Baker College reviews

3.7

66% would recommend to a friend

(254 total reviews)
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Dr. Jacqui Spicer

66% approve of CEO

63% positive business outlook

Baker College has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 254 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Baker College 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

254 reviews
1.0
Jul 13, 2015

Used to be great

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There are many good people who work there, just not very smart people in leadership positions.

Cons

Leadership is famous for hiring friends and relatives, and promoting people who aren't qualified to do their jobs. The recent promotions of CAOs to campus presidents are ridiculous. They are losing enrollment hand over fist, yet nothing is being done about it, other than to eliminate jobs. No one ever tries to solve the problems - they just create project after project, most of which fail because no one listens to the people who know how to plan and measure success.

3.0
Jan 25, 2015

Administrative Assistant

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Scheduling flexibility for hours worked

Cons

Horrible pay, too much turnover of staff

1.0
Nov 10, 2014

Going downhill fast

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Most adjunct faculty care, or they wouldn't be there since the pay is so poor. The Owosso campus is generally appealing to the eye. There is a broad range of programs offerings to teach.

Cons

The college seems less focused on students and staff, then on the mighty dollar. Significant layoffs have taken place, (probably 5 rounds this year that I know about), leaving people without the experience necessary to be successful to fill the voids created. The college handled the layoffs very poorly: communicating the changes very poorly to the "survivors" and those affected, and poorly communicating the state of the college. Thus demonstrating that those who can't do business well, do actually teach it. Clearly those in leadership positions are not business savvy. Baker has been a case study in "what not to do". Additionally some of the college's pay practices have been sketchy at best, encouraging employees to do professional development directly related to their work for the college without pay, or reducing rates of pay without advance notice. Baker also does a terrible job preparing the faculty for their roles, making decisions regarding what you will be teaching at the last minute, and making books and resources for the class available too late to be properly prepared. In many cases the UBD (Understanding By Design) courses are designed by people who are not in the field and are clearly not subject matter experts. In addition to having poor content, the UBD restricts the instructor's ability to present relevant material that would actually prepare the students for their future. New faculty is poorly trained on internal systems (Blackboard, APA format, etc.) and resources to help them in their new position. I always feel bad for students who have a new instructor who is struggling to figure things out. They pay for the full class, but clearly don't get the full educational experience. Historically Baker was very proud that the adjunct faculty were working professionals. They did a fantastic job preparing students. Our current direction is making Baker a joke, and the unprepared students are damaging the long-standing reputation. There really isn't room to grow for adjunct faculty. Number of classes available to teach are restricted (due to both union concerns, and ACA restrictions to the number of hours to be benefit eligible). You really don't have much of a voice or any freedom in what to cover for the term or how to teach. At this point Baker should either set up the "checkout counter" and handout degrees to anyone who can pay, or sell prerecorded videos of lectures. Either would be as effective at preparing graduates as the current trend.

Viewing 52 - 54 of 254 Reviews

Glassdoor has 274 Baker College reviews submitted anonymously by Baker College employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Baker College is right for you.