Performance Management Used as a Weapon - Perm Staff Employee Penn State Employee Review

1.0
4 Mar 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Well-known brand. Some dedicated frontline employees who genuinely care about students and the mission.

Cons

In my experience, performance management was not about development — it was about control. After raising internal concerns, I was suddenly placed on a PIP that bore little resemblance to my job responsibilities or prior evaluations. Expectations shifted. Standards moved. Documentation escalated. It felt less like coaching and more like constructing a termination narrative. What was most alarming was the timing. The performance issues cited had never been formally documented before. Once concerns were raised, scrutiny intensified immediately. Feedback that had previously been neutral or positive became selectively negative. HR did not function as a neutral party. The process appeared to support management decisions rather than objectively examine them. Transparency was minimal. Psychological safety was nonexistent. Once you’re labeled a “problem,” the outcome feels predetermined. If you plan to work here, document everything. Save emails. Clarify job duties in writing. And understand how quickly your role can change if you challenge leadership.

Explore other reviews about Penn State

4.0
9 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Meaningful mission supporting community education and outreach programs. Gained valuable administrative and clerical experience, including scheduling, data entry, records management, and event coordination. Developed strong customer service and communication skills by assisting educators and community members. Worked for a well-respected public institution, which looks good on a resume. Opportunity to support nutrition education and public health initiatives, contributing to positive community outcomes.

Cons

Pay was very low compared to the responsibilities and cost of living. Limited opportunities for career advancement without changing positions or departments. Administrative work could become repetitive at times. Salary growth and raises were relatively modest.

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All