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Dr. Susan G. Friedman    

Dept of Psychology,    

Utah State University     

& Raising Canine    

 PRESENT    

 

 

 

LLA-TELE for Animal Professionals

Living & Learning with Animals:

The Fundamental Principles and Procedures of Teaching and Learning

 

 

Purpose and Objectives

LLA-Tele for Animal Professionals is designed to provide the foundation for a comprehensive and coherent understanding of behavior analysis as it relates to facilitating the lives of captive and companion animals. The principles and procedures discussed throughout the class apply to all species. To meet this goal, the following objectives will be explored:

          1) The fundamental principles of learning and behavior,

          2) a model for assessing the functional relationships between behavior and environmental conditions,

          3) the teaching technology of applied behavior analysis and its ethical guidelines for implementation,

          4) a systematic model for building behavior-change interventions.

 

With this information, animal professionals will be able to better guide clients to proactively teach their animals successful captive and companion behaviors and effectively analyze and resolve behavior problems that inevitably arise.

Philosophy and Scientific Underpinnings

The philosophy of behavior in this course is that companion animals, like all learners, must have power to operate positively on their environment to live behaviorally healthy lives. We facilitate this power when we engineer the environment that works for the animal when he engages in behaviors that work for us. The guideline followed for matching problems to solutions is to implement the most positive, least intrusive, effective interventions. To change our companion animal’s behavior we first change what we do.

 

Students will quickly learn that once they have the necessary tools, a commitment to facilitate rather than force behavior does not mean a loss of behavioral compliance.

 

The natural science perspective of behavior analysis guides the information presented here, which means that our challenge is to explain behavioral phenomena by identifying the physical events that produce them. Participants are encouraged to focus on observable behavior and the environmental conditions that support it, rather than make inferences or assumptions about hypothetical mental mechanisms. The lectures rely heavily on the findings of many decades of scientific study of behavior from the field of behavior analysis to replace personal recipes and folk wisdoms about behavior, which are so pervasive.

 

Associated with this course is an email list called LLA-Tele Professionals. The purpose of this list is to further your experience with the material during the course. Information will be provided the first night of class for students to join this list.

 

CLICK HERE TO ENROLL FOR PART I

 

What is a telecourse

A telecourse is a course taken over the telephone and computer.  This educational medium is extremely convenient, inexpensive and productive.  All you need is a telephone and access to a computer.  You call in at the designated time for the lecture; you receive notes and other information via computer; and, you receive and turn in your assignments via computer.  You can be anywhere there is phone access and still participate -- you can be at your office, at home, on vacation or driving in your car!  We recommend you be in a location where you can take notes and focus on the lecture; however, if necessary, you can be in transit.

 

To learn more about telecourses, click here!

 

 

Instructor

Susan G. Friedman, Ph.D.

Department of Psychology

Utah State University

e-mail: sg.friedman@usu.edu

 

Course Description

LLA-Tele is designed to be a first course in behavior analysis for veterinarians, trainers and other animal professionals.  The principles and procedures of behavior analysis are general in nature, that is, they apply to all species and situations.  Thus, LLA-Tele provides a robust, generic foundation to accurately assess and resolve behavior problems and more effectively support your behavior work with clients and patients.

 

MAIN TOPICS

 

Part 1 main topics include science foundations, respondent and operant learning, functional assessment, and principles and procedures for increasing positive behaviors.

 

Part 2 main topics include empowerment, principles and procedures for decreasing problem behaviors and a systematic intervention design and implementation protocol.

 

Application Opportunities

Each student is encouraged to participate in the following application opportunities:

1.  Complete at least one case study consisting of a functional assessment, intervention design, implementation, and data collection, for review by the instructor and fellow participants.

2.  Complete and revise weekly short-answer homework questions included in written lectures.

3.  Complete an optional 25 short-answer final exam.

4.  Bring questions and comments for discussion to each teleconference.

5.  Participate on the private yahoogroups list serve, LLA-Tele, maintained for course participants and instructors to further the course objectives.

