Pros
The clinical teams and PHP programs I worked alongside were thoughtful, compassionate, and genuinely student-centered. Working directly with adolescents in partial hospitalization can be meaningful, and the concept behind the role — supporting students academically during a vulnerable period — is important and necessary. Fellow teachers are often experienced, caring professionals who want to do right by students.
Cons
In practice, the company places a heavy emphasis on administrative metrics, documentation, and optics over flexibility, professional judgment, and student-centered decision-making. Teachers are required to log extensive documentation and activity metrics that often feel redundant and disconnected from the realities of working with students who have just been discharged from inpatient psychiatric care.
There is limited autonomy for teachers, even when working with highly vulnerable students whose capacity to engage academically can vary day to day due to medication changes, emotional distress, or clinical needs. The pressure to demonstrate measurable academic activity can feel misaligned with the therapeutic goals of a PHP setting.
Management culture can feel micromanaging, and concerns raised in good faith about workload or student impact may not be received collaboratively. In my experience, providing internal feedback was followed by disciplinary action rather than problem-solving, which made the environment feel unsafe for honest dialogue.