SAGA Education reviews

3.6

60% would recommend to a friend

(240 total reviews)
avatar

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
5.0
Aug 3, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I worked as a fellow in the 2015-'16 school year and absolutely loved my job. I am returning for the 2016-'17 school year to work as a leadership fellow with my students again. I appreciate that SAGA puts tutors into a role they can handle and allows them to bring their own creativity and ideas. With a few weeks of training I would certainly not have been ready to become a classroom teacher. It would have been a disservice to myself and the students I worked with. However, I did feel capable of excelling as a tutor with only 2 students in front of me each period. I was able to develop very close relationships with my students and to target my instruction to meet their individual needs. For most of them I ended up serving as the adult they knew and trusted the most in the building. I worked as a City Year corps member the year before and I found that I often had too much asked of me and was thus not able to complete any of my tasks well. SAGA allowed me to really focus on what I thought was most important and would most benefit my students. I felt supported by the staff and my teammates. SAGA provided me with a full, rigorous curriculum, which served as a great starting point. I never had to spend too much time preparing content for a tutorial. But they also encouraged me to tweak it in any way that I wanted. I incorporated games, projects, activities, puzzles, music, poetry, stories and visual art, and this made my students look forward to class. My site Director checked in with my coworkers and I constantly to make sure we felt supported and worked tirelessly to find us outside resources to make our planning easier. My teammates were great and passionate as well, and I knew I could always count on them for help with lesson planning or difficult behavior problems. They also become close friends and one of my teammates is now my roommate. SAGA is proven to be effective. A Major Study is underway by UChicago and results have already been released by the Brookings Institute showing that the program is effective at meeting several goals for student growth.

Cons

The pay is low. Tutors absolutely deserve to be paid much better than they are. unfortunately, that is not possible if SAGA is going to offer their services to chronically underfunded public schools at a price they can afford. They are up front about the pay. I didn't eat lobster every night, but I had no problem paying rent in Chicago (I live with roommates) and feeding and clothing myself. The work is hard and sometimes thankless. Students will not always thank you for all you have done for them. They will sometimes fail a test even though you studied for days with them. There may not be many support systems for you (or your students) in the school outside of Math Lab.

1.0
Aug 3, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

They promote from within - once they like you. Though, it is designed to attract recent graduates, there are seasoned professionals who altogether add dimension and variety to the tutoring experience and workplace.

Cons

There are so many. The major ones include the poor/passive - aggressive communication, the corporate approach to education reform, lack of professionalism, the unknown experiments on students, no pay for overtime, the changing of policies with little to no notice, the "blame game"; the lamentations about money from management to staff, conversations and requests about tutor/staff morale only for it to be ignored, and the curriculum. Honestly, it is all about cutting corners at the expense of children and people who want to build students. The curriculum and model are lackluster. It is extremely ineffective to have one person tutoring up to four or more students at a time with varying comprehension levels with or without learning delays using a curriculum that has errors in it. Additionally, with poor training and a desperate approach to hiring staff, it is just about numbers and not quality tutoring. More importantly, the organization discusses a model it has and its success in Chicago and Boston. But those places are not NYC, and there are no success stories in the NYC. No one took the time to educate themselves on the level of diversity and academic needs of the students. The approach is that these students come from "indigent backgrounds" and should take what they can get because they can be saved by this organization. But that is not the case. Indigence does not have a direct correlation with intelligence.

1.0
Jul 24, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Your co-workers are passionate about education inequality and the kids you tutor and work with are great. No complaints there. The social mission is inspiring but that's where the pros end.

Cons

Where do I begin? Management is completely out of touch with the tutoring corps. Management is condescending and is more concerned about the stats and never knows what's going on at the tutoring level. Training is a joke which consists of silly role play. The math materials they give you for tutoring sessions are full of errors and typos which doubles the amount of work you need to do as a tutor. Every night I would have to spend hours double checking practice problems. The healthcare is problematic to say the least, the deductible is $2000 on top of the premium which I can't understand how someone making minimum wage can afford. People are constantly leaving and being brought on which creates a chaotic environment for everybody and affects morale. I decided to tough it out through the school year I couldn't bear to see my students left out without a tutor for the regents. Stay away from this organization; there are many great charter schools that will pay you a competitive salary as an associate instructor and offer much more intense training and career mobility if you really want a career in education.

Viewing 238 - 240 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.