[nagdu] cane skills as prerequisite for guide dog

Tamara Smith-Kinney tamara.8024 at comcast.net
Tue Apr 6 19:44:08 UTC 2010


Dave,

That's something I've noticed myself.  /smile/  The policy there for the
schools whose practices I'm more aware of seems to be oddly inconsistent in
how it is carried out.  I don't know what that means, or what other factors
are involved, of course.  So it's not like I can make any sort of judgment.
Just every now and then I will find myself scratching my head and wondering.
/smile/

Tami Smith-Kinney

-----Original Message-----
From: nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf
Of David Andrews
Sent: Saturday, April 03, 2010 8:47 PM
To: NAGDU Mailing List,the National Association of Guide Dog Users
Subject: Re: [nagdu] cane skills as prerequisite for guide dog

Tracy:

As I understand it -- most of the Dog Guide schools say that people 
need good cane skills in order to be accepted.  It sounds like this 
isn't necessarily true, which I have always suspected.

Dave

At 01:32 PM 4/2/2010, you wrote:
>Marion, I don't necessarily agree that good cane skills should be a
>prerequisite for getting a guide dog.  It's a nice theory.  It would
>certainly be helpful.  But I know too many people who don't have
>spectacular cane skills, but do great with a dog.  Some of them are older
>people, who started getting dogs when cane training was not very
>available.  Some of them are from places where services for blind people
>are not very good.  Some of them went blind as senior citizens, and quite
>a few agencies don't serve that population very well, since they won't be
>employed.  Should we tell these people they have to wait until they can
>somehow get cane training?  I don't think so. I've met enough people for
>whom the dog was the thing that got them back out, living their lives, and
>I think getting out and living one's life is a great thing. I'm not
>willing to stand in someone's way over whether or not their cane skills
>measure up to some philosophical mark.
>
>Should we take good orientation as good enough?  Or should the guide dog
>schools offer cane training to prospective applicants who they feel should
>have it? They seem like reasonable approaches to me, and I believe they
>are
>the ones being carried out. Encouraging good cane skills is fine, but I
>wouldn't make it a prerequisite for a guide dog.
>Tracy


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