Disappointing... - Anonymous employee Scholastic Employee Review

2.0
23 Apr 2012
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Pros: Reasonably intelligent and well read people. Co-workers are mostly nice. Some of the office space is very nice, some not.

Cons

Cons: They hire very, very few full-time employees. I feel like 90% of the staff are temps. So, you are expected to work the same hours (no OT, ever, you can't even bill for it even if you do work the extra hours), same stress, same expectations, but they don't want to pay medical, vacation, bonus or anything else. How is that fair? Then, it's a great big mystery why their employees are so unhappy. I'll tell you why: Scholastic is abusing their power. Even when they have a great quarter, they always told us "Sorry, we can't hire anyone to help you". I finally quit. Average tenure there seemed to be 6-8 months before you snap. Oh, and don't expect any training either. Another annoying thing was that managers tend to be "do as I say, not as I do." Meaning, you will get scolded like a child for being 5 minutes late to a meeting, but your manager can take as much time off as s/he wants without informing anyone, and that is somehow OK. You will also get scolded for some other arbitrary reasons, such as not formatting a Word document properly, yet no one ever told you it needed to be done a certain way. You are just supposed to know. The best was when I saw a manager yell at their subordinate for an hour in front of everyone one, then the same manager chided that subordinate for being upset after being publicly humiliated.

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5.0
26 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

positive working environment, good people

Cons

great company to work for; no complaints

2.0
11 Jun 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Remote work and the clients are very nice to work with.

Cons

In my experience, the company's compensation practices lacked transparency and accountability. When employees asked questions about how their earnings, bonuses, or compensation were calculated, clear answers were often difficult to obtain. Decisions affecting employee pay were made without adequate explanation, and requests for clarification frequently went unresolved. What I found particularly concerning was the apparent disconnect between employee compensation outcomes and management compensation. Employees regularly experienced reduced bonuses or earnings, while management and executive leadership appeared largely unaffected by the same business decisions. This created the perception that the financial impact of those decisions was being borne primarily by employees rather than those making them. After repeatedly seeking explanations and receiving few meaningful answers, I lost confidence in the fairness and transparency of the compensation process.

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