New Leadership Lacks Understanding - District Manager Learning Care Employee Review

2.0
Feb 27, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Flexible PTO for director or higher levels If you're liked, your pay can be higher than similarly situated peers

Cons

-New C suite has no experience in ECE and it shows. They see the business as a cash cow and not an ECE provider. -Labor constraints border on unethical. Consistently asked to cut labor, which means schools cut corners and do things they shouldn't to meet expectations. -Consistently shifting focuses and "new" initiatives that do nothing but grasp at dollars. No focus on family or employee retention unless individual districts or schools drive that. -Increases are few and far between. Rigid hiring rates means that we cannot pay for experienced candidates. That means we are left with less than educated teachers who cannot meet the demanding job expectations. -Upper leadership dismisses concerns. Why have us do a survey and then do nothing to make the culture of the organization better? -Spent millions of dollars for an outside contract to tell us to drop a word from our name. That money should have gone into investing into our schools! -Top heavy Support Central partners constantly clog our calendars with meaningless invites to discuss things we can't possibly have time to care about (like schools who did not complete the menu correctly). No respect for District Manager calendars or time. -Expectations are wildly out of sync with the realities of the market. We are supposed to grow 5 children per school per week in this economy? How about realistic, market-based expectations? -District Managers are not trusted to make decisions with their teams. Instead, we become forced mouth pieces for C suite initiatives. Creativity is dimmed, not celebrated. -Bonuses are structured in a completely unattainable way. When you ask questions about why the budgets are structured how they are, you are told to stop asking and start doing. -C suite and other high-level leadership is filled with buddies of the CEO. No incentive to grow in the company if you are not retail-based. Several peers have been turned down for jobs only to find out that a C suite leader's former coworker (from retail, or vet clinics, or wax clinics!) got the job. "Good old boy" system at work here.

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Learning Care Response
3mo
Thank you for sharing your detailed feedback and for your many years of service. We sincerely appreciate your dedication to the children, families, and your colleagues. We hear your concerns about staffing, pay, and leadership, and we are committed to reviewing these areas to better support our team. Your insights are valuable as we continue to strive for a positive work environment and meaningful support for all employees.

Explore other reviews about Learning Care

5.0
Apr 7, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I love my job, We have a great company that really looks at what is best for children and teachers. Our education team is fantastic our children are excelling daily in their learning but still always have the opportunity to play and experience there classrooms. We have great benefits which is hard to find. I would recommended our school and any in the company. Our school is very unique we have incredibly long term staff. Many over 25 years my self I have been with our company for 41 years.

Cons

Work life balance is always an opportunity that could be better as in any company.

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Learning Care Response
3mo
Thank you for your feedback and for your 10 years with Learning Care!
2.0
Feb 28, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Decent benefit offerings. Paid time off. Employee discount on childcare. Consistent scheduling. Contributing to shaping the next generation of leaders.

Cons

Inconsistent enforcement of company policies. Low wages. Curriculum materials are not always provided. Uneven workloads due to bad hiring and inconsistent staffing (some have it easy while others are overwhelmed with responsibilities). Little upward mobility for teachers.

1
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Learning Care Response
3mo
Thank you for sharing your detailed experience. It’s clear that you value the benefits, consistent scheduling, and the meaningful work of shaping children’s growth. At the same time, your concerns highlight significant operational challenges: low pay, uneven workloads, inconsistent policy enforcement, lack of curriculum materials, and limited upward mobility. Your point about classroom cleaning and sanitation is especially important—expecting teachers to manage both education and full cleaning duties under tight schedules creates a real risk for staff health and burnout. Your advice about incentives to retain staff, a clear reporting system for management issues, and more structured time for planning and sanitation underscores actionable ways management could improve both teacher wellbeing and overall center quality.
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