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TNTP Teaching Fellows

Part of TNTP

Engaged Employer

TNTP Teaching Fellows reviews

3.2

54% would recommend to a friend

(90 total reviews)
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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
Aug 22, 2015

Worst experience of my life

Anonymous employee
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Pros

The fellows themselves are all wonderful. I made friends with genuine people who wanted to change lives and were willing to switch careers because they wanted to make a difference.

Cons

Quitting my job to be a part of this program was the worst decision I ever made. No one who works for them is interested in serving underprivileged students. Most of the coaches and managers were there to be promoted in their own careers. They use the promise of a fast road to teaching to lure people from across the country into leaving their jobs while saying 85-90% pass Pre-Service training. The truth is, 50% are cut or drop out throughout training and another 25% are let go. The way the employees speak to the fellows is demeaning. Imagine being on a job interview every day for 6 weeks straight where the interviewers talk to you like a child and send you home with 4-5 hours of homework after working a 10 hour day. The content area assignment is seemingly completely random. I was assigned to teach a class that I had no background in and as a result, did not know how to teach. These students deserve better than unqualified teachers with no experience. Also, if you do get cut from the program, they'll dump you via email with no explanation. Classy. I just hope as their application for next summer opens up that I save someone the trouble, money, and unnecessary frustration that I experienced this summer. Research your options and read up on the research about TFA and TNTP grads. None of these programs are helping anyone but themselves.

1.0
Jun 7, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I met and worked alongside real teachers- and some of the best human beings I've known - at my school.

Cons

Exploitative Unhelpful Misleading Callous REMEMBER: - TNTP gets +/- $1,000,000 grants from school districts to provide and train new teachers. By end of summer, there were no more than 50 teachers who passed PST. Out of 120+. Some of these left in the first week of school, utterly unprepared. - New teachers move from all over the country to train during summer. Many leave their jobs and commit fully to teaching. Training is role-playing and repeating by rote certain phrases and reactions, especially from "Teach Like a Champion." Lost $ -Teachers then placed in a summer-school classroom. My training was in a high school. The main teacher did not have any lesson/curriculum planned. No guidance. I never saw a full lesson in my content area over the summer training. I never met an experienced teacher in my specialty and grade level over the summer (or for my whole time teaching). I struggled with lesson planning, but was given no models of successful lessons to read and watch. Yes, we saw excerpts. No, we never saw a full lesson with real students. -Teach unpaid for hours each morning, train in afternoon, plan lessons at night. No chance to retrieve lost income over summer. The teaching and planning requires us to impart a semester's worth of learning to our students in 12 days of summer school. At the end of every session, the main teacher passed her students based on who had showed up every day and marginally attempted the worksheets she gave. When we weren't teaching, we all sat in the field room, planning lessons and supervised by 1 or other coach. -Encouraged to take a job at the first school that offers to hire, not to reflect or question fit at school. Some teachers miserable. -No actual training in content area during summer or schoolyear. Instead, we had online learning modules about lesson planning on "Blackboard." In PST, we spent hours sitting in a classroom together staring at screens, reading breakdowns of NexGen standards and watching snippets of classroom videos. Never even saw a video of a full lesson. -The work for the modules is involved but mostly busy work. During schoolyear, it takes 3-8 hrs that can be poorly spared from a busy schedule. When projects are turned in, 4 tepid comments maximum, mostly praise. No advice on how to improve, even though I described in detail the challenges my students and I face. -Most of my students had no concept of foundational standards to our grade level. I was docked points in 1st observation because the lesson was remedial. Kids did not know what atoms, or phases pf matter were, but I was supposed to stick to the standard on kinetic theory rather than have a review lesson. Even though it was remedial was aligned to the grade level standard; the observer did not know or understand my content area. -No support is provided in the school-year, beyond ~20 min bimonthly "coaching" meetings - No advocacy for teachers -For all this, you get to pay $5,500 tuition. I was buying breakfast, pencils, supplies on top of paying off the cost of moving, settling in a new city, rent, student loans. $550 is my groceries for 2+ months. I had a passion for teaching and loved my kids. However, I did not receive support or guidance. I still have never seen a full lesson in my content area (whether to adults or children). I spent hours on lesson plans. By Christmas, the other teacher in my content area had resigned. For 2 months I planned for both classes and differentiated for his EC kids. There was no recognition of this extra work or support when I described my stress and need for advice. I was inadequate. I was a new teacher with 150 kids of my own whom I loved, but who also had immense challenges. The other teachers at the school could commiserate, but not help. My coach gave a couple tepid sentences of advice when I asked her about lesson planning, teaching kids who could not read or speak English. I resigned. I am still on the hook for the rest of the $5,500 and am getting calls. By my calculations, TNTP already got almost $20,000 per new teacher from the school district for this school year. They put new, idealistic teachers with insufficient training into classrooms. My coach had about 10 other trainee teachers in our Blackboard group. Where is all the district's money going? Certainly not serving the students. The first response from the coordinator in my area after I told TNTP I was resigning? "Even if you resign you still have to pay the full $5,500." I never mentioned the tuition.

1.0
May 26, 2018

TeachNOLA is a scam - and a very racist one too

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You will meet a ton of people who have sacrificed everything to move down to the toilet of the country. I am only filling this out because Glassdoor makes you. New Orleans has its charm, but you do not want to live here. Great place to visit though.

Cons

Where do I begin? In 2017, TNTP/TeachNOLA received $1million from the US government to help recruit 900 teachers by 2020. The only money they spend on their fellows is on a very cheap bumper sticker and a notebook you can buy from the dollar store. They silence voices of color, deleting comments they don't agree with, while amplifying White women who run the training as "Directors." You are expected to pay for everything out of pocket, including copies, printer downloads of the numerous reading materials, and you are expected to scan and upload signed agreements of a handbook they don't even give you until the first day of pre-service training. You will be living off savings, expected to find your own job without any help from TNTP or TeachNOLA, and you're not even allowed to take off for interviews during training. This program has not provided anything to its fellows except a whole bunch of lies and effective marketing. They have a 100% placement rate because they cut the people they don't like. And you are still on the hook for the cost of the certification. So let me get this straight, you are teaching unpaid 12 hour days with food and transportation you procure with the possibility of being cut at any time for almost any reason - my question is what the hell does TNTP / TeachNOLA offer their fellows?? The White women who run this program will do whatever it takes to preserve and uphold White supremacy, so god help you if you're not with that program because you may find yourself one of the impoverished people stuck in Louisiana with no support system or way to get back home. Teach Like a Champion, their only textbook, written by a Harvard businessman, is a really racist book. I'll just leave it at that. Do your own research on that b.s. Instead of focusing on childhood development, trauma, educational theory, or social justice issues, the book and its accompanying horrifying videos show fellows how to teach Black children to sit up straight, pass papers back and forth, and other inane things with snaps of fingers like they are training dogs in obedience school. TNTP/TeachNOLA claims to be all about anti-bias and ending systemic racism, but those are just buzzwords on Powerpoint slides. There is no unpacking of any of that, and anything that makes the White people in charge uncomfortable gets dismissed, deleted, or minimized. There is no mention of salary, because God forbid the charter school system would ever be transparent about that, but I noticed a trend: the White fellows who show up to PST in business casual - even in skinny jeans and Sketchers - are the ones who get hired over the Black fellows who show up in three piece suits with more education and higher pedigrees. So, same stuff, different day. TNTP used to be in a lot more cities. They are only in 4 or 5 now. I wonder why. What's sad is the poor African-American students who have the honor of being lab rats by these corporate monsters in the name of educational reform.

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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.