 

Learning Objectives

 

PART 1:

A.  Lecture 1 - Science Foundations

     1.  Introduction

           a)  What brings us together - animal love operationalized

           b)  The many challenges for companion animals

      2.  The significance of science

      3.  Terminology tumult

      4.  The many disciplines of behavior science

      5.  Ethology, evolutionary determinants of behavior

      6.  Behavior Analysis, environmental determinants of behavior

      7.  Applied behavior analysis, a study of one

      8.  A simple model of behavioral support, behavior more or less

      9.  Traditional learning paradigms

           a)  Respondent learning (classical conditioning), shrinking Pavlov

                   i.  Eliciting innate behavior patterns with learned triggers, S-S-R

                  ii.  Respondent processes: Habituation, sensitization, extinction

                 iii.  Behavior Therapy, counterconditioning processes

                       (1)  Systematic Desensitization

                       (2)  Flooding

           b)  Operant learning

                   i.  Behavior is a function of its consequences, R-S

 

B.  Lecture 2 - The ABCs of Behavior

      1,  Behavior defined and what it is not

      2.  The problems with constructs and vague labels

           a)  The reification fallacy and explanatory fictions

           b)  Operationally defining behavior

      3.  The smallest unit of analysis, behavior ABCs

           a)  Distant and immediate antecedents

           b)  Consequences

      4.  Functional assessment, identifying predictors and purposes

      5.  Analytic summary statements

      6.  Functional assessment protocol, first 4 sections of the FAID form

 

C.  Lecture 3 - Antecedent Behavior Change Strategies

      1.  Setting events

      2.  Establishing operations

      3.  Discriminative stimuli

      4.  Application examples

      5.  Demonstration: Ken and Nico learn to step up

      6.  Demonstration: Severe macaw learns to step up

 

D.  Lecture 4 - Consequence Behavior Change Strategies

      1.  Increasing Behavior

           a)  Positive and negative reinforcement

           b)  Application examples

           c)  Essential characteristics of effective reinforcement

           d)  Individual differences, identifying an individual's reinforcers

           e)  Establishing new reinforcers from existing reinforcers

            f)  Relative advantages and disadvantages of primary and secondary

                 reinforcers

                   i.  Jaguar learns to step back

           g)  Shaping, the crown jewel of teaching

                   i.  How it works: Operant classes and differential reinforcement

                  ii.  Steps to shape a behavior

                 iii.  Building shaping plans

                       (1)  Foot wave

                       (2)  Bathing

                 iv.  Targeting, the most important behavior for any captive animal to do

                  v.  Demonstration: Lisa and Lil' Dude target training

                 vi.  Prompting and fading

                       (1)  Demonstration: Shaping with food lure, Susan and Sam, zero bite

                              step up training

                       (2)  Demonstration: Fading in feared hand, Susan and Blizzy simulate

                              step up training

                vii.  Adding a cue

                       (1) Demonstration: Leah and Julio crate training

               viii.  Chained behaviors

                       (1)  Two different explanations for how chains are learned

                       (2)  Forward and backward training strategies

a.       

Telecourse Format

LLA-Tele is a two-part telecourse. Each part consists of 4, weekly, 2-hour telephone classes, totaling 8 weeks and 16 contact hours. Part 1 can be taken as a terminal course, however completion of Part 1 is a prerequisite for participating in Part 2.

 

Each class will include a slide presentation, discussion of the weekly readings and short application exercises, and a Q&A focused on the participant's personal cases. The classes will be audio-taped and made available for the students to download for their personal use.

 

Course Syllabus

 

DATES

 

Part I

 

Thursday, September 4, 2008

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Thursday, September 25, 2008

 

Part II

 

Thursday, October 9, 2008

Thursday, October 16, 2008

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Thursday, October 30, 2008

 

TIME (time is the same for both Part I and Part II)

 

TIME ZONE TIME
Eastern 8:30pm-10:30pm
Central 7:30pm-9:30pm
Mountain 6:30pm-8:30pm
Pacific 5:30pm-7:30pm
Alaska 4:30pm-6:30pm

 

Students will receive the teleconference phone number, access code and other logistical information in an e-mail delivered shortly before the course begins.

