[nagdu] How long is "successful"

Ann Edie annedie at nycap.rr.com
Sat Jun 8 10:33:36 UTC 2013


Hi, Robert and All,

I was trying to come up with a chart or something that might gather/display
the type of information that would be useful in determining relative success
of various guide dog programs in putting out longer lasting teams.  I found
your solution, Robert, to be very elegant and comparatively simple, which is
great.

What I was thinking of would be a chart which would start, for example, with
the number of teams put out by a certain program in the year 2000 and then
give the number of partnerships which ended within 1, 2, 3, and so on years
in each of several reason catagories.  The catagories that I felt were
applicable were:  dog medical, dog behavioral, dog age-related retirement
(this one would not be allowed to kick in before age 9 or 10 of the dog, I
would think), and human (all reasons, such as death, health, lifestyle
change, just deciding a guide dog is not right for him/her, etc.)  Of
course, I don't know if even the schools have this type of information or if
we could accurately gather it from handlers.  Then there is the issue of
whether handlers put a spin on the reason for ending partnerships, for
example saying/believing that they are retiring a dog for natural
age-related  or medical reasons when actually the dog is not working well
and hasn't been working well for maybe years and is now 6 or 7 years old,
which I would call a behavioral reason and not a natural age-related
retirement at all.  I think the Eames' book or perhaps one of the guide dog
program surveys did ask for the number/percentage of teams that ended within
a year, but I don't believe that most of the schools even gave that figure.
I have always wanted to have this type of information, because I feel it is
very useful and significant to know what to expect.  And it would be
interesting to know if there really are significant differences between
programs with respect to this type of statistic.  For me, it is sort of like
checking Consumers' Report to see the reliability rating or repair records
of the various car brands before deciding on a brand of car to buy.

I would think, or at least hope, that the guide dog programs do collect this
type of data on their teams and use it to improve all aspects of their
operations, from breeding to dog training and team instruction to follow-up.
But I don't know if they actually do take this approach to quality
improvement.  So a simple statistic like the length of partnerships which
Robert is proposing might get at the same information in a much more
efficient way.

Best,
Ann

-----Original Message-----
From: nagdu [mailto:nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Robert Hooper
Sent: Friday, June 07, 2013 12:34 PM
To: NAGDU Mailing List, the National Association of Guide Dog Users
Subject: Re: [nagdu] How long is "successful"

Hello All:

I've had a few thoughts on this subject, and have arrived at a few different
possibilities.
The first is to ask why such a statistic exists--ultimately, one would
answer, to measure the success of the guide dog program in general.
Therefore, to measure general success, I would suggest looking at (1) how
many active teams a program has and (2) how many teams a program turns out a
year. This takes the question of success on a personal level and makes it
irrelevant. For example, if guide dog school x has 500 active teams and
guide dog school y has 1000 active teams, then there are some hypotheses you
can draw with these numbers. Here are a few:
1. Guide dog school y is more efficient than guide dog school x with regards
to resource use, class size, dog placement, etc.
2. Guide dog school y has a better marketing strategy, as it has seemed to
reach more prospective clients than guide dog school x.
3. The amount of teams put out by guide dog school y puts them further ahead
with regards to experience (and thus, one would hope, competence).

One can continue to make such hypotheses--which reminds me--these are not
factual statements one can make about these schools. As anybody using
statistics properly can tell you, statistics are tools that can be
misappropriated and poorly used. Thus, it is important to call the above
statements hypotheses--for example, when reviewing the schools, make these
hypotheses, and, to the best of your ability, test them scientifically.

