Curriculum Associates is a for-profit company which preys on former educators’ desire to help students. Their mission-driven language masks a profit-first model that relies on former teachers’ willingness to give extra time, energy, and especially unpaid labor in ways that feel uncomfortably similar to the exploitation many experienced in education itself. For educators considering this as a transition out of the classroom, it is important to understand that reality clearly before accepting the role.
As reflected in other recent reviews, compensation for the part-time Professional Learning team was significantly reduced, leaving many employees with gig-level pay while still facing expectations that often resemble—or exceed—full-time professional demands. The work frequently involves extensive travel, cross-time-zone scheduling, and collaboration across multiple departments. While these experiences can be professionally rewarding, part-time staff are often treated as though they have the same availability as salaried employees, despite being compensated only for select portions of their time. Meetings and responsibilities are regularly scheduled on unpaid days, with limited recognition that many employees rely on supplemental work, caregiving flexibility, or intentionally chose part-time roles for work-life balance. The result is a role that functions as serious sales and customer retention support, but is increasingly compensated like a side job.
Additionally, prospective employees should carefully evaluate the advertised hourly rate, as it can be misleading. The posted rate generally applies only to customer-facing hours, which represent just one portion of the job’s actual responsibilities. Many essential duties—including planning, internal meetings, travel, and administrative responsibilities—may be unpaid or compensated at substantially lower rates, significantly reducing true earnings. Combined with seasonal fluctuations, inconsistent workloads, and the unpredictability of school-based scheduling, income can be highly unstable and difficult to control. Even performance incentives may feel disconnected from actual effort or effectiveness, as bonus structures are often tied more to assigned work volume than employee performance, leaving workers with limited agency over their earning potential.