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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
1.0
Jan 16, 2017

Reading Clinician

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The basic reading instruction techniques have some merit and it is always good to work one one one with the children. Depending on your center the center director and mentors can be terrific people to work with on a daily basis. Generally the center is a friendly and welcoming place. Training in proprietary techniques is frequent. Session monitoring and feedback are well done. You can learn alot from weekly feedback. Very useful.

Cons

The corporate culture is what I call "the fast food of instructional services". The contract is written so that the company has all the advantages and the clinician gets jerked around. I was hired to work part-time which in my book is half-time - up to 20 hours per week. I was scheduled initially for 30 hours per week which is almost full-time ( 31 hours is full-time). The company wants you to be 100 percent available but they won't guarantee you any hours. I could not get a commitment from the company as to my regular working hours but they wanted me to give them a schedule of all my available hours in advance. My working schedule was recieved on Friday or Saturday for the week beginning the next Monday ( 2 days advance notice). In one day my work schedule changed 4 times. I was asked to come in, my first hour was cancelled, I was asked to stay an hour later and then that lesson was cancelled sometime while I was at work. There was no policy about getting paid when there were cancellations. It was impossible to have regular hours and a regular weekly income. The pay rate is very low - 15 - 17 dollars per hour. No consideration is given for an advanced degree or educational background. In my center I was the only trained and certified teacher but I was paid at the same rate as recent college grads with no teaching experience. This is not a good place for professionals and the majority of staff are recent college grads or retirees. The company is run by very young 20 somethings verging on 30. They know the company routine but they are very green and don't know what they don't know about teaching and student behavior. I had one 22 year old supervisor undermine my teaching efforts I had set some behavioral standards for a young learner and the supervisor told the child that she did not have to do the task that I had set out for her rather than checking in with me about how and why I had set this task. She let the child manipulate the situation instead of working together with the teacher On several occasions supervisors told me that students needed to sit in their seats and made this a behavioral goal of the session. Many of the students had attentional difficulties and sitting in their seats just made this worse. Students worked in open rooms where they were often distracted by the sights and sounds of other students. I found the company is insensitive and unresponsive to the special needs of the children they serve - students who have dyslexia, autism and ADHD are not well served by the environment even though the reading technique is very good for them.

2.0
Sep 8, 2016

Good not Great

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

good pay relatively. nice working with kids sometimes. hires a diverse group of people from many backgrounds. middle tier bosses were cool enough and there's chance at short term travel

Cons

managers are snoody and hypocrites. little support from bosses. not enough pay for the amount of working you're putting in with the kids. you're the kids' primary tutor and are expected to deal with a lot.

2.0
Jul 9, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The methods and materials really do help dyslexic readers make quick and impressive progress in decoding. It's rewarding to see students make such quick progress as decoders, and the students and other reading clinicians are usually a pleasure to work with. Clinicians learn a LOT about reading education in a short time.

Cons

Diagnosticians and managers play favorites by giving as many hours as possible to clinicians they like personally and to those who buy 100% into the company's arguably reductionist teaching philosophy. Even if you have a graduate degree in reading educate from a prestigious university, managers will cut your hours by half or more if they like others clinicians better than they like you. There's no way for the majority of the part-time, contingent reading clinicians the company exploits to make ends meet and almost no hope of advancement (very, very, very competitive promotion process). Clinicians get paid over $10 per hour less than most tutors, even though the intensive and specialized training and the tutoring itself are majorly challenging and high pressure. Some students rebel against the often overbearing demands of the intensive instruction to which they are subjected for many hours per day, but clinicians are expected to stay bubbly and upbeat and interesting every minute of the day to "motivate" students. Managers scapegoat clinicians for systemic problems with the program. The overly narrow approach to reading instruction can create "super remedial readers" (students who can automatically decode almost any real or unreal word thrown at them but who continue to have trouble making meaning from the texts they read). The severe restrictions placed on the language and methods that clinicians can use to teach are mainly to blame.

Viewing 127 - 129 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.