Great place - Accountant Ingham ISD Employee Review

5.0
26 July 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great place to work at

Cons

Little room to grow in career

Explore other reviews about Ingham ISD

5.0
9 Feb 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The support at the ISD for a staff member is excellent.

Cons

Depending on your role you may work independently.

1.0
9 Feb 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I found no pros to this workplace.

Cons

The workforce lacks meaningful racial diversity; there are very few people of color, resulting in a largely homogeneous (predominantly white) workplace. Training and onboarding are inconsistent, with support tapering off without clear communication. Expectations are often unwritten and unspoken, requiring new staff to intuit standards rather than being clearly oriented to them. Management and coaching support appear conditional; once impatience sets in or an employee is viewed unfavorably, regular meetings, guidance, and training stop rather than increase. Development efforts are replaced by documentation and justification, creating the appearance that outcomes are decided first and rationalized later. Little patience is shown toward employees who are still learning their roles; curt and dismissive comments toward new staff are common. Feedback and accountability are applied inconsistently; positive performance may be acknowledged but does not align with later evaluations. Concerns are raised without prior informal discussion or opportunity for clarification or correction. Serious behavioral incidents are handled inconsistently; for example, a near physical altercation between an employee and a member of the public resulted in no apparent consequences, while far less serious issues elsewhere were escalated. Verbal guidance and approvals cannot be relied upon; expectations may change after the fact when it becomes convenient, creating risk for employees acting in good faith. The workplace shows little tolerance or accommodation for neurodivergent employees; differences in communication style, learning pace, or work approach are treated as deficiencies rather than supported. Procedural language is used to justify outcomes instead of addressing underlying communication, training, and management failures.

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