Great Way to help the community - Field Manager The Y (YMCA) Employee Review

4.0
Jun 14, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The Y is a great place to work for a variety of reasons. It has very competitive pay for young workers. I was paid much more than I would be paid at another job of similar responsibility. It is a relaxed environment that gives you the opportunity to work with kids and members of the community. Very flexible when it came to working - I could work when I could. It was also nice to work outside.

Cons

You get a horrible farmers tan if you work outside, and the parents can be somewhat uppity.

Explore other reviews about The Y (YMCA)

5.0
Apr 22, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great co workers and bosses

Cons

Typical non profit pay that isn't super high

3.0
May 28, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The team members/ coworkers and administrator (team lead) that you work with on a day-to-day basis are the ones who will make or break the experience. Obviously working with children, one must have patience, be flexible, creative - there are some days that test all of those skills! lol! But when you have a great teaching team to work with, your program can run like a well-oiled machine. I loved the time I had working with this program!

Cons

The pay is very low, I do understand with the YMCA being a non-profit, but at the same time when a position is responsible for young children, the pay should be higher than a fast-food chain, to attract and keep higher caliber staffing. - If you already work at a school, it's not a bad gig to make some extra money for coming in a few hours early or a few late. But if you are driving more than 5min, to work 2-3 hours for a ridiculously low rate I would say pass. I was not doing this for the money - I truly loved my coworkers and the kids that attended my school. Unfortunately, some of the other cons are: poor communication (very poor), lack of SOP's when it comes to how teachers should be handling situations for their own personal safety and unrealistic expectations (of us to do marketing, surveys collecting demographics, and pushing for financial donations). The last few things listed is what ended up driving me to resign.

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