Have you raised these concerns and feedback to administration and what was their response? What you describe sounds really frustrating but it's also fair to let the administration try to explain what's going on.
Someone said in another thread that Hack Reactor has been going through "internal restructuring".
u/CodedCoder wrote (the comment Michael replied to):
Not sure how that is the students problem at all though? Internal, external it doesn't matter, they should know how their bootcamp is running nad make sure students are getting what they should.
u/michaelnovatireplied·
Its 100% Hack Reactor's problem and that's why I think you should give Hack Reactor a chance to fix it.
u/CodedCoder wrote (the comment Michael replied to):
I have been hearing a lot of bad about Hack Reactor, I feel like there is absolutely now ay they do not know about it.
u/michaelnovatireplied·
I'm the co-founder of coaching platform and while it's not a bootcamp and everyone has a unique experience, we still collect feedback on every single thing people do, weekly feedback, everyone has a team of 3 staff members to give feedback to, and we even have fully anonymous/untraceable feedback mechanisms. And then even then, once in a blue moon, someone leaves and says they had a bad experience - when all their feedback on paper was positive (and there had been no anonymous feedback related to their complaint)
Sometimes it can be really hard to figure out what problems are if people don't communicate them clearly through the provided channels. You might assume they know because a lot of people are having a bad time, but maybe it's fewer people than it seems - and the people are not surfacing their complaints. Maybe it's not! I'm not making assumptions but it's important to know!
u/angry_hr_seir wrote (the comment Michael replied to):
I can tell you that as a former teachers aid, otherwise know as a SEIR, they do not care. I have heard from some coworkers that they were reprimanded and criticized for trying to find and bring up the blatant cheating problem that HR has.
u/michaelnovatireplied·
Thanks for sharing, that sounds really sad :(
I wish people realized that cheating isn't going to get you a job and is only going to slow you down.