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A Step Up Academy

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suffer in silence - Anonymous employee A Step Up Academy Employee Review

1.0
Jul 30, 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The instructional staff there are wonderful. Everyone who works directly with the students are incredible human beings.

Cons

The leadership here is horrible. If you have any concerns or need support don't bother saying anything. They talk about the staff in such a disgusting manner. They make you feel like you're worthless and mean absolutely nothing. The classroom ratios are all messed up. They are so understaffed it makes no sense. They are still accepting kids even though they are losing a staff member each week. It doesn't add up. They lie to the parents to make themselves look good and hide the chaos going on inside. I would never send my child to a school like this. It's really sad because the people who genuinely love it there and love the children get treated horribly. I hope new leadership takes over the school before their current runs it into the ground

Explore other reviews about A Step Up Academy

5.0
Mar 4, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

• Pay is very fair for a Private School. (Let's be real education is an underpaid field) • The kids are challenging but rewarding • Most of the staff cares so much. • There are supportive administrators.

Cons

• Dealing with behaviors can be tricky • Low Paid Time off allotment as with most education jobs.

1.0
Jan 28, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

tuition reimbursement, generous pto for admin levels, paid holidays

Cons

Lack of transparency and inconsistent communication from leadership. HR is not consistently included in key decisions, yet is expected to manage the impact of those decisions. Policies and expectations are applied inconsistently across departments and individuals. Limited accountability for leadership behavior, which contributes to a culture where employees may feel unsafe speaking up. High emotional labor without adequate structural or managerial support. A reactive rather than proactive approach to employee relations and compliance. While the organization states it values equity and respect, follow-through is inconsistent. Compensation practices lack transparency, and there are perceived inequities in pay and treatment that undermine trust. DEI efforts feel narrow in scope, with some employees experiencing exclusion rather than inclusion. Responses to employee concerns appear inconsistent, creating the perception that outcomes depend on relationships or identity rather than policy. Reports of inappropriate or offensive language have not always been addressed in a timely or meaningful way. Overall, there is a perception of systemic bias and a lack of openness that makes it difficult for employees to feel safe, valued, or heard.

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