 

CEUs

 

CCPDT: 

Part I - 6.5   Part II - 6.5

 

IAABC: 

Part I – Certificate of Attendence – 8 CEUs

Part I – Certificate of Completion – 10 CEUs (submit and finish homework)

Part II – Certificate of Attendence – 8 CEUs (combined with Part I will be 16)

Part II – Certificate of Completion – 10 CEUs (submit and finish homework - combined with Part I will be 20)

Part II – Certificate of Excellence – 12 CEUs (submit and finish homework and complete final exam - combined with Part I will be 22)

 

Materials

All required materials will be provided to the students including a link to the weekly presentation computer slides for downloading, weekly written lectures and articles, the Functional Assessment and Intervention Design (FAID) protocol, and, for Part II, The Parrot Enrichment Activity Book by Kris Porter.

 

 

Registration & Fee Per 4-Week Class Part I
 

To register for LLA-Tele for Animal Professionals, please click on the link below. The cost for enrollment in Part I is $350.00.  A Professional Discount is available for for staff coming from the same clinic or facility. For 2 participants from the same facility, the fee is $25 less per person.
 

We hope you'll join us for what promises to be a fun and productive learning experience: A course designed for animal lovers where the animals award the grade!

 

CLICK HERE TO ENROLL FOR PART I

(we must have 18 people enrolled to conduct this class)

 

PART II

E.  Lecture 5 - Consequence Behavior Change Strategies

     1.  Decreasing Behavior

           a)  Punishment, everyday usage vs. scientific functional definition

           b)  Positive and negative punishment

           c)  Application examples

           d)  Consequence quadrants

           e)  Factors affecting punishment

            f)  Problems with punishment for companion animals, people, et al

           g)  Alternatives to punishment

                   i.  Antecedent design

                  ii.  Differential reinforcement of alternative behavior

                        (1)  Application example - replacing perseverative screaming with

                               pleasant vocalizations and physical activity

                 iii.  Extinction

                        (1)  Problems with implementation

                  iv.  Time out - doing it correctly

            f)  Research on choice, control and behavioral health

                    i.  Control of environment

                   ii.  Contrafreeloading

                  iii.  Learned helplessness

                  iv.  Demonstration: Amazon learns to crate with empowerment

 

F.  Lecture 6 - Solving Problem Behaviors Systematically -

     Putting it All Together

      1.  Five considerations for developing an effective plan

      2.  Ethical hierarchy of behavior change procedures, effectiveness is not enough

      3.  Steps for building behavior change plans, Functional Assessment and

            Intervention Design (FAID) Protocol

      4.  Functional assessment summary and competing behavior paths

      5.  Brainstorming strategies to make problem behavior irrelevant, ineffective and

           inefficient

           a)  Success Files

                   i.  Kathy: Reba: Chasing Kiki

                  ii.  Maria: Sunshine: Biting

                 iii.  Lee: Rockx: Screaming

      6.  Enrichment planning exercise

 

G.  Lecture 7 - Training tips and Guidelines

      1.  Behavioral momentum and observational learning

      2.  Taking responsibility

      3.  Training tips

            a)  Demonstration: Amazon learns to scoot under towel

 

H.  Lecture 8 - Common Behavior Fallacies

      1.  Handling clients’ "Yeah buts" and other hackneyed distractions

2.       

Registration & Fee Per 4-Week Class Part II

 
To register for LLA for Animal Professionals Part II, please click on the link below. The cost for enrollment in Part II is $350.00.  
A Professional Discount is available for for staff coming from the same clinic or facility. For 2 participants from the same facility, the fee is $25 less per person.

We hope you'll join us for what promises to be a fun and productive learning experience: A course designed for animal lovers where the animals award the grade!

 

CLICK HERE TO ENROLL IN PART II - Part I is a pre-requisite for Part II.

 

 

Instructor

Susan G. Friedman, Ph.D., is a psychology professor at Utah State University. An applied behaviorist for more than 25 years, her area of expertise is learning and behavior, with a special emphasis on children’s behavior disorders. Prior to living in Utah, Susan was a professor at the University of Colorado after which she lived in Lesotho, Africa for 5 years. While there, she directed the first American School of Lesotho. Susan has written on the topic of learning and behavior for two avian veterinary texts and popular parrot magazines. Several articles can be found on the web at http://www.thegabrielfoundation.org/HTML/friedman.htm . She has taught animal behavior workshops with Steve Martin at his ranch facility and zoos around the country, speaks at bird clubs and conferences, and enjoys contributing to and learning from several companion parrot behavior internet lists. Susan is a core member of the California Condor Recovery Team.  When asked how she became interested in working with companion parrots in particular, Susan explains with a wink, "I have always enjoyed working with juvenile delinquents!"


