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Great Hearts Academies

Engaged Employer

Great Hearts Academies reviews

3.5

51% would recommend to a friend

(496 total reviews)
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Jay Heiler

69% approve of CEO

47% positive business outlook

Great Hearts Academies has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 496 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Great Hearts Academies 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

496 reviews
3.0
Sep 8, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There are two great things about Great Hearts. You get to spend the day with some wonderful students and you can leave before 4.

Cons

Great Hearts has continued to cut pay and benefits in the past few years. The management can be wonderful or terrible depending on the school you end up at. We've had a number of management changes over the years. Unfortunately, they are starting to cut TA hours which puts more pressure on the lead teachers (and the TAs since they aren't getting the full 40 hours they were promised). The rumor is that they will eventually move to 1 TA per 2 classrooms. TAs have been asked to do silly things like moving tables and helping with janitorial duties rather than keeping them in the classrooms. Great Hearts has also opened up TA positions to anyone with a high school degree. This is causing many of the high performing TAs to find other employment. It leaves the lead teachers with people who, at best, are not helpful in the classroom and, at worst, are taking away from the learning of the students. HR has become petty with time clock hours for the TAs; frequently sending lengthy emails to all the headmasters and employees showing every time an employee has manually punched in to the time clock. This wouldn't be as bad if they had taken the time to set up a useable website or app. Instead, they quickly put together a website that is nearly impossible to use. In a recent meeting with HR, many of the headmasters had asked for these emails to stop and instead to simply not pay their hourly employees who had to manually clock in. While I'm "just a teacher" I'm fairly certain this is illegal. There are little to no advancement opportunities. Pay is abysmal. Benefits are getting worse and worse AND more expensive. There is no real professional development even though most of the employees have never been teachers. The most recent "professional development" has included reading a book that was not related to education or pedagogy, listening to classical music for 90 minutes, going for a hike, and a mandatory happy hour where we weren't paid four our time. While these are enjoyable activities, I don't think they are as helpful for the teachers as true PD would be (especially since many of these teachers haven't had any formal training to be in the classroom). Bottom line: the employees are subpar, there are no advancement opportunities, and upper management is continuing to make cuts.

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Great Hearts Academies Response
8y
We're sorry to hear of some of the frustrations you're experiencing. As a current employee, we are here to answer any questions or concerns you may have. Please reach out to the HR team if you would like to discuss your concerns in further detail. Thank you for sharing your feedback.
5.0
Apr 3, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great staff, everyone is like a big family, good hours, pretty decent pay, good benefits.

Cons

No paid holidays or breaks for hourly employees, only 4 sick days and 1 personal day.

1.0
Apr 20, 2016

Poor guidance for Specials

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Colleagues are very friendly and kind. You will never have gossipy, toxic coworkers. School wide unity on discipline helps a lot with classroom management. Administration helps with discipline a lot. Curriculum is good. Specials teachers see their kids every other day.

Cons

Great Hearts has no idea how to develop Specials teachers. As a charter school, they don't have Directors of Fine Arts or Directors of Athletics in the way that public schools do. So basically they have absolutely NO ONE qualified in the leadership team to help you flourish in your field if you are a specials teacher. You receive absolutely ZERO feedback on lesson planning or classroom instruction. The art teacher at my school said the headmaster only ONCE stepped into her classroom all year. The Spanish teacher complained about receiving absolutely NO help relevant to actually enhancing the curriculum and make it fit the needs of each grade. Both Sonrisas and Vale need a lot of work to actually constitute good materials. Don't even get me started on the music curriculum. Theory Time is the absolute worst thing that you can give to elementary students because talking about note values of music is not connected to music that they actually make so they are limited to a logical understanding of notes; it's not meaningful at all! I heard parents at my school say their children were crying and didn't want to go to school because they hated Music. Of all things they could hate! If you teach PE, Art, Music, or Spanish, and you want to get better at your craft, do yourself a favor and do NOT work for Great Hearts. Go somewhere else where you can actually grow as a professional, earn BETTER PAY, and be surrounded by people who are striving to become better TEACHERS. You don't become a better art or music or Spanish or PE teacher for elementary by sitting around reading and discussing literature. You become a better teacher by studying the pedagogy of your field and observing master teachers. Too often I have sat through stupid meetings that literally had NOTHING to do with my classes. Administration will forget about you and do not tangibly support you besides the talk at the beginning of the year about how important fine arts are. They only come to you when they want to use you. Did I mention that my school did not pay the art and music teachers for the extracurricular clubs we had? And they all left soon after that.

Viewing 55 - 57 of 496 Reviews

Glassdoor has 508 Great Hearts Academies reviews submitted anonymously by Great Hearts Academies employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Great Hearts Academies is right for you.