I have another possibility, and this one is more of a statistical one. If
you are wanting a time-based method of success, do the following.
Take a representative sample of data points (N) where each data point
represents the duration of a guide dog team. This can be measured by taking
the length of time from dog acquisition to team termination (due to
death--of either party--retirement, etc.). If N is large enough, and
assuming the sample comes from a statistically normal population, you should
get a bell curve representing a normal distribution. This can help you
figure out a lot of things. I would take the mean of team duration and call
that "successful," just to have a realistic expectation of guide dog team
duration. If you convert your sample to z-scores, then where z=-1.0 and
z=1.0 is where you will find approximately 2/3 of the population.
If one must have a time-based method of determining success, then I believe
that this would be a more accurate means of obtaining such, rather than just
assigning an arbitrary number of years. Of course, this is purely a measure
of how frequently schools put out long-lasting partnerships. Whether that
constitutes personal success is a different issue entirely. I think that the
word success, as originally defined in this thread, is too broad and
encompasses too many factors. Instead, get more specific--for example, call
it "successfully long-lasting partnerships." If that's what you want to
measure, then nobody can argue that those statistics don't measure that
variable. The problem arises when the variable is too generalized--a word
like "success" is sort of a scientific catch all. I enjoy this discussion,
and feel free to inquire about my various points--I'm writing this on break,
so this message was a bit hurried. 
Sincerely,
Robert Hooper, Undergraduate Research Assistant, HDFS Early Childhood
Development Lab Hooper.90 at buckeyemail.osu.edu The Ohio State University,
Department of Psychology; Department of Neuroscience 166H Campbell Hall
1787 Neil Avenue
Columbus, Ohio 43210
Cell: (740) 856-8195

-----Original Message-----
From: nagdu [mailto:nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Tracy Carcione
Sent: Friday, June 7, 2013 3:09 PM
To: NAGDU Mailing List, the National Association of Guide Dog Users
Subject: Re: [nagdu] How long is "successful"

I'm not comparing it to hospital stays; I was just trying to give an example
of helpful statistics.  Rebecca's example of divorce statistics is a better
comparison.  Nor would I expect it to be the whole picture, more another
piece of data to use.  For instance, when I was choosing a place to get
trained in computer programming, my first question was "What percentage of
your graduates got work in the field after completing training?"  That's
another kind of success statistic.
I feel that stats on bad matches or unhealthy dogs would be helpful to both
school and prospective student.
Anyway, I'm sure I've used up my 5 list messages, so I'm off.
Tracy

----- Original Message -----
From: "Margo and Arrow" <margo.downey at verizon.net>
To: "'NAGDU Mailing List, the National Association of Guide Dog Users'" 
<nagdu at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Friday, June 07, 2013 2:15 PM
Subject: Re: [nagdu] How long is "successful"


