employer cover photo
employer logo
employer logo

Lindamood-Bell Learning Processes

Engaged Employer

Lindamood-Bell Learning Processes reviews

3.0

36% would recommend to a friend

(872 total reviews)

Nanci Bell

26% approve of CEO

19% positive business outlook

Lindamood-Bell Learning Processes has an employee rating of 3.0 out of 5 stars, based on 872 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Lindamood-Bell Learning Processes employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Education industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

872 reviews
3.0
May 13, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Let me start off by saying I worked for this company for 6 years. I did every possible position (it felt like) they had to offer. I did everything they asked me to do from change in student schedule at last minute, and move across the country. I have a few mixed feeling about this place but I promise it will be the most accurate review. So here are the pro's... 1) If you are a teacher, and you want experience WORK HERE FOR A SUMMER. You learn invaluable learning strategies for students. I can't tell you how many times I went on an interview and immediately saw LMB on my resume and that's all they wanted to talk about. Subsequently, many offers came my way. As a teacher for LD kids now, I implement the LMB style of teaching into all my lessons and IT WORKS. 2) Yes, the schedule is demanding for the summer but you know, that's what you sign up for. Most managers will tell you right away there are no vacations in summer so these reviews on here complaining about it, is just whining to me. The nature of the job is that they do INTENSIVE instruction in the summer. If you don't like it, don't work there. Most of these reviews have no idea what goes into planning for a summer. People cancel. People call out sick. People BULL, so a management is forced to make last minute changes. But if you want to make decent money in the summer, I would definitely recommend it here. 3) The program works. If you want to get the warm and fuzzy feeling over a student reading for the first time. This place is for you. 4) Development. If you are good at your job, and you work for a decent manager (sometimes comes a dime a dozen here) you will get development. LMB PD department taught me so much about how to be a good teacher, manager, and overall communicator. If you choose to stick it out and try to climb rank, you (most likely) wont regret it. 5) you meet some pretty great people. I have met some of my best friends at these centers.

Cons

1) LMB does not plan ahead. They do the best they can but they are constantly in triage mode. A lot of these reviews complain about unaware management, and that is because LMB puts people in positions of which they are not ready for. They say they will develop you so you're ready but most of the time its learning on the fly and criticism when it doesn't go well. 2) Not enough support. In any of the roles. Simply, expectations are too high with not enough help. Ultimately, criticism and grudges are held when you cannot meet expectations. 3) and most importantly. You are underpaid for these expectations. You work crazy amount of hours for both hourly and salary and you never feel like you've been compensated appropriately. Especially consultants. 4) You are never felt like you're being heard. Management will often disregard your feelings and try to manage over you. 5) The fake facade of open communication and being upfront is BS. There is no such thing. Managers can never be open with their employees about what is actually going on.

2.0
Dec 7, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-I did work there for 8 years so there are a lot of things that are great about LBLP -I did survive the recession while working at LBLP and I got my Master's Degree while working full time at LBLP. So for the right person/reasons and if you are at the right location they can and will accommodate your schedule -Most of the kids are great -The company is ever evolving in a number of ways so if you enjoy constant change, even if it just changes right back, you may enjoy working for LBLP -It's a perfect gig if you are in school or have another means of revenue

Cons

Once I became a consultant I NEVER stopped working. The expectation was that I'd be readily accessible to each of my parents, the expert on each of my kids, and deliver top notch quality individualized lesson plans for my students on my load no matter what it took. More often than not this happened outside the hours of 8-5 while I was not on the clock. The company is very elitist. I realized this early on. They have a product that millions of people can benefit from but only the HAVES can truly make it work according to the formula. When I started the hourly rate for service was $86 when I left 8 years later it was $114. My pay increased averaged less than $1 a year. I think one year I got a $0.25 raise. If you are a White female who looks like you may have been in a sorority and you're not an idiot you will do well at LBLP. If you are not, just know you'll stagnate. There are few men or women of color that thrive in that company. They are selective as to who they promote regardless of skill set or what you have to offer. I witnessed someone with no clinical background get promoted from an operations position over people who had been in the clinical role for years. They believe anyone can be taught yet they choose to develop who they want to develop. If you make a mistake it's made into this huge deal. HUGE. They are really ambitious but don't seem to have the basics as far as how to run a successful business mastered yet despite being in business for so long.

3.0
Dec 1, 2017

Employees undervalued

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Effective methods. Coworkers are smart, dedicated people. Flexible hours. Fast-paced sessions make the day go by quickly--you're rarely bored.

Cons

The culture that corporate enforces promotes a constant over-the-top positivity that comes to feel creepy and false (e.g., one must respond with "my pleasure!" when thanked for anything). We were told during training that "this is an emotional job, in that you are required to be happy"--very weird. The people at the top seem to advocate this unnecessary focus on various minor aspects of presentation at the cost of addressing substantive issues of instruction. A lot is expected of clinicians--you must manage behavior, act as a diagnostician, and complete a significant (often unrealistic) number of instructional tasks in each hour. You have only 5 minutes between sessions to prepare for your next student (including putting away and setting up materials), and you may not have any time to learn about the diagnoses they have, behavioral issues, and so forth. You are expected to build a rapport with the student and make learning fun, yet also follow the instructional plan to a T and not waste a single moment in each 55-minute allotment. Both esteem and pay are low given the responsibilities and skill set required, and the pay has now been lowered even further with little warning (other reviews detail this situation).

Viewing 7 - 9 of 872 Reviews

Glassdoor has 951 Lindamood-Bell Learning Processes reviews submitted anonymously by Lindamood-Bell Learning Processes employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Lindamood-Bell Learning Processes is right for you.