 

Testimonials

 

Taking Susan Friedman’s LLA course was refreshing, enlightening and motivating. She approached behavioral issues, which constitute a large portion of the average private veterinary practice, from a scientific basis and taught useful tools for the intervention of problem behaviors. Moving from anecdotal, anthropomorphic and assumptive interpretations about behavior to a scientific understanding of the function of behavior changed the way I approach companion animals, wild animals and even my staff!

Good luck!
Juli Ponder, DVM

Raptor Center

College of Veterinary Medicine

University of Minnesota
 


 

On a practical basis, what LLA has given me as an avian veterinarian:

 

For a couple of years we had at our clinic offered our clients an "avian obedience course" according to the AAV-material from the late 1990s. However, it felt outdated and frustrating not to be able to offer something better.

 

After learning about Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) we have changed our concept totally, and are now offering "avian training courses," primarily to new bird owners, to help them get a good fresh start with their birds. So far this has been a tremendous success!

 

I always hear Susan¹s voice telling about the least intrusive, most positive way in doing things. The only drawback of learning about LLA and ABA is that it I¹m completely engulfed in it now. Instead of reading my veterinary textbooks and journals, I spend all free time learning more about behaviour and training!

 

Gunnel Anderson

Djurkliniken Roslagstull, Stockholm, Sweden

 

 

 

Susan is who I give credit for my new approach to pet ownership. Susan’s mantra is if you change an environment for success, animals learn to behave successfully.
 
What has been so wonderful for me since I began studying with Susan several years ago is how my relationship with my birds has improved dramatically and how eager they’ve become to learn. Without any use of force or dominance, I have successfully modified behaviors and empowered them to be better students. And, as Susan would say, an empowered animal is a healthy animal.

Lisa Desatnik, Ohio

 

 

 

Hi Susan,

 

I just wanted to relate a quick moment  to you that has everything to do with you and your teachings.

This course is by far one of the best courses I have ever taken.  The help we received and personal attention to our questions and homework assignments was top notch, and the patience with us to be sure that we really understood the concepts and material was unmatched.  Nowhere have I learned so much that is so applicable to my life, in such a short amount of time. I am so sorry that it has ended now. I now have many new tools that I can use in my communication with Picasso, and I am excited and determined to use them to the benefit of us both!

 

Pam Price

 

 

 

My fellow colleagues,

 

I had heard about Susan Friedman’s Living and Learning with Animalss course at an AAV lecture in 2003. I had felt as an avian veterinarian that giving behavior advice was difficult. After taking the course for 6 weeks I could see that a scientifically based study of behavior was so important. Previous behavior classes I had attended were presented from a speaker’s experiences. There were never any basics that I could go back to. This class really opened my eyes to the A,B,C’s of behavior. It makes such good sense. Those of you who were able to attend Dr. Friedman’s talk at the 2006 AAV conference understand what I’m saying. ANYONE who is involved with birds would benefit greatly form the course. I hope Dr. Friedman will feel free to post my statement everywhere she can.

 

Sincerely,

Vicki Schulz, DVM

 

 

 

 

My personal and professional life changed for the better when I took Dr. Susan Friedman's online LLA course.  I gained a completely different perspective as I learned the principles of positive reinforcement.  My parrot, other pets, family, friends, patients, clients and staff have reaped the benefits.  And me? The big reinforcer for me is having lots of fun seeing others learn from what I have been taught. I highly recommend LLA for ALL veterinary professionals, great and small!
 
Ellen K. Cook, D.V.M.
Cicero Veterinary Clinic

 

 

I just found out that Dr. Susan Friedman will be offering another telecourse with Raising Canine; this one will be based on her own LLA Course, which is so popular, there’s an 18 month waiting list for enrollment!
 
As a graduate of the LLA Course I can tell you that it was an incredible learning experience for me and a personal highlight in my life; I am proud to have earned my certificate, but am even happier to have had the opportunity to learn from Dr. Susan Friedman, whom I admire and respect so very much.
 
I encourage you to take advantage of this wonderful opportunity and sign up now – I wouldn’t miss it for the world!
 
