[nagdu] Going out during training

Lisa belville missktlab1217 at frontier.com
Wed Feb 2 20:43:13 UTC 2011


Peter, I must be missing something, because I fail to see how these policies
are custodial.  Have you talked to sighted people who have gone through the 
various versions of military boot camps?  They have rules in place, and God 
help you if you break one of them.  But you don't hear them whining about 
how the rules are custodial or paternalistic.  Most of them have joined 
whatever branch of service by choice and want to progress through their 
training.  They either go with the program or they leave.  The purpose of 
this example is to illustrate that policies need to be in place in order to 
achieve a specific goal in a set time frame.

People don't work with their green dogs off campus because they know little 
about how that dog
reacts to certain situations.  Why would any person who is serious about 
working with that new dog want to jeopardize the future of their team by 
possibly getting into a situation they cannot handle due to this 
information.  Consider also that many people getting guide dogs have never 
had a dog before,
even as a pet.  Why should that innocent dog be subject to someone's 
inability to
properly work with it based on their inexperience with a dog?  Can you 
imagine how the public would react to this?  They already cry abuse when 
they see us give a leash correction even if it's necessary.

To revisit my military analogy, they don't just give people guns and the 
keys to a tank and let them play war games during basic training for the 
same types of reasons.

Those of us in training for our successor dogs can also have issues learning 
their dog's personality quirks.  I didn't know how to read the body language 
of either of my dogs for the first week at least.  Having someone there to 
give instant feedback about what I was feeling through the harness and leash 
was immensely helpful.  so was the support and socialization I got from 
others in the class with me.  Nights were spent learning how to groom, pill, 
and entertain my dog.  I personally didn't have the energy to go off campus 
to do anything else.  The thought that I needed to assert myself as a blind 
person because I was being oppressed didn't really occur to me because I 
knew that this period of training would last for only a specific time 
period, and when it was over, I would be on my own with the dog, so I'd 
better concentrate on working and learning how we worked.  I did leave on 
the weekends, but was responsible enough to return in time to feed and 
relieve my dog.  Frankly, it was a much needed break for me and the dog.  I 
didn't feel oppressed, but then, I'm not always looking for a reason to feel 
oppressed or discriminated against.  I suppose someone with this mentality 
can find discrimination and opposition every place if they do nothing else 
but look for it.

Maybe it's not like this for you, but I'd bet that for 99.9% of us training 
guide dogs and working with them as the end user is incredibly time 
consuming for all involved.  Every component of the highly condensed 
training is useful for forming a bond that will hopefully lead to the 
formation of a safe and successful team.

If we used your philosophy, people would just pick up a dog and come and go 
at random, not showing up for training classes or lectures.  this is a 
recipe for failure.  I'm not a dog trainer.  I could never do the owner 
trainer thing like Julie and Tami have.  That's why I go to a school.  I 
don't want to get into the nitty gritty details of training because there 
are more facets to me than being a person who happens to be blind and who 
happens to prefer the use of a big black dog over the long, white cane.

I might take your stance a bit more seriously if you managed to convince the 
leaders at NFB centers to allow dogs in every aspect of their training and
not only during certain areas or training classes.

This is a policy I find offensive and paternalistic because it implies that 
I, as a dog user, am obviously not adjusted to my blindness, i.e., inferior 
and in need of training simply because I use a dog.  I don't measure up, I'm 
not the perfect model blind person and I obviously need mommy and daddy NFB 
to show me the error of my ways.

This attitude is just as repulsive, more, in fact, than having some sighted 
person tell me I'm a poor blind person who will never amount to anything. 
The NFB's so-called philosophy has done nothing but divide and alienate 
those of us it is supposedly in place to help.

In my opinion, you and those who feel as you do would be better off spending 
your time getting your organization to see dog use as equal to the use of 
the long white cane.  Why should guide dog schools take you seriously if you 
can't even get your own organization to treat you like the equals you insist 
you are?

And don't tell me to remember Daytona or to go to a national convention. 
I've been to national conventions and have served on local chapters, so I've 
seen things first hand and I've spent time trying to change it.  As long as 
people like you can justify discrimination within your own organization and 
bully those of us who dare to think differently, nothing will change.

