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
4.0
Sep 10, 2012
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There are many reasons people work in the non-profit sector (where Baker College is), one reason most often quoted is to "help others," or "pay it forward." I get real satisfaction from helping others master subjects that intimidated them before the term. My students are the next generation in my profession, and in showing them the way I believe I'm nurturing competent ethical business professionals that will contribute to our community and our economy.

Cons

With the exception of the Flint campus, there are no union or tenure protections for faculty. So, we always have to be on our 'A' game. Fortunately student evaluations are one measure of our performance, but not the exclusive measure; contributions outside the classroom are measured, expected and contribute to positive evaluations. Recent staff realignments hit PhD faculty at our campus, which was completely unexpected. Staffing alignment is appropriately dependent on student enrollment. The school's core market of students is dependent on external funding to study -- either federally guaranteed student loans, grants or other outside scholarships. Cuts to those external programs have immediate impacts on enrollment. Despite providing lifetime placement assistance to our graduates, the school does not have an outside alumni association or foundation that solicits supports for infrastructure or student scholarships. This contributes to our vulnerability to external funding fluctuations. A good number of support staff have been hired after completing degrees here, so there is a bit of an in-bred "we've always done it that way" mentality in some departments. Some of the staff have become apathetic, "whatever management wants today," which can be dispiriting. A large pool of current management is reaching retirement age concurrently. They have agreed amongst themselves to stage their retirements in order to prevent total organizational shock from one large out-flux. Stepping into these roles are both externally recruited and internally promoted academic professionals with advanced educations (reputable PhDs) and new ideas, which are shaking up the longer-term staff quite a bit. Change is in the wind; some of it forced due to this resistance. I'm looking forward to improvements in IT applications -- internally developed systems were "reframed" with Windows overlays, but they remain the same cumbersome legacy applications that require significant internal support. The new VP of IT has initiated a search for an externally-developed true ERP application network to support our operations. Workload as a faculty member is significant: I teach five classes of 25 students each, support a student club, hold office hours and special review sessions, manage a pool of adjunct faculty and student tutors, contribute to the curriculum updates and rework, provide system-wide support for multiple classroom-focused technology initiatives, and conduct tours of the campus for prospective students. Fortunately for me, I personally find satisfaction in being able to manage so many initiatives at once; others may find the workload imposing. Our employment agreement specifically excludes outside teaching initiatives, not that I would have the time to take anything else onto my plate. One does not work in the academic or non-profit sectors for the compensation. Benefits are very good (healh insurance, etc.), but my salary is less than 1/2 what I was earning in the for-profit sector. Of course, the for-profit sector had other disadvantages which were still uncompensated despite the higher pay -- but that's another subject!

5.0
Nov 19, 2014

Great place to work

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Freedom to do my job the way I see fit They are on top of things and make the proper changes where they have to, and based on research. Decent pay They care about their students. They are the only college I know of that when the state pulled grant funding from the students the college gave it to the students right out of their own pocket so these students would not suffer from the loss. I see some complaints on here about how they are changing things and getting rid of people, but I believe these were necessary changes based on enrollment and the needs of the college. And, they only cut in pay was for adjunct workers who were being allowed to work over typical adjunct hours. With the new healthcare system, adjuncts were restricted to 28 hours, a restriction most colleges followed anyway.

Cons

They don't have a lot of open full time positions.

5.0
Oct 17, 2014

Great support from deans.

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Consistent employment and quality students within programs.

Cons

None to write about at this time.

Viewing 235 - 237 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.