Showing posts with label Training trainers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Training trainers. Show all posts

Saturday, July 24, 2010

Dray's TMAU Class for Beginners (TMAU 101)

This is the beginning of Dray’s scent training for TMAU-specific work, using a cotton ball with a TMA-rich urine sample on it. Cotton holds and absorbs scent better than anything else. Up to now, Dray has been trained for other scents to develop the desired alert behavior; and now, it is geared to TMA specific training, and eventually, other body odor-related scents. The TMA sample was donated by a university lab that handles TMA-rich urine samples, and they asked MeBO to not disclose their identity as they wish to remain anonymous.

TMAU SALIVA and/or SWEAT SAMPLES NEEDED
From symptomatic volunteers who have
TESTED POSITIVE FOR TMAU

In order for Dray to have a well-rounded concept of TMA scent, Liz is asking for volunteers who have tested positive for TMAU and are certain that their saliva and/or sweat (collected in separate containers) would have TMA on it, by drenching a cotton swab with saliva or sweat and placing it in a zip lock bag and inserting it in a plastic container like the one Liz is working with in this video, covering it tightly with its proper seal. You can purchase these cheaply at your local grocery store. It would be greatly appreciated if you would then mail it to the following address:

Pawsibilities Unleashed
Pet Therapy of Kentucky, Inc.
P.O. Box 5316
Frankfort, KY 40602

We thank Liz and Charlotte for having spent countless hours, days, weeks and months in the development of this TMAU Service Dog Program. To think, WE'VE ONLY JUST BEGUN; THE SKY IS THE LIMIT!








TMAU Service Dog






MarĂ­a de la Torre
Director

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Joint Venture MeBO Research and Pawsibilites Unleashed




By Liz Norris, Master Trainer
AKC-CGC Instructor and Therapy Evaluator

Pawsibilities Unleashed
Pet Therapy of Kentucky, Inc.





...When we train a starter pup for our diabetic or seizures, the donation fee is $5,000.00 which is a reasonable amount for most people to afford and we can make it this affordable by putting the beginner training on the pups and teaching the owners how to do it from there. Keeps the expense down and they learn how much work is involved. Do you think this is foreseeable with producing Trimethylaminuria Service Dogs? Do you think there will be a demand for them? I think once people realize that they can get this help, there will be a core amount of folks that would definitely want this type of help.

I am very excited about this prospect and the more I research it, the more excited I am. We/Kentucky Labs have a litter of service dog pups coming up. I would highly recommend one from that litter.
We breed with Cheryl Moore who has lines going back to Westminster show ring and they have been excellent to train for diabetic and seizure work. We have no failures. 100% as of today!


Would you [MeBO] want to be part of this and do a joint project with us? I have some ideas I would be willing to toss around with your organization. Maybe your friend would want to be the "test subject":)


This is just so neat. What a great new avenue to use service dogs and help so many other people. I would love to do a sit down with you/your interested bunch and tell you how scent work with dogs happens and show you the potential. Lets us do as test subject ASAP.

Liz

Thu, Feb 18, 2010 at 4:39 PM

MeBO Research

Dog's Sense of Smell


By Liz Norris, Master Trainer
AKC-CGC Instructor and Therapy Evaluator

Pawsibilities Unleashed
Pet Therapy of Kentucky, Inc.


Dogs can filter scent under water.





First of all, dogs "scent" like we "see". They walk into a room and smell everything...we walk in and "see" everything. They do not acclimate to scent....instead they put in the background (like we do background noise) the scents they are not focused on at the present time or scents they are not being, "paid" to focus on:)

Dogs can filter scent under water. They can not breath water, or intake water, but the Jacobson Organ in their nose area allows them to filter scent under water and tell which rock you threw into the pond is yours and which are not. Just a little FYI to let you see how good they are at the job...

Throw away choke chains, prongs, slip collars or shock collars. A service dog must trust you and work from trust. Instead of correcting the dog all the time and using, "No" over and over, you encourage the dog to work through a problem and problems solve....in other words if it goes to the wrong scent vial, then you say, "keep working"...not No, jerk it off its feet, etc. You let it know it needs to keep going until it hears the Click of the clicker and then it gets a Treat. A service dog can not take the Public Access Test in those devices either...

Liz

Fri, Feb 12, 2010 at 8:10 PM

MeBO Research

What can dogs detect by smell?

By Liz Norris, Master Trainer
AKC-CGC Instructor and Therapy Evaluator
Pawsibilities Unleashed
Pet Therapy of Kentucky


If you have a scent, and a dog with the correct temperament and desire to do the job, they can be taught to track anything and signal. Be it termites, bed bugs, worms, fleas, tears, mold, peanut allergies, whatever...

Fri, Feb 5, 2010 at 7:12 PM

MeBO Research

How to clicker train

By Liz Norris, Master Trainer
AKC-CGC Instructor and Therapy Evaluator
Pawsibilities Unleashed
Pet Therapy of Kentucky, Inc.


