Good job for students - Anonymous employee Babylangues Employee Review

5.0
Oct 17, 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Nice company. You can choose the hours that suit you.

Cons

Not much to improve on.

Explore other reviews about Babylangues

4.0
Nov 16, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The entire staff was very accommodating and nice. I originally interviewed for them and one other ESL babysitting company and I was much more comfortable with Babylangues. They were very good at keeping my class schedule and my preferred age of children to babysit in mind. The process both applying to and leaving the company was very straightforward and they were more than happy to be my reference for several jobs I ended up applying for after leaving Paris.

Cons

I found the training session, which is only half a day, a little redundant and it could have been much shorter but that is the case for a lot of training sessions. The pay is not amazing but it was enough for me to pay for some necessities as well as some other excursions in Europe. I've heard stories of bad experiences other people had with one of the staff members but I've never experienced this personally.

2.0
Nov 5, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Alright if you can't find anything else and can't speak French, and if you have other sources of income and are doing something else in France like studying or something. It's very easy to get a job here as they seem desperate for teachers and seem to often hire people on the spot during the interview.

Cons

It’s just babysitting for minimum wage (though advertised as a 'high' wage), and you can only do part-time hours. Holidays aren’t fully paid, you just accrue 1€/hour to be paid out at school holidays. Only half a day training, which is unpaid and disorganized. I heard that one staff member was aggressive and unprofessional towards another teacher when he wanted to leave which really turned me off working there, and made me reluctant to approach them about anything. You have to give 2 or 3 months notice to get out of the contract (they threaten to press charges if you don't), and it's in French so read it carefully before signing, don't just sign it on the spot without reading it like they ask you to. I got the impression that they have a high turnover rate of babysitters. I found the company to be fairly disorganized, and the same lesson plans seemed to be used for children of different ages and levels, so some of it wasn't relevant. Because all your leave is paid out during school holidays, you can't take any days off during normal working time or you won't get paid. Also they are short on staff so I felt a lot of pressure to not take any days off because it is unlikely that they will be able to get a replacement. I felt like it would be quite difficult to take a sick day at short notice (though luckily I didn't get sick while working there). Also I was told during a job interview at another organisation that experience at this organisation is not highly regarded by proper English teaching schools in France, they just consider it as babysitting, so I wouldn't recommend working here if you want a career in teaching English.

13
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Babylangues Response
11y
To whomever wrote this article, please feel free to get in touch with us (careers@babylangues.com - +33173749200) to dicuss your issues and how we can help you resolve them. Am I right to assume that you have never worked with us or have ulterior motives to tarnish our reputation? Your allegations are false: "It’s just babysitting" --> It is not babysitting but Language Teaching through interactive activities taking place either in a classroom or at childrens' homes. All our instructors receive full training to the innovative methodology developed by Caroline Benoit-Levy, a certified linguist, weekly teaching assignments and proprietary pedagogical materials in the form of books, CDs, and activity toolkits to accompany them along the curriculum. "for minimum wage" --> Babylangues instructors are paid a net hourly rate of 10.00-16.50€, incremental over time and substiantially higher that the French minimum wage (7.47€ net/hour). "You have to give 2 or 3 months notice to get out of the contract (they threaten to press charges if you don't)" -->Yes our contract clearly states a 2-month notice period for resignation. We require a high level of commitment form our instructors as the job involves working with young children and thus building a close relationship with them. Unexpected instructor departures tend to be very disruptive to the progress made by the pupils concerned. A 2-months period is the time needed to ensure we recruit a viable replacement instructor and put in place a smooth transition between the leaving instructor and his substitute. If a replacement is made before the 2-months period, instructors are in fact permitted to leave without having to serve the notice period in full. This happens in most replacement situations. We have obviously never threatened or intimidated anyone, we are serious organisation with hundreds of clients and a reputation to sustain. "It's [the contract] in French so read it carefully before signing, don't just sign it on the spot without reading it like they ask you to." --> Our legal documents are French because our company is based in France and the authorities we comply with have this as a requirement. We have never asked for anyone to sign documentation on the spot. Instead we provide transcripts translated in English with our contracts, always encourage our instructors to take them away and read carefully before returning, and even redirect those interested towards the services of a profesional and independent translator.
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