Lisa

The handle on my recliner apparently doesn't qualify as an exercise
machine...who knew ?
Lisa Belville
missktlab1217 at frontier.com

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Peter Donahue" <pdonahue2 at satx.rr.com>
To: "NAGDU Mailing List,the National Association of Guide Dog Users"
<nagdu at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Wednesday, February 02, 2011 1:19 PM
Subject: Re: [nagdu] Going out during training


> Hello Gary and everyone,
>
>    And there in lies the problem. I thought we attended guide dog training
> programs to learn to be top-notch guide dog handlers whether with an
> instructor or out alone with the dog. Students attending our centers are
> expected to use their canes whenever they travel be it on their own, with
> another student, or with a cane travel instructor. It should be the same
> when one attends a guide dog program. Such low expectations and custodial
> policies would never be tolerated at an NFB-run facility. If you continue
> to
> lap up the excuses put four the  by guide dog programs concerning
> unaccompanied travel with a dog prior to graduation remember Daytona.
>
> Peter Donahue
>
>
> ----- Original Message ----- 
> From: "GARY STEEVES" <rainshadowmusic at shaw.ca>
> To: "NAGDU Mailing List, the National Association of Guide Dog Users"
> <nagdu at nfbnet.org>
> Sent: Wednesday, February 02, 2011 11:07 AM
> Subject: Re: [nagdu] Going out during training
>
>
> Hi:
>
> Yes, at my school they allowed people to go out for short periods of time
> in
> the evening. All the girls in my class were under 18 so generally they
> were
> accompanied by a staff member but this got more lax as the program went
> on.
> No one was allowed to leave the school property with the dog until after
> they graduated without being accompanied by a trainer mainly for liability
> and safety reasons as others have stated.
>
> Like others had mentioned, I was there to get a  guide dog and do what was
> required to begin the building of a strong team. So, although there was a
> jam session I wanted to attend shortly after I got Bogart I did not do
> this
> since I knew it would not help us move forward. However after about ten
> days
> I felt, and the trainers agreed, that it would be okay to leave Bogart for
> some periods of time. I don't think the school was ever trying to take
> away
> my freedom but they wanted to be sure, especially with poodles, that we
> developed a strong bond before we left and we demonstrated our ability to
> be
> responsible in intregrating  the dogs into our lifes.
>
> Gary
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Cindy Ray <cindyray at gmail.com>
> Date: Tuesday, February 1, 2011 4:35 pm
> Subject: Re: [nagdu] Going out during training
> To: "NAGDU Mailing List, the National Association of Guide Dog Users"
> <nagdu at nfbnet.org>
>
>> Peter, I must respectfully say that what you are saying isn't
>> the point. Yes, maybe the schools can let you go out some
>> sooner, but the issue isn't really about the people so much as
>> the dogs. The dogs are a little unnerved by the new experience
>> they are having; the trust isn't there; should you really be
>> able to go out with that dog right off because you are a
>> competent adult? There are liability issues, too,  and
>> everyone there isn't as prepared to go off campus. This creates
>> sort of a class system in my opinion. And, as Janine pointed
>> out, at some of the schools there are logistic issues for this.
>>
>> Cindy
>>
>> On Feb 1, 2011, at 5:17 PM, Peter Donahue wrote:
>>
>> > Hello again everyone,
>> >
>> >    What I'm hearing is, "Your expectations are
>> too high. Lower them because
>> > blind people are too stupid to handle new dogs in unfamiliar
>> environments.
>> > After all they're too helpless and can't be trusted to travel
>> alone with new
>> > dogs in strange situations. Such is beyond their capabilities.
>> We need to
>> > guide them every step of the way."
>> >
>> >    People we just staged a demonstration last
>> Saturday of what is possible
>> > when a belief in the abilities and capabilities of the blind
>> is shared by
>> > all. Driving that Ford Escape in a public venue such as the
>> Daytona
>> > International Speedway was a monumental achievement. Things
>> could have gone
>> > horribly wrong but they didn't. Mark Riccobono successfully
>> navigated the
>> > track and by doing so shattered many misconceptions concerning
>> the blind. If
>> > he had people holding him back as is happening among our guide
>> dog users he
>> > never would have had that chance to prove what can be
>> accomplished when the
>> > blind have access to information. It would have been a
>> tremendous loss for