Kim Lutz
Kim’s Canines LLC
Missouri

 

 

I  have a new foster dog (came from a home with 175 Labs in it  - unbelievable) who has many issues, one of which is lunging and trying to run at other dogs in order to play (I think!).

I was thinking about this the other day in my head saying "Man! I wish she wouldn't do that!! How can I get her to stop it??"  And my brain went "Well what do you want her TO do?"  AHA!  (that was you talking in my head, wasn't it?)  and then "What is she doing now  that most closely approximates our end goal"  next AHA.

A  shaping plan of course.  It's just so very cool.  Thank you and this dog thanks you too.

Leslie  Mapes
Chagrin Falls, OH 44022


 

 

 

The class was really helpful to me, because I had such a poor background in training.  My only real training experience was in the old established dog obedience classes - yank them by a choke chain until their eyes bulge out kind of stuff.  My bird mentor was a lady that I worked for in a pet shop, and who I later figured out should not even be allowed to VISIT birds, let alone OWN them. I got all the wrong advice from all the wrong people - time out for a misbehaving parrot meant 15 minutes alone in the bath tub (no water), that sort of thing.  I hang my head in shame.  This class has been such an eye opener for me, and I really meant the comment I made a while back about it making me feel free.  I'm free to be nice to my birds, even when they don't "get it", and I'm free from having to "punish" them.  And I'm free from having to try and figure out what they are thinking - I don't have to *know* what they're thinking!  All I have to do is observe what they're Doing!

 

An additional thought -  I haven't trained my birds or worked with them much  for 4 or 5 years now.  I didn't want to have to make them go sit in the bathtub for biting - that never did seem right to me.  So I just fed them and watered them and talked to them in their cages, and what they were willing to offer me is what I settled for.  (Most of them will step up for me anyway.)  I preferred to just visit with them, talk to them in their cages, and watch them play their silly games than to have to punish them - fully believing that it was a drastic mistake to leave misbehavior unpunished.  So - I didn't give them the chance to misbehave so I wouldn't be put in the position of having to punish them.  See just how much this class has really helped me?  *happy hop*

 

Helen "Stormie" Egeland

 

 

 

 

Hi Susan


May I say that you are a phenomenal person and lecturer - I have taken many courses in my time and I have never been so glued to my seat, learning, laughing and empathizing with every part of my being for such long periods of time - thank you for such a wonderful weekend and learning opportunity! You will be happy to know that I am applying the ABCs to my two macaws with fabulous results - they are blossoming as we speak - thank you and do take care!

Helen Swim
Director, Marketing and Sales

First Ontario Fund

 

 

 

Susan Friedman's LLA course was excellent at explaining the fundamentals of functional behavioral analysis and assessment using parrots as the object of study. Working with winged animals that can fly away at will and cannot be controlled by leashes, collars or head halters presents an incredible training challenge. If you want to have an even better understanding about the application of functional behavior analysis and assessment then don't miss this course.

 

Wendy Van Kerkhove
Fresh Air Training, LLC
wendy@freshairtraining.com
612-377-4770


 


 

I actually learned about this course at the LLP course you did in Calgary. I really enjoyed it and learned a lot. I managed to teach a Quaker parrot I'm fostering to step up and stay on my hand using the stuff I learned. He was very wild when he came to me.  

 

I'm also making progress teaching my Red-lored Amazon to step up for me as well. She always steps up for my husband, but is more likely to strike at me, but this is changing. We've had to go very gradually - for example, first I rewarded her for letting me place my hand near her without lunging. My Maroon-bellied Conure is now learning to come to my hand when I call her.


I have Don't Shoot the Dog and all issues of Good Bird, which I got at Parrotdise Perch in Calgary. They're very useful resources! I'll be sure to check out the sample telecourses at Raising Canine. Being mainly dog-based is fine, since I have two dogs as well.  Dogs and parrots are quite different, but I've noticed that principles for training the two species seem quite similar.

Thanks!
Jessie Zgurski, Alberta, Canada.

 

 

 

 

For more information

 

Contact Raising Canine

sue@raisingcanine.com

512-916-4007

 

Or

 

Dr. Friedman

sg.friedman@usu.edu

435-881-4345

 

 

 

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