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Foundation Academies

Engaged employer

Foundation Academies Reviews

3.7

67% would recommend to a friend

(125 total reviews)
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Sheria McRae

68% approve of CEO

69% positive business outlook

Foundation Academies has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 125 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Foundation Academies employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Education industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

125 reviews
5.0
29 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- I've improved my lesson planning and organizational skills. - I've also learned different classroom management and teaching strategies. - Administrators explain expectations clearly. - Teachers share advice and ideas for lesson planning.

Cons

Handling all classroom responsibilities is quite overwhelming at first.

1.0
22 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Passionate educators, resilient students, meaningful mission, committed colleagues who genuinely care about children.

Cons

Foundation Academies has a compelling mission, incredible students, and many dedicated educators who work tirelessly despite the obstacles placed in front of them. Unfortunately, some of the biggest obstacles are no longer external—they are self-inflicted. For years, employees were told that the organization needed fresh leadership, stronger systems, and greater accountability. What many staff members were not prepared for was watching those brought in to “fix” the culture become contributors to the very problems they claimed to solve. There is a recurring pattern of leaders arriving with sweeping critiques of everything that came before them. Existing systems are dismissed. Long-standing employees are treated as if they are part of the problem rather than part of the solution. Institutional knowledge is undervalued. Relationships that took years to build are disrupted in a matter of months. The message becomes clear: before we can move forward, we must first convince everyone that everything is broken. The irony is difficult to ignore. Some of the loudest criticism of the organization has come from individuals who willingly chose to join its leadership ranks. Employees have listened to repeated explanations of what is wrong with Foundation Academies while waiting to hear evidence of what is actually getting better. Criticism has become a leadership strategy, and disappointment has become a management style. Meanwhile, staff are expected to remain fully engaged through constant restructuring, shifting priorities, leadership turnover, and uncertainty regarding employment decisions. Teachers and support staff continue to be asked for flexibility, resilience, and commitment while often receiving little of the same in return. The organization speaks frequently about culture, belonging, and trust. Yet trust cannot thrive in environments where communication is delayed, decisions feel predetermined, and employees feel more scrutinized than supported. Culture is not created through presentations, retreats, slogans, or surveys. Culture is revealed by how people are treated when they disagree, ask questions, or simply want clarity about their future. Perhaps the most disappointing reality is that Foundation Academies does not suffer from a lack of talent. It suffers from a failure to consistently value and retain that talent. Too often, proven employees are overlooked while newcomers are elevated quickly. Whether intentional or not, it creates the perception that relationships and influence carry more weight than demonstrated results and long-term commitment. The students deserve stability. The staff deserve honesty. The mission deserves leadership that spends less time diagnosing failure and more time cultivating success. The tragedy is that many of the problems being addressed today were not created by classroom teachers, support staff, or families. Yet they are often the ones paying the price for leadership decisions made far above them. Foundation Academies has all the ingredients necessary to be exceptional. The question is whether leadership is willing to examine its own contribution to the challenges it so readily identifies in everyone else.

1.0
22 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The kids! They are the ONLY reason I would ever consider staying. My colleagues believe in the mission!

Cons

I worked at Foundation Academies long enough to witness a troubling disconnect between what leadership says and what leadership does. The organization frequently promotes values such as trust, collaboration, transparency, and respect. Unfortunately, many employees experience something very different. Staff are often left uncertain about their futures until the last possible moment, communication around personnel decisions can be inconsistent, and morale continues to suffer as turnover remains high across multiple levels of the organization. Perhaps the most striking contradiction involves leadership itself. An individual who previously sat in a governance role, regularly weighing in on organizational decisions from the outside, later joined the executive team and quickly became one of the loudest critics of the organization she chose to lead. Employees were repeatedly reminded of everything that was “wrong” with Foundation Academies, often through dismissive comments, public criticism, and a tone that felt more accusatory than constructive. What made this especially difficult to understand was the inconsistency. If the organization was truly as dysfunctional and ineffective as described, why pursue a leadership role within it? And if the goal was transformation, why begin by diminishing the very people expected to carry that transformation forward? The perception among many staff members was that criticism flowed freely, while accountability for leadership behavior did not. Concerns became even more pronounced when individuals with personal or professional connections to leadership appeared to enter the organization and quickly occupy influential positions. Whether intentional or not, this created questions about fairness, transparency, and equal opportunity. Meanwhile, schools continued to experience instability. Leadership transitions became commonplace, institutional knowledge walked out the door, and employees were expected to maintain exceptional outcomes while navigating constant uncertainty. Foundation Academies has talented educators, committed support staff, and students who deserve consistency. The challenge is not the people closest to the work. The challenge is a leadership culture that too often mistakes criticism for strategy, turnover for transformation, and rhetoric for trust-building. Until executive leaders are willing to model the humility, transparency, and accountability they expect from everyone else, the organization will continue to struggle with retaining great people and building the culture it publicly claims to value.

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Glassdoor has 127 Foundation Academies reviews submitted anonymously by Foundation Academies employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Foundation Academies is right for you.