> Tracy, I don't know if we can statistically do this.  I'm sure there 
> are ways to do it but I do not believe statistics show the entire 
> opicture and I also think comparing this to hospital stays is like 
> comparing apples and oranges.
>
> Margoa nd Arrow
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: nagdu [mailto:nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Tracy 
> Carcione
> Sent: Friday, June 07, 2013 1:19 PM
> To: NAGDU Mailing List, the National Association of Guide Dog Users
> Subject: Re: [nagdu] How long is "successful"
>
> I think we're mixing up personal success with statistical success.  
> I'd agree that, on a personal level, getting your dog to do what you 
> want with a minimum of effort, and being safe together, constitutes 
> success.  But how do you measure that, if you want broad statistics?  
> The only way I can think of is to see how long the team stays 
> together.  There will be outliers--people who retired a dog young 
> because of an attack, for instance, but it's the only way I can figure 
> to measure what I want to measure. If someone has a better idea, I'd 
> love to hear it.
> Now, maybe you don't care.  You're happy with your dog and your 
> school, and that's all that counts.  I can dig that.  But I'd also 
> like some level of assurance that, when I go to class, I have the best 
> chance of getting a dog I can work with for a long time.  Right now, 
> all a person can do is talk to other people from their school of 
> choice and see how they've done.  I just wonder if there isn't some 
> more objective measure that could be added into the mix, to give the 
> prospective student another way to compare schools, and to show 
> schools if their training is working as well as they would like.
> After all, the hospital I work for analyzes data on bad outcomes, so 
> we can do better.
> Tracy
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Larry D. Keeler" <lkeeler at comcast.net>
> To: "NAGDU Mailing List,the National Association of Guide Dog Users"
> <nagdu at nfbnet.org>
> Sent: Friday, June 07, 2013 12:42 PM
> Subject: Re: [nagdu] How long is "successful"
>
>
>> Well, the point is that in my neighborhood, I know where those small 
>> curbs are at. She does stop at the big ones and whenever there are 
>> obstacles in the way. But, for me, the little ones where I live are 
>> not that important so I don't get on Holly to do them. I could have 
>> but its really not that important. Some folks might not consider that 
>> successful but, i don't really mind. I do  care if obstacles are 
>> there and if she didn't stop for them! Some folks will tolerate there 
>> dogs eating things they shouldn't or sniffing other folks for 
>> example. What I consider successful is that if I want Holly to do 
>> something, I can get
> her to do it with a minimum of fuss.
>> If I want her to stop at those little curbs, she will! And, if we are 
>> somewhere that I don't know, she will anyway. I guess success for me 
>> is knowing what your dog will do when you do something and what your 
>> dog knows you will do! And, if your dog listens to your commands and 
>> you listen to the dog.
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: "Star Gazer" <pickrellrebecca at gmail.com>
>> To: "'NAGDU Mailing List,the National Association of Guide Dog Users'"
>> <nagdu at nfbnet.org>
>> Sent: Friday, June 07, 2013 11:25 AM
>> Subject: Re: [nagdu] How long is "successful"
>>
>>
>>> Larry,
>>> Your post about your dog not stopping at curbs as a good example of 
>>> how difficult this is to deal with.
>>> Reading your post, I was thinking "I couldn't deal with that behavior". 
>>> Y
>>> Ou feel differently. You love your dog. You and she have a history. 
>>> I don't know your dog, and have no history with her.
>>> I'm wondering if the statistics used on marriage and divorce rates 
>>> would serve as a good model?
>>> We all know people who have been married for 60 years and are miserable.
>>> Yet, for all kinds of reasons they stay married.
>>> Likewise, we all know marriages that ended quickly for any number of 
>>> reasons.
>>> And as with dogs, we all have a friend where we think "How does she 
>>> put up with *that*".
>>>
>>>
>>> -----Original Message-----
>>> From: nagdu [mailto:nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Larry D.
>>> Keeler
>>> Sent: Friday, June 07, 2013 11:19 AM
>>> To: NAGDU Mailing List, the National Association of Guide Dog Users
>>> Subject: Re: [nagdu] How long is "successful"
>>>
>>> Aggreed! My point is that too many variables exist to have a perfect 
>>> team.
>>> You have to use some kind of continuum scale to measure. And, what 
>>> success if for one is not the same as it is for another. If you use 
>>> saftey as you're standard most folks I know at least have that 
>>> covered.
>>> ----- Original Message -----
>>> From: "Margo and Arrow" <margo.downey at verizon.net>
>>> To: "'NAGDU Mailing List, the National Association of Guide Dog Users'"
>>> <nagdu at nfbnet.org>
>>> Sent: Friday, June 07, 2013 10:53 AM
>>> Subject: Re: [nagdu] How long is "successful"
>>>
>>>
>>>> Well, I'd say that even if a team works for one month and does 
>>>> well, they're successful.  I say this because after one gets home, 
>>>> things could happen.
>>>> Dogs get sick, humans get sick, dogs die, humans die, circumstances 
>>>> change, etc., etc., etc.
>>>>
>>>> I just don't think we can put too much of a figure on it.  I 
>>>> figure, though, one can begin to tell how successful a team is 
>>>> after they get home and work a bit.  One can also tell during class 
>>>> if a team might be successful or not.
>>>>
>>>> Margoa nd Arrow
>>>>
>>>> -----Original Message-----
>>>> From: nagdu [mailto:nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Tracy 
>>>> Carcione
>>>> Sent: Friday, June 07, 2013 8:04 AM
>>>> To: NAGDU Mailing List, the National Association of Guide Dog Users
>>>> Subject: [nagdu] How long is "successful"
>>>>
>>>> Darla asked how long a team has to be out to be "successful".  I'd 
>>>> say at least 2 years, just to put a number on it.  Or possibly 3; I 
>>>> could argue either way.
>>>> I'd be real curious to see numbers from schools of teams graduated, 
>>>> and partnerships that lasted 3 years or more. I think that should 
>>>> be a pretty good indicator as to how well the school is doing. I 
>>>> mean, if school X put out 500 teams, and 300 of them stayed 
>>>> together, that's only a 60% success rate, and not so good.  But if 
>>>> 400 of them worked 3 years or more, that's 80% success, which is pretty
good.
>>>> Tracy
>>>>
>>>>
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