employer cover photo
employer logo
employer logo

TNTP Teaching Fellows

Part of TNTP

Engaged Employer

TNTP Teaching Fellows reviews

3.2

54% would recommend to a friend

(90 total reviews)
avatar

Tequilla Brownie

100% approve of CEO

44% positive business outlook

TNTP Teaching Fellows has an employee rating of 3.2 out of 5 stars, based on 90 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The TNTP Teaching Fellows 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

90 reviews
1.0
Jan 24, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

This program uses “Teach Like a Champion” techniques which are good management strategies. My co-fellows were wonderful!

Cons

I’ll start with this disclaimer: I quit pre-service training 6 weeks into it. Before beginning the program, I read all the negative reviews but thought I would be one of the successful ones. While there are people who make it through all the way to licensure, I would say you have less than a 10% chance of getting your license in your first year. While this is a rough estimate, the fact that TNTP won’t release the percentage of how many fellows make it through is very concerning. So, my first suggestion to you, purely based on chance, is to find another program. Some state education departments offer “Alternative Route to Licensure Programs.” Or, you can get your teaching license online through “Western Governors University” which is fully accredited and very inexpensive. Right now I am working on my license and teaching full-time through one of these programs. If you’re still set on TNTP, seriously consider these cons: — Dishonest Recruitment: TNTP preys on idealistic individuals and hints that people who don’t make it through PST simply weren’t “cut out for it” or “weren’t willing to put in the effort.” While this may be true for a few, here is the reality: there is a HUGE variation in classrooms and in the individual support you will receive. Your chances of making it through PST depend on a variety of factors, not only your individual effort. So when they recruit you and basically say “you will be successful if you read Teach Like a Champion, believe in your students, and put in a lot of effort,” they are not being honest. They over-recruit knowing full-well that you have a good chance of not making it through PST. — Minimal teacher support: The first day I began teaching and most every day after, my students were out of control: screaming and running around the classroom. I seldom saw my coach. By the third day, management told my co-teacher and I that the problem was us and only us; we weren’t engaging the students enough. Yet, we didn’t have technology in our classroom, we didn’t have engaging materials or manipulatives, we were strongly discouraged from playing engaging games with the students and, most importantly, we didn't have another adult in the classroom to support us. When I told my coach that I didn't have enough money to buy more engaging materials she replied with a snobby "I spend at least $2,000 a year on my class!" Of course, she has a salary. In my opinion, it is completely, and morally wrong to throw inexperienced teachers into this type of environment with so little support. Now that I’m a full-time teacher in another program, I look back in disbelief at the way TNTP treated me and other fellows. In conclusion, run far away and look elsewhere. TNTP causes potentially promising, good teachers to leave the profession and never look back. So sad for students who would have benefited from these forward-thinking, change-oriented individuals. I’m honestly disgusted by the TNTP program.

1.0
Nov 27, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

It may lead to full time employment with a public school system. A few of the trainers were great and inspirational. It could be that program is more successful in other areas, I can only speak to what I experienced in DC.

Cons

The DC Teaching Fellows program (summer 2016) was unprofessional, disorganized, and full of condescension for it's participants. It was unbelievable to me that the trainers/organizers treated these very impressive and well educated participants with such such a stern, authoritative, and frankly (at times) disrespectful approach. The demands were inhumane. The unpaid hours involve in training were extraordinarily demanding. I felt like I was in the military. It did not build me up and inspire me. Instead, the approach seemed to be one of "breaking" people. Belittling the participants was commonplace. Many of the trainers boasted of their "five years" teaching in the public school system. For some reason, they thought that this made them experts, but their performances would suggest otherwise. Most of the trainers were arrogant and unsympathetic to the problems the participants faced. I had to leave. It was a very unhealthy environment. Many people relocated from all over the country and had to support themselves during this training. The total amount that people lost (in dollars) would be staggering. I know many people who left as I did. I happened to live in the DC area, so the loss wasn't as great as many of my fellow participants.

1.0
Sep 15, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I met a few new people! But honestly, it was just a waste of time. I have nothing good to say about the program, but moving to a new city like DC was nice.

Cons

Your working for free for 12hrs a day in the summertime. They hid a lot of things until you actually get to the program. Your going to be doing a lot of work.

Viewing 49 - 51 of 90 Reviews

Glassdoor has 110 TNTP Teaching Fellows reviews submitted anonymously by TNTP Teaching Fellows employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if TNTP Teaching Fellows is right for you.