Reviews by job title

150 reviews
3.0
23 Jan 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

If you can handle a rigorous and highly prescribed instructional model, there is real opportunity for growth as an educator. The structure can strengthen classroom management, planning, and instructional clarity especially for newer teachers who want strong systems. Williamsburg Middle School, in particular, was a genuinely positive environment. The leadership team there was solid, supportive, and grounded. The educators and leaders at the school level clearly care about students and about each other, which made day to day work meaningful.

Cons

At the network level, Uncommon is a massive charter organization, and with that scale comes familiar issues. Like many large inner-city charter networks rooted in “achievement gap” narratives, there are elements of meta-racism embedded in the system often tied to white saviorism and top down decision making. That said, it’s important to name the distinction: while the network structure carries these problems, many of the educators and school based leaders actively push back against them. The people working directly with students often lead with care, reflection, and genuine commitment, even when the broader system falls short.

2.0
4 Jun 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Fairly generous compensation package, considering amount of experience Relaxed PTO and paternal leave policies Due to the school being in its infancy, opportunities to make your mark are bountiful

Cons

Inconsistent and largely unsympathetic leadership that promotes "making the school look good" to its parent company (Uncommon Schools) than on actual student results, which leads to high turnover rate among teachers. Unnecessarily strict policies toward students that actively inhibit learning, despite claimed good intentions. High transfer rate for students as a result.

2.0
1 Oct 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Student life is active, there is always room for growth.

Cons

Constantly being watched, always being judged, coworkers are catty, students are disruptive and leadership blames misbehaviors on teachers who are just trying their best to manage a 100minute class of 30+ kids.

2.0
26 May 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great if you don’t have a teaching degree or certificate or have never taught before. Great for new general education teachers

Cons

Terrible for special education. Did not follow IEPs and very little support. For the Special Education Coordinator, two jobs are done for 1 with no time in the day. Expected to teach a full caseload and then still be able to do all the leadership responsibilities. Terrible at collaboration. Extremely cliquey and lots of favoritism towards students and staff.

1.0
2 Oct 2025

Rose Colored Glasses

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Most staff are friendly and collaborative Students are eager and willing to learn

Cons

Poor communication between network/leadership and staff Unreasonable expectations given the amount of coverages required Turnover Rate is egregious

1.0
15 Dec 2025

Sink or Swim- but here are some weights for your ankles.

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Smart people - Nice office - Office closed 1 week in the summer as well as week btw/ Christmas & New Year's - Educator populations in schools reflects the populations/communities they're teaching (this is so important and great to see); if this diversity were carried through to leadership, they'd get 5 stars here.

Cons

- Sense of urgency seems conflated with expectations for instant results, leaving little room for iteration that supports long-term sustainable impact. - Culture expects & celebrates long-form memos (think 5+ word page docs) for projects across all sorts of functions; like writing papers on top of doing the actual day to day work - Pay is not competitive - Required to be in-office, shift from previous remote policy that caused dozens of people to leave the organization - Many teams regularly under-staffed - Those who do not come from education have to prove themselves constantly, are not as respected - High high burnout among school staff - Things that should be optional (attending work parties, off-hours events with no overtime, etc.) are used to negatively evaluate team members. - Management is hyper involved in select teams' work, with executive team expecting to review processes, progress, etc. that should be trusted to individual teams - Very low chance of/rate of promotions - Leadership among regions and the home office is not very diverse (race, backgrounds, work styles) and does NOT look much like the communities they serve.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 150 Reviews

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