Pros
The people JUMP brings together are some of the greatest people I've ever met. They bring passion, warmth, and talent to the organization that has a positive impact on youth. The experience for a facilitator allows meaningful opportunities to connect with people, partnerships, and beautiful places around the world they can then share with their students. The projects you can get involved with allow a lot of opportunities to learning and professional growth.
Cons
The co-founder/executive director breeds a toxic work culture, which becomes especially apparent for those who work full-time for the organization. You can work as hard as you ever have and it still won't be seen as good enough. Their full-time staff retention is dismal. People get burned out and frustrated with the organization, rarely lasting longer than a year or two, then leave for bigger and better things. Both the ED and COO lack much leadership experience outside of JUMP and it shows. Senior leadership doesn't inherently trust the people they hire, even when the people they hire are more experienced than they are in the field. They gossip more than actually communicate feedback effectively to folks who work for them. Talented and caring people will be hired, given little training, then are asked to essentially function as robots on an assembly line building programs as quickly as possible, sometimes with only a few days notice. Then those people are blamed when things don't work out perfectly, rather than blaming the flawed system they are working in. Staff maintain an optimism that things will get better, but it never does. JUMP may continue to expand, but the poor management of people remains the same. People who leave the organization are often seen as traitors. While you can learn a lot in the process, it's hard to say that working for people who make you feel like you'll never be good enough is worth it in the end.