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Play Connections

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Registered Behavioral Technician - Anonymous employee Play Connections Employee Review

5.0
4 June 2018
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The BCBA's/supervisors are so helpful and knowledgable! You see your supervisor once a week so you are always getting the help that you need. While working for this company you become trained to become an RBT and you learn so many skills; differential methods, corrective feedback, reductive measures, reinforcement measures.. etc.

Cons

The only hard part about this job is some commutes can be at the most an hour but most commutes take about thirty minutes.

Explore other reviews about Play Connections

5.0
15 Sept 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-Positive and supportive environment, including from the management team. -Management team really seems to value the employees and their opinions. They know how to deliver feedback to employees in a respectful way. -6-7 weeks of scheduled time off per year, + 60 hours PTO. -Employees are salary so there is no worrying about not getting paid because of client cancellations. - The services provided take place at the center, in client's homes, and schools. Typically, employees spend half a day at the center (multiple clients per hour) and the other half either doing an in home or school session. If you work full time, you also work the after school program which means staying later twice a week. -If you're just starting out in ABA, they provide training (and paying the first year fees) to become RBT certified (but you pay your renewal fees yearly after that). -There is frequent supervision from BCBA/BCaBA's so there is plenty of opportunities to grow your skills and work collaboratively. -This company is the only ABA company I've ever worked for that I could tell really puts the client's first and understands that to do that, the employees need to be taken care of as well.

Cons

-Sometimes you have to sub with a client you've never worked with before. If you don't like unpredictability, that can be hard, but its also a great way to develop your skills (they do take in staff's skill set before assigning clients) -Sometimes training can go very slowly -If you're new to ABA there is a lot to learn and can be overwhelming (true for any company)

2.0
21 July 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

There are many bright, well intentioned people that work at Play Connections. I always wondered why they would chose to work at a glorified daycare, particularly with low pay. I think it’s because a lot of employees are fresh out of college and have no direction in life.

Cons

This glorified daycare is very disorganized. During my time there, I found others throwing together things at the last second. Yes, given the dynamic nature of children, it makes sense some of this would occur. However, it happened nearly all the time. I think people would have worked harder if they weren’t so busy/exhausted and if they got paid more. Specialists disagreed/gave different instruction when it came to the same child/situation, and then I would be the one corrected. The dynamics of what was happening, how to do things, the environment we worked in, the roles we played, the coworkers we worked with, and the children we taught. And I wasn’t told if these changes until I did something wrong. Others did not have this problem to the same degree because they either worked in one room all day and/or got away half the day to work in schools/homes. When coworkers were away, specialists would replace them in the rooms, but they often had little understanding of the activities and dynamics of the practical application of things while in these contrived environments. And then they would correct me/be annoyed with me because I didn’t do what they thought things should be. The way people would express their disapproval was very passive and expressly “gentle”. In fact, most of the time no one would say anything, and only complain to the supervisor. The supervisor, in turn, wouldn’t address it, and only would after a long time had passed and would only state generalities. I found this to be true both when I was -forced- to complain about a couple people and when others complained about me. There was no due-process with these matters. People would make snap judgments about situations and assumed they understood what I was doing. And given the nature of the dynamics of the place, it was impossible to pause to correct their interpretations. Then they would give general complaints to the supervisors, and so on. I was hurt and frustrated with this. However, at the time I struggled to verbalize my observations. The way that Behavior Techs were trained was very disorganized and thrown together. Apparently, there was an express, written-out rubric that Technicians were supposed to achieve in their development as employees. However, we weren’t given copies of this, let alone an explanation of it. I had lots of experience teaching children, but because it was my first year at Play Connections, I was bottom of the heap and not allowed to take on a leader-role in the group classroom, etc. When I did have a chance, I was highly complimented for my “blossoming development,” even though it was the situation, and not me that had changed.

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