Disconnected and very unorganized company - Teacher K12 Employee Review

1.0
Nov 21, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Ability to work from home

Cons

Most communication is done all via emails which can work in many cases, but not when the employees don't answer emails or know their job. Most of my issues with K12 stems from the lack of organization or other people understanding their roles/duties. As new employee at K12, I was hired as a teacher and then told to watch some training modules and do some of the readings and was expected to know what I was doing. I was promised a mentor - that didn't happen. The amount work dumped onto a teacher is ridiculous. I spent 12 or more hours per day doing work that a computer program could do (pulling data and makings list of kids at-risk in learning or attendance). I spent nearly three weeks trying to get my separation with the company straight. Being that I was worked from a home office, I wanted to make sure that I would get the shipping labels sent and I still haven't gotten them. The other thing that surprised me was when my new employer requested my finger prints, K12 told me that I needed to pay a fee to sit down with a HR representative and review my file which would take weeks to do. Need less to say, I could not start my new teaching job and had to pay $80 for another set of prints that K12 wouldn't release, even though I paid for those too. My last and most profound complaint about K12 is the amount of students assigned to a teacher. I had nearly 300 kids assigned to me. There is no quality learning going on. There can't be when one teacher has nearly hundreds of kids. The thing that made me decide to look for another job was when we had our State standardize testing. The kids that didn't take the test at the facilities throughout our state, we were told we must get those kids tests. They actually had labeled emails from corporate "Hello Stalkers" and told us the ways we needed to located and get these kids tests. They encouraged us to use the fake Facebook page they created to catch untested kids/parents, use Twitter, contact their emergency contacts (grandparents, aunts/uncles), and lastly was to show up on their doorstep and test the kids right then and there. The company needed 95% of the kids tested otherwise they lose funding. Harassment was over the top and ethically wrong. I had families calling me yelling and some crying about how K12 was worse than bill collectors. Overall, great concept but horribly run and work load is not ideal for good teaching or learning. I don't recommend this company unless you don't have an issue with long hours for little pay.

Explore other reviews about K12

5.0
Mar 30, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great co workers teams work well together

Cons

none that i know of . loved my time there

avatar
K12 Response
3mo
We’re thrilled to hear you’ve had such a positive experience at K12! Thank you for being part of our team and for sharing your perspective.
3.0
Jun 12, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great collaboration with highly professional colleagues who truly care about teaching and education. Work remotely.

Cons

Insufficient training for the many responsibilities of the position. Insufficient follow-up from the upper administration on said responsibilities. Workload increased to levels that made completion of said workload difficult (with putting in extra hours without added compensation) to basically impossible. Difficult to change roles (at least, in my position). Many additional hours away from the classroom, which greatly disrupted educational continuity.

avatar
K12 Response
3w
Thank you for your honest feedback. We appreciate you sharing both the positives and areas for improvement, and we’ll make sure your perspective is shared internally.
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