employer cover photo
employer logo
employer logo

Kansas State University

Is this your company?

Good Experience for beginning teachers, but low compensation - Graduate Teaching Assistant Kansas State University Employee Review

3.0
Feb 2, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Gain Experience in teaching, from helping professors teach their classes to being able to teach your very own class once you have a masters degree. Learn how to work with students and grade assignments and essays as well as learn how to have good educational standards and how to handle assignment conflicts and grading concerns.

Cons

Limited to 20 hours of paid work, but often requires extra time and energy to create a good lesson plan that is then not compensated. Pay is minimal and hard to live on, especially while working to get your degree, which often requires taking out more student loans or living very minimally

Explore other reviews about Kansas State University

5.0
Jun 13, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Very Flexible around class schedule.

Cons

Lack of training but overall a great experience.

3.0
Jun 18, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Great vacation time/sick time & benefits - Generous 403(b) match and contributory program - Excellent healthcare and dental - Fun campus atmosphere - Students that want to be there, getting you excited for work and always offering a fresh perspective

Cons

- Management is reluctant to take input from suboordinates seriously, even when they are out in the field and face to face with prospects, parents, and the general public, - Management has unrealistic expectations given current political and social climate. They expect everything to remain the same, and do not acknowledge the challenges facing students entering into and trying to navigate higher education in the current socioeconomic/political system. - Unwillingness to negotiate or even discuss raises, regardless of experience or attainment of additional credentials. - Decieving "1 free class per semester" benefit. The class will not be free due to additional "fees" or mystery costs not covered by your employee benefit. Employees who would need to take classes online are often completely ineligible. - Blatant favoritism within departments. Some suboordinates are given special privileges (leaving early 2-3 days a week, refusing to/making excuses as to why they can't perform certain parts of their job and having management make excuses for them, being granted hybrid/wfh privileges while others are required to be in office 5 days a week, etc), while other coworkers are left to pick up their slack. - No reward for high performance (bonuses, raises, recognition, etc.), and a complete dismissal from leadership when a suboordinate asks to have an open and candid conversation, - A culture that drives away high performers due to lack of recognition, support, or valuable/tangible feedback. I was also witness to the director of a department swearing loudly in their office on several occasions while on Zoom, and conducting themselves in an unprofessional manner (yelling, swearing) during a one on one meeting with a suboordinate.

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All