The Emperor Wears No Clothes - College Counselor HS2 Academy Employee Review

1.0
31 May 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

As a counselor, HS2 isn't a terrible place to work if you're a recent college graduate because you'll be receiving an entry-level salary at a job that doesn't have a steep learning curve. If you have any kind of educational experience or advanced degrees, however, you'll still be made an offer near or identical to a college student on whose diploma the ink isn’t even dry yet. Teaching isn’t so bad, either, though it’s difficult to secure a good income because the position is part-time and non-compete contracts make it so you can’t line anything else up with other tutoring companies. HS2 capitalizes on employee empathy. If you care about student success, watching them grow and getting to know your clients as people and not just potential success statistics, you may be willing to overlook the severe dysfunction that you're otherwise inundated with. Depending solely on employee altruism doesn't work, though. Once that sense of self-obligation runs dry, counselors are expendable and quickly replaced by new recruits, who invariably burn out and move on themselves. Employees need more than a paycheck as an incentive to come into work and do their best. But if you share genes with Mother Teresa, by all means, this job is for you.

Cons

STAFFING: Every year or two, there is a mass exodus of employees. Around seventeen full-time counselors have left HS2 in northern California alone within a little over a year. This effectively hits a “reset button” on the quality of services that the company is able to offer its clients. If a company’s business model is built around a revolving door of young, underpaid employees, there will always be a low ceiling to the kind of expertise that is able to offer. This isn't fair to parents who are charged exorbitant sums of money under the pretense that these kids have specialized or insider knowledge. (Beyond what can be found by one's own internet research, anyway.) The typical incoming employee knows precious little about college admissions counseling, having no previous background or formal certifications. All of their knowledge is acquired on the job, which means that those few senior employees who manage to stick around are responsible for imparting what they know to their juniors. If HS2 is understaffed, moreover, that means they have less bandwidth to train and mentor new employees. Employees are given barebones training and then are thrust into counseling a demanding population of parents and students. Well-informed parents often know much more than a greenhorn “counselor.” COMPENSATION: There is no additional stipend available to teachers or counselors who have completed an advanced degree in education or counseling. If HS2 wants to keep educated employees, it needs to pay them something at least approaching market value, which varies based on locale, of course. The median pay for counselors and educational consultants in 2017 was around $55,000. True that this type of job usually requires a Master’s degree and state license and thus one could justify paying the average HS2 counselor less on account of that. However, this is a national figure, not adjusted for the local cost of living, where a household joint income of $100,000 is considered “low income.” HS2 counselors aren’t even paid the national average for this kind of work. HS2 rewards only a core group of middle-managers who are willing to overlook glaring ethical problems, demonstrate a certain irrational allegiance to the company and who have no sense of work-life balance. This core group isn’t a kind of united cabal, though; they often undermine and gossip about one another behind closed doors and divide junior counselors into competing cliques. Gossip and backbiting are the scourge of Cupertino branch in particular. HUMAN RESOURCES: The human resources at this company doesn't exist, by all accounts. They refuse to respond to employee queries in a timely, respectful fashion. Rather, HS2's approach to conflict resolution is "ignore it and it will go away." It has been my experience that unless a question or concern has to do with some sort of routine, a simple thing like payroll or sick time, emails are usually dismissed outright. Questions about things like salary, scheduling changes, reduced bonuses or benefits or employee conflicts are never answered in a timely manner, if ever at all.

Explore other reviews about HS2 Academy

5.0
7 Mar 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

People are nice and encouraging

Cons

Weekend are needed due to the daily working hours

3.0
5 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Students and counselors are great people; some coworkers are amazing too.

Cons

Working hours are in the afternoon, not worth the time since the pay is minimal, as well as low considering the workload. Lots of disrespectful and rude parents too.

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