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Washington State OSPI

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Overall, great experience! - Anonymous employee Washington State OSPI Employee Review

5.0
27 Mar 2022
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Pay is dependent on school district location - As an emergency sub, I'm able to pick up my own shifts whenever I want (sometimes kind of hard, unless you get a school district that is in need!) - Pay increases after a few days at certain locations

Cons

- For some school districts, some schools require you to work x amount of days before you get an increase in pay (currently waiting to reach 60 days to start getting paid the amount that I initially thought I was going to get paid) - Sometimes you get worried because, if there are no substitute positions, you stress about when you're going to work again.. etc. Stability can be questionable at times

Explore other reviews about Washington State OSPI

5.0
11 Aug 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Diverse team and very inclusive. Great to learn about state agencies and grow within this career path.

Cons

Sometimes feels inefficient. It's a state agency so its fair to expect a lot of paperwork.

1.0
3 May 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Supporting educators and administrators at schools and districts with the goal of improving student outcomes. Statewide work. External messaging leads to a genuine sense of enthusiasm upon hire.

Cons

Terrible onboarding process never improved. Inconsistent application of expectations across agency and staff. Leadership talks about equity, but internal advocacy for equity efforts are dismantled, and genuine advocates are shut down, removed from responsibilities, and micromanaged. Insider culture. Employees are to do as they are told, and any critical feedback is perceived as a threat. Employees learn to stay quiet or risk losing their jobs. Departments and divisions are separated from each other in a way that makes it hard to collaborate broadly. Internal favoring of friends and family for job hires, including a daughter managing her dad, and the superintendent’s wife working at the agency (and promoted via a reorganization). Multiple reorganizations feel like constant shifting sands under the feet of staff and reduce staff productivity. The most stressful job ever. Multiple staff fired - many who participated in equity work - with little or no notice. Multiple staff leave because of the disfunction at the agency. It seems that people who know about the negative parts of what is happening there and push for change are discredited and dismissed, often literally, from their jobs - with little to zero notice. A shared internal understanding among non-executive staff about the level of stress and anxiety caused by this culture. Wasted time and effort on projects that never see the light of day because of communication glitches, micromanagement, and perfectionism. An extremely bureaucratic and dysfunctional working environment.

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