Horrible - Teacher I CAN SCHOOLS Employee Review

1.0
13 Jan 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I never did find one

Cons

This company is based off of a group of successful charter schools. The problem is that there is no warning as to what the environment will be like when taking the job offer until you walk in on your first day. No curriculum, no break during the extremely long school hours (7:30-3:30) including eating your lunch with students. The students are to be in their desks the entire day and do not have recess or gym. There is no curriculum and no books (at least not when I was there in 2013). I would spend 3+ hours a day making lesson plans and researching common core, the "pacing guide" is a joke. Be prepared to have no life if you teach here. Most "teachers" are not licensed teachers. There is no hands on curriculum, the students are expected to do worksheets all day. The behavior expectations are strict, but doable if you don't have 32 students, 4 with an IEP, and 5 unidentified (making up students with a disability a 1/3 of the class). Extremely stressful environment and not what I signed up for when becoming a teacher. If you like boot camp, this is the place for you, If you want to teach, this is not the place for you!

Explore other reviews about I CAN SCHOOLS

5.0
26 Apr 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

great kids and liveable salary

Cons

not as much pay as other big schools

5.0
2 Oct 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Minimum starting teaching salary is $40,000. Recent college graduates make up a majority of the teaching staff at the schools, so the culture is high-energy and encourages professional development. Campuses are safe and secure and students are well-behaved because of the strict behavioral policies. 100 minutes of planning per day, hundreds of hours of professional development each year, and plenty of opportunities for promotion to leadership roles. As a recent grad, I can honestly say the benefits here are far better than anything else I've heard of, and there are always openings.

Cons

Working in urban education is never easy, so there are definitely challenges you wouldn't find in a suburban school; sometimes you have to be as much a mentor to the students as you are an educator. Expectations are high and there is a lot of feedback, so you have to be willing to take constructive criticism and you are expected to implement it quickly. Because of turnover in past years (Teach for America) the teachers and leaders are still working on developing stability in school culture.

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I CAN SCHOOLS Response
11y
Thank You for taking the time to write a review. We appreciate your comments around the delivery of feedback. We will be using your advice for the betterment of the company/schools.
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