBIS) and no true intervention system for tier II and tier III students. They simply group them with a small group teacher during their time. That is not intervention. IEPs are not written correctly; goals are not benchmarked with objectives. The coordinators usually lack experience and knowledge to understand how to help students. Most students in my school had speech and language disorders and I can tell you right now that some of those students should not have been labeled as such. The CEO (Doug) believes that if you just push them hard enough you can "graduate from special services." I believe this is a horrible and disgusting attitude to take and am deeply, DEEPLY offended by this belief especially coming from a founder of a network of schools. There is much more I could say, but I leave it at this to say that you have been warned. These schools are a volatile environment for (real) teachers.

1.0
Oct 14, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-There are growth opportunities: if you stay for a couple of years, it is highly likely you will receive some sort of promotion and raise. -The teachers they hire tend to be incredible smart, hardworking and capable. You will not find this everywhere. -Professional development is overall very strong, although not at all differentiated to the needs and wishes of teachers. -There are great leadership opportunities. If you are offered the opportunity to be in Leadership Fellows like I was, definitely take advantage of the opportunity. It helped me learn a lot about myself as a teacher and as a leader, and it also helped me learn about struggles and problems across the Achievement First network. -Students do learn a lot.

Cons

-In my experience, kids were not treated with the kindness and understanding that they need and deserve. Most of the schools in AF use a color-changing behavior system which is very negative and based upon punishment. In my four years at AF, I saw the way color changes negatively impacted students' sense of self. Expectations for student behavior are extremely rigid and this is stressful for students and, from my perspective, results in further scholar misbehavior. -It can be an extremely stressful place to work. Teachers are taught to do "whatever it takes" which in theory is great. In actuality, it means that teachers are held responsible for everything. I have heard many teachers tell me - sometimes through tears - that they feel like their best is never enough. -Work-life balance is incredibly difficult. Teaches work VERY long hours. The school day is long and teachers at some schools have very little preps. Teachers will be "asked" to use their prep time to support coteachers, attend meetings, etc. Last year, I spent over half of the year with only a 30 minute break over the course of 10 hours with children. -There is lots of teacher turnover. In my three years at AF, I saw almost 20 employees resign their positions; over half of these employees quiet midyear. -Teachers are not given permission to be creative. As someone else's review mentioned, this is a very "one-size fits all" mentality. The best part of teaching is creating a classroom community that is authentic to you and your students. You are very rarely given the freedom to make even little decisions for your class (for example, even pencil passing out procedures are scripted for teachers). -I was never able to find a real outlet to express my concerns. I did not want to resign, but I ultimately felt I had no choice. Throughout my last year, I repeatedly went to leadership to discuss some of my concerns about the treatment of students and teachers. I did not feel like my concerns were actually heard and I ended up regretted going to them at all because it just damaged my image as a leader in the school. -Lots of student suspensions. -My salary was not equitable based upon the long hours that I worked. I consistently worked 70+ hour weeks.

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