>> > us all. How sad. He never drove that car on the Daytona Track
>> until last
>> > Saturday yet he performed a flawless demonstration in front of
>> thousands of
>> > people.
>> >
>> >    I find it disgusting that we can shine our
>> lights for Mark's achievement
>> > yet we have lowered expectations when it comes to guide dog
>> training. If
>> > Mark could drive that car in an unfamiliar environment those
>> in guide dog
>> > training that choose to do so should have the opportunities to
>> work their
>> > dogs during off-hours. As I stated previously the rule should
>> be if a team
>> > can't complete x amount of hours of unaccompanied travel
>> during their
>> > training the blind person shouldn't be sent home with a dog.
>> >
>> >    Finally I'm hearing some of this rubbish
>> from people that on occasions
>> > criticized the NFB for not doing enough to help guide dog
>> users. How can we
>> > do more if the organization's hands are tied by those
>> unwilling to allow the
>> > imagination juices to flow rather than buying in to the voodoo
>> dished out by
>> > our guide dog programs. I'd suggest that the next time someone
>> suggests a
>> > possible remedy to address and solve guide dog-related issues
>> be they with
>> > training, access issues, etc remember what happened in Daytona
>> last
>> > Saturday.
>> >
>> > Peter Donahue
>> >
>> > ----- Original Message ----- 
>> > From: "GARY STEEVES" <rainshadowmusic at shaw.ca>
>> > To: "NAGDU Mailing List, the National Association of Guide Dog
>> Users"
>> > <nagdu at nfbnet.org>
>> > Sent: Tuesday, February 01, 2011 1:50 PM
>> > Subject: Re: [nagdu] Going out during training
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> > Hi Tracy:
>> >
>> > I agree with you. During my class I started off slowly leaving
>> Bogart alone
>> > in the room and would see how he reacted. I sort of broke the
>> rules first by
>> > showing up at the end of day meeting without Bogart. My room
>> was right
>> > across from the meeting room so I could hear what he was
>> doing. I live in an
>> > apartment so it was crucial that I could have confidence in
>> him that he
>> > wouldn't bark if I left him home alone. I think my instructors
>> trusted me
>> > and how I worked with Bogart so I think they got what I was
>> trying to do.
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> > Once he was pretty good I did nip down to the bar for a beer
>> or two but he
>> > was never lefr alone for more than 4 hours.
>> >
>> > The othergirls in the class were all under 18 and they were
>> interested in
>> > checking out boys at the local coffee shop.  It was
>> actually Bogart's
>> > brother, Byran, who did all the barking which did worry me a
>> bit with
>> > regards to Bogart but so far he seems very good in this regard.
>> >
>> > I don't think the girls should have been sent home but I think
>> that if the
>> > dog wasn't doing good being left alone then they should have
>> had to work at
>> > it to build up the dogs trust that you'd come back.
>> >
>> > Gary
>> >
>> > ----- Original Message -----
>> > From: Tracy Carcione <carcione at access.net>
>> > Date: Tuesday, February 1, 2011 11:23 am
>> > Subject: [nagdu] Going out during training
>> > To: nagdu at nfbnet.org
>> >
>> >> I don't think that going out with a brand-new dog, in an
>> >> unfamiliar area,
>> >> during class is a good idea, certainly not in the first couple
>> >> weeks.  It
>> >> takes a while for the dog and person to adjust to each other,
>> >> and, until
>> >> that happens, the guiding/following may not be all it should be.
>> >> As to going out without the dog, I wonder what people think
>> >> should happen
>> >> in the following:
>> >> I was rather shocked by an episode Gary related about his
>> >> class.  People
>> >> were free to go out after the training day, and it sounded like
>> >> one woman
>> >> was making a habit of taking off, leaving her dog in the room,
>> >> where it
>> >> started barking its head off, and other people repeatedly had to
>> >> go and
>> >> deal with the problem.
>> >> If people are free to go out, and their dog causes a problem
>> in their
>> >> absence, I think it would be reasonable to give them a warning,
>> >> and, if it
>> >> happens again, send them home.  After all, they're in class
>> >> to learn how
>> >> to handle a dog, and if bar-hopping is more important...out
>> they go!
>> >>
>> >> It did sound nice in Gary's class, to be able to nip down to the
>> >> cornerand have a brewski.  But TSE is too far out in the
>> >> country for that.  GDB
>> >> too, for that matter.
>> >> Tracy
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
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