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National Math and Science Initiative

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National Math and Science Initiative reviews about "pay"

28% positive business outlook

Reviews by job title

5 reviews
2.0
Sep 26, 2018

Mismanagement of resources

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The pay is above market value Many of the people working there are great The kitchen is fully stocked and open to anyone The new CEO will hopefully change things for the better The mission is great. Almost too great to be led by some of the people working there

Cons

Senior level managers are past due for a change. Many are unprofessional and unpredictable lacking management skills better than first-time shift leaders at fast food restaurants. Work place bullying is normal, mass firings are regular, and the culture created by that instability does harm to a lot of genuinely great people at the organization. The amount of money wasted (hiring people for one role, compensating them astronomically, then giving them secretarial work or mismanaging them to the point where they don’t get the opportunity to think for themselves) should be considered a fireable offense and if left unchecked, will be their downfall. I feel the most sorry for the non-senior level employees. They deserve so much better than they get.

1.0
Jul 16, 2016

Horrible organization

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The hours aren't too bad. There's a fully stocked kitchen so that's nice. I honestly can't think of anything else.

Cons

Horrible pay, horrible management, horrible HR. If you're a big shot, then work here! They pay all higher up people well over six figures and cater their lunch every day. BUT, if you're not a big shot, you will get paid around $29,000 with horrible benefits. The HR employees are gossipy and they play favorites.

2.0
Jul 16, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Good pay, some great people, you can choose your hours

Cons

- Work was disjointed, materials not always accessible, overall organization and management have no idea what is going on.

1.0
Sep 18, 2023

Retaliatory work environment

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Caring coworkers, remote work, flexible schedule

Cons

When joining NMSI, I was driven by the stated mission to reach those furthest from opportunity. However, in my time there I have not seen that mission in action. In the latest of many reorgs, every Black women who spoke up about micro-aggressions they experienced in the workplace at the last all staff convening was let go. To further cement the retaliatory nature of this restructure, both written and verbal communication stated that that one department spoke about lack of leadership accountability and clarity, therefore that department was cut and reimagined. In the reimagining of that department, the ones who were honest on our staff engagement surveys did not find their names appear on the new org chart. When confronted with this, the new CEO tried to say there were other reasons for the restructure but failed to specifically name other departments as the impetus for the “streamlining.” The overall diversity of the staff of took a huge hit with the last restructure and those who were able to get new jobs were not the ones “displaced”, but ones who already had confirmed jobs. When the vocal parties attempted to apply for new roles, they were told they were unqualified despite having held hiring paying positions in the org before all of this making it very clear that they were not displaced, but fired. In this process, NMSI lost every BIPOC and all but 1 female senior director and not a single one was rehired for ANY position they applied for. Yet we now have newly appointed “directors” who do not manage people despite the newly adopted “equitable” metrics that qualify directors as those supervising managers and senior directors as those supervising directors. As another former employee posted, this is the sunken place. With the erosion of internal trust and moral, the very bloated leadership team comprised of 10 c suite employees for a staff of 60, did not take a pay cut, nor reimagine their roles. To give the illusion of caring, they hired a DEIJ director who was onboarded after the staff was given the news of the organizational change. This strategic timing allowed them to ensure that marginalized staff had no safe space to turn to during this process. If you like unsafe, hostile, and retaliatory work environments, NMSI is the place for you. If not, look elsewhere.

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