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Arizona State University

Engaged employer

Large university struggles to create a culture that demonstrates it values all employees - Lecturer Arizona State University Employee Review

2.0
12 Feb 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

large university with a wide range of opportunities

Cons

non tenured faculty are paid poorly when compared to their tenured peers. They teach large volumes of students and are not compensated appropriately. Colleagues that do research don't value teaching faculty and often they will not work with or mentor students that disclose that they'd like to teach. The pay is not commensurate with experience, varies widely across departments, and the administration will jump on any excuse they have to take money from departments to fund other things, leaving non-tenured faculty to teach courses with 300 students in them an little to no TA support. They are asked to continue to improve the student experience, meanwhile no one is working on improving the staff experience. The students deserve a better expereince, and so do the teaching faculty.

Explore other reviews about Arizona State University

5.0
30 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good research environment and great teachers

Cons

Long hours working on research

2.0
29 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Competitive pay for some positions, some great colleagues.

Cons

The "culture" in some non academic departments is incredibly toxic. Employees often see others as competitors and some will try to throw others under the bus to avoid being in trouble from senior leaders. It is slow to get any work done if you need upper admin approval and often time work that you have created and completed is thrown away and never looked at again. Personalities of some administrators is very fake and friendly, when they will cut you with no regard or thoughts. The senior administrators of ASU act in a cult like manner and tightly control many goals, works, etc. You will most often have little to no freedom to accomplish the goals that you know would be best for your department because you spend an inordinate amount of time on projects deemed important to senior leaders, that have little to no impact but padding a report for someone in Fulton. Culture is extremely toxic in many areas, and senior leaders refuse to listen to those serving and trying to provide feedback. There is heavy turnover in many areas, while adminstrators turn a blind eye to it and chalk it up to "normal" turnover. Many mid level managers end up sick, stressed, seeking new employment, or taking FMLA to try to deal with the stress and trauma. You will have little opportunity for advancement unless you move departments regularly, or by hunkering down to be a lackey. Routinely expect last minute requirements and expectations, budget cuts without notice, and little to no professional development or support. Depending on the area you may also deal with difficult students/parents who are not held accountable for their actions.

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