SL Perspective on the recent cuts - Online Scoring Leader ETS Employee Review

1.0
Jan 27, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Work from home anywhere in the country

Cons

I have worked for ETS for more than a decade as an online rater and scoring leader. When I was first hired, I was so grateful to the company for providing decent wages for a flexible job that can be done from home. Over the years I have encouraged many friends in the education field to apply for various scoring positions. After the recent despicable pay-cut to longstanding raters, I no longer hold any respect for this company and will certainly never recommend them again. Several months ago, ETS hired 100s of new, unsuspecting raters at $15/hour, a significantly lower rate of pay than the other raters were making. SLs were told that we weren’t allowed to discuss compensation with any raters. Then in early January, raters who have been with the company for years at the higher rate of pay were notified in an insulting email that their pay was going to be reduced to $15/hour and they could either accept this pay-cut or quit. I already thought that hiring all of those new raters at lower wages was despicable, but I could never imagine that ETS would sink so low as to cut pay by 20-25% for their longstanding workforce. This is an unconscionable slap in the face to 1000s of people who have committed years of their life to this company. There seems to be a perception in the higher echelons of ETS that most raters are just doing this part-time, but that could not be further from the truth. I know 100s of raters who depend on ETS as their primary source of income, sometimes working for several different programs and working any possible shift so that they can cobble together a livable paycheck. During the times of year when tests are plentiful, I know many raters work 7 days a week, 10 or sometimes even 12 hours a day. They know they have to save up every possible cent so they can survive the lean months when hours are few and far between and shifts get cancelled frequently with almost no notice. This work, sitting in front of a computer grading tests, is mentally demanding and extremely isolating and yet these highly educated raters (BA minimum, often much higher) continue to work for ETS for so many reasons including the flexibility of working from home and setting your own hours. I am saddened beyond belief that their wages have just been REDUCED. How will they survive? My pay as an SL was spared in the recent cuts. ETS knows that if the Scoring Leaders were to quit en masse or go on strike, their whole operation would fall apart. While I am personally grateful that I dodged a bullet for the time being, I certainly wouldn’t put it past ETS to hire a new slew of SLs who will work for less and then dock my pay as well. I am actively seeking other employment because the writing is obviously on the wall that ETS doesn’t care about its employees and will do anything to boost profits.

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5.0
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Pros

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Cons

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1.0
May 22, 2026
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CEO approval
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Pros

Support of immediate management and coworkers makes coming to work every day a pleasure.

Cons

Where to start... First, the employee performance evaluation process and methodology has changed from 1) performance vs your job description to 2) OKRs which were completely unattainable and meaningless at every level to 3) rocks and outcomes which again have very little to do with the day to day jobs of most employees. It seems the burden for goals and objectives and performance management has shifted from management to employees as they try to define a methodology that holds only doers responsible for the company's success. All this since Amit Sevak took over. Management manipulated the questions in a recent employee survey to force responses that made it look like there was improvement year over year. Of course, when you add a new President between the employees and the CEO peoples opinion of senior management is improved. Of course when you shift the focus to immediate management from senior management, the responses will be improved. Try issuing the exact same survey as the prior year and see how much "real" improvement there was in the numbers.

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