How to do the Clicker training:

Basically I say:
  • See it
  • Like it
  • Click it
  • Treat it
  • Keep it

Translates to:
  • See the dog doing something
  • You like what the dog is doing
  • Click with clicker
  • Treat dog with great treat

Translates to:
  • Dog picks up a ball
  • You like this
  • Click with clicker
  • Treat with great treat
Dogs sees this as:


Wow, I picked up a ball, heard the "marker", click that I was doing something the human liked and double wow, I got a treat for it. How easy was that and communication was totally clear.

This starts the dog to become motivational in offering behaviors. In easy to understand terms;

(1) the dog starts to "offer" you behaviors to see if you will
(2) Like them
(3) Click him
(4) He gets a reward (treat)

Conditioning the dogs mentality to keep trying things over and over and to think and to offer behaviors that you could not get any other way. the dog starts to try different things because he wants to hear the click. He knows the click means a reward (treat, fetch, other motivational likes).

For human understanding:

If you walked down the street and every blond you passed gave you a Click/$100.00 bill.
Human nature would make you become conditioned to start seeking out blonds in the crowd because you have been rewarded by a positive method for doing so.....Click means you found one - Treat means $100.00 bill

If you were to walk down the street and every red head slapped you, then mental conditioning would take over to see all red heads as a threat and you would start avoiding them. You might never really be able to trust one ever depending on how much negative association you had with them over how much time frame.

This translates into:

If every time I ask you to "Sit", I jerked your head off with a choke chain or prong collar or shocked you with shock collar, then I would be training you by bully methods, intimidation methods, threat methods, not teaching you by example. You would learn to focus on the negative instead of the positive. Even if you sat and I treated you, you would know, "I sat because I was being abused" big deal that I got a treat...who cares, I still got abused. The dog or person starts to focus on, "how can I keep this from happening" not I am working happily to save your life. Then you have a dog that is always looking for the correction and focused on that, which means the dog is not focused on your blood sugar, seizures, body scent changes, and not focused on the positive.

Dogs trained by the negative shut down. They feel like no matter what they do or what answer they come up with the end result will be the same.....they get abused. that is where their focus has been conditioned to be.

Teaching is showing, leading, setting an example. Dogs trained by this method (clicker or lure) are capable of thinking thru a puzzle and coming up with a solution. They do not shut down, quit working, and will keep on trying until they get the right answer. They have never been told "No" you are too stupid, "No" you can't achieve this you are a dog, "No" you can't do this, you are the wrong breed, but encouraged all the way from puppyhood to, "Yes" good dog. If they make a mistake, then you do not click or treat.

Following example of working with new puppy:

My pup is asked to Down
-she offers me a Sit (her best thing ever)
*nothing happens except - that is a good Sit - (because it was and you should always notice when they do something good)
-she offers me a High 5
*nothing happens except - that is good High 5 - (because it was and you should always notice when they do something good)
-She offers me a spin
*nothing happens except - that is good Spin - (because it was and you should always notice when they do something good)

-finally she thinks, it is not something I have done before and been rewarded for. I need to try things that I have never been click/treated for.

-She offers me a Bow
*Now we are cooking
You can click this, as it is on the way to the Down
She is like, Wow I got clicked for that Bow thing
then she test it to see if it is really what got her clicked/treated

-Then she bows and nothing happens (I usually C/T for the Bow about 5X before I ask for a little bit more)
she is confused because now we are asking her for just a little bit more
-she lays down.
*Click/Treat (really big jack pot treat so it will stick in her memory)

this happens in minutes. Everyone is happy and had a great time.

or you can by-pass the Bow/Click/Treat for just the Down and shape the Bow later as a trick.

MeBO Research

Clickertraining : The 4 Secrets of Becoming a Supertrainer

By Cecilie Koeste & Morten Egtvedt
www.canisclickertraining.com




http://docs.google.com/fileview?id=0B02huQIv5VnWMmNjYWQ5ZjYtNTFmYS00Njg4LTgzYTgtM2U1Mzk5ZTI4MWRl&hl=en

received from Liz Norris, Wed, Mar 3, 2010 at 6:19 PM

MeBO Research

Dogs on prongs and saying "NO"

FROM: Liz Norris, Master Trainer
AKC-CGC Instructor and Therapy Evaluator
Pawsibilities Unleashed
Pet Therapy of Kentucky, Inc.


Let me give you my impression of dongs on prongs, when I see one like this, I know it has not been trained to use its mind and be a free thinker. I also know it is not under control for YOU, but under the control of a collar. Proved that at a workshop this weekend where the lady was so proud her Doberman was on a prong......I told her to strip the dog naked and it should work for her if she were correct in her assumption that the dog would obey her without it. Dog left the country........could not wait to get away from her and force training. It did not want nor did it volunteer to be with her and part of their team. worked 15 minutes with dog on loose leash and she was right there with me, following me, would not get off me...like Velcro.

The Cognitive Dog : PowerPoint

The Cognitive Dog

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