SAGA Education reviews

3.6

60% would recommend to a friend

(240 total reviews)
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Alan Safran

63% approve of CEO

46% positive business outlook

SAGA Education has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 240 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The SAGA Education 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

240 reviews
1.0
Aug 24, 2018

Unproffessional

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Helping disadvantaged youth in mathematics, good opportunity to shift into a career in Education

Cons

Little to no transparency from management, "relationship capital" as an actual term used in training to describe the "leverage" you're supposed to gain on students, prying eyes everywhere, extremely low wages for tutors, was told on the first day of training that the company had overhired and despite a promise of full school year employment that employment would be provisional through October effectively forcing tutors to compete for each other's jobs, no recourse in the event of termination and at-will employment despite pivotal benefits being provided, Site Directors( immediate superior) who vary wildly in disposition and personality, making the wrong choice of school a nightmare, cheery veneer revealing stone cold calculation beneath

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SAGA Education Response
7y
Thank you for sharing your insight and experience. We understand that compensation is a challenge. The Fellowship is designed as a service based opportunity and we let people know about the compensation before applying, during the application process and within their offer letters. We know the stipend is not a high rate of pay; we are looking for people who are driven to serve students who need them, for 10 months, and we are blessed to have 8-23 applicants per year for our positions. This job is not for everyone; but so many of those who do choose to serve with SAGA find the 10-month service among the highlights of their life, and would recommend it to a friend. In prior years, understaffing placed significant stress and pressure on Fellows (because of higher caseloads), and puts us in a position where we are under-serving our students. As a result, we decided to slightly over hire knowing that some natural attrition will occur. Furthermore, we are actively pursuing an additional school in New York City this fall and need additional capacity to serve this potential new site. Although the personalities and style of Site Directors vary, they are all deeply committed to the Fellows and to our students. Fellows rise to become highly effective instructors because of the Site Directors and our intensive daily feedback system. Each Fellow is formally observed roughly twice a week, and more frequently in 5 minute observations. This level of ongoing support is necessary, especially for Fellows who are new to education.
3.0
Jul 27, 2018

micromanagement, not much room to provide deep feedbacks for individual kids

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You will meet some smart and nice fellow tutors; The kids also connect with you. It depends on how much you put in of course, but most kids are manageable and you will care for them over time. The accountant and several upper management people are responsive and competent. Some tutors took the opportunities to be hired as staffs at the end of the school year.

Cons

You don't really know how the kids did in the Regents Exam unless you text them individually. There is a laundry list of things to do: 1. With few exceptions tutor 7 periods a day, with 3 minutes break in between, and about 30 minutes lunch break. In a public high school, this makes it really hard to use restrooms. 2. You need to call and log calls to the parents every other week. You need to get the contact info from the students. Sometimes it just doesn't happen. 3. You need to review each period and write comments for each student at the end of every day, the so-called "daily." 4. Miscellaneous requirements and tasks like proctoring and logging scores that are mundane and inflexible. The site directors vary, but they all seem to be working under a lot of pressure and have high expectations. Upper management makes the mission look lofty and you enter with passion, then throughout the year, you have to deal micromanagement and other things unrelated to teaching math to the kids.

Viewing 187 - 189 of 240 Reviews

Glassdoor has 276 SAGA Education reviews submitted anonymously by SAGA Education employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if SAGA Education is right for you.