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Don't Shoot the Dog!: The New Art of Teaching and Training

Don't Shoot the Dog!: The New Art of Teaching and Training

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Author: Karen Pryor
Publisher: Bantam USA
Category: Book

List Price: £15.99
Buy Used: £3.73
You Save: £12.26 (77%)



Used (10) from £3.73

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 29 reviews
Sales Rank: 410885

Media: Paperback
Edition: 2Rev Ed
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 224
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 8.2 x 5.2 x 0.7

ISBN: 0553380397
Dewey Decimal Number: 153.85
EAN: 9780553380392
ASIN: 0553380397

Publication Date: January 31, 1999
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Condition: in a well read condition fast uk delivery

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - Don't Shoot the Dog: New Art of Teaching and Training
  • Paperback - Don't Shoot the Dog!: The New Art of Teaching and Training

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Customer Reviews:   Read 24 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Must have book for every dog owner   November 26, 2008
I bought this book after borrowing a copy from my sister,

I have used the clicker method on my dog, and I recomend it to anyone that has a dog and wants him to be wellbehaved and happy.



5 out of 5 stars This book should be on the curriculum! Outstanding book   July 17, 2008
Similar to Dr Breach, I came to this book through Amy Sutherlands book (having read her article "What Shamu taught me... [etc]"), but what I was looking for in Amy's book was not there - it was here in "Don't Shoot the Dog" - and I can't agree more with Dr Bream.

"Don't Shoot the Dog" is in my top 10 books I have read of all time. I have trained and taught all my life, and every page of this book has been an epiphany for me. I have learnt what it is about my teaching/training methods (that others say is my natural ability) that work so well, and I have been able to refine what I do. Rather than specific solutions, this provides the formula through which you can come up with each and every one of your own solutions, tailor-made to that specific training aim.

Every politician should read this, every school child should study this as part of the curriculum. It has changed my philosophy and understanding of others, and if this were practiced as a general rule in society, society would be immeasurably better for it. For a small book this has a very long reach.

My one criticism: the title has restricted the audience. "Don't Shoot the Dog" is a book about developing behaviour in the most positive, and yet also the most extraordinarily effective, way possible. It is a book that engenders tolerance in the trainer and cooperation in the trainee. It is a book that builds trust and makes both sides winners in interactions.
What it is not, is a book about dogs (or shooting)!



5 out of 5 stars a VERY usefull book   June 3, 2008
This book was recommended to me by the psychologist who we consult regarding our son with autism. This is indeed the book that best equips us with dealing with our sons behaviours. I read the whole thing not with dogs but with my son in mind and it completely sums up the best way to teach him. I would be happy if all special needs schools read this book with an open mind. It would change a LOT of things.



1 out of 5 stars Full of Jargon-Speak and little content   March 8, 2008
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

I was extremely disappointed with this book. I have spent many years working in staff development & coaching. I am also a dog owner and interested in training methods. I found this book to be full american psychobable, but very low on anything practical usable or even new. The Author talks a great deal about how fabulous she is as an animal trainer but is apparently unable to describe how or why. If you exclude all the maeaningless language she has very little to say and the examples she quotes do not appear to back up her assertions on how people/animals respond to coaching. there are much better animal training beeks around and much better people training/coaching books too. Don't waste your money


5 out of 5 stars One of the most beneficial books you could ever read   November 28, 2007
 3 out of 4 found this review helpful

I first read this book a couple of years ago and since then have recommended it to anyone who would listen. I've also bought four copies and given them as gifts.

I decided recently that I should reread it to reinforce the ideas and to see if it was as good as I remembered. It is.

When I first read this book I can remember being literally horrified at the methods I had been using to try to modify other peoples' behaviour (family, girlfriend, colleagues, etc.). Any time you attempt to change the behaviour of any person or animal you are - whether you realise it or not - attempting to train them.

It turns out that the methods most people use (usually unconsciously or because they do not know better) are both ineffective and unpleasant - especially punishment. It is rare in life that you can change to a different method of doing something vitally important that is both much more pleasant for all of those involved and produces better results. This book demonstrates one of these happy occasions.

All of our attempts to change the behaviour of other creatures can be broken down into three categories: punishment, negative reinforcement and positive reinforcement. Punishment is an aversive applied after the event (such as grounding your kids or putting a criminal in jail). Negative reinforcement is an aversive (punisher) applied when an unwanted behaviour is occurring which is then stopped when the unwanted behaviour stops (such as the use of a choke chain on a dog). Positive reinforcement involves rewarding desired behaviour (for example using praise or food).

Karen Pryor's methods originate with the findings of American psychologist B F Skinner and her work as a dolphin trainer. Dolphins are unusual creatures in that it is not really possible to train them using the traditional methods of negative reinforcement or punishment. Dolphin trainers thus had no choice except to explore what was possible using only positive reinforcement, particularly using the powerful tool of a conditioned reinforcer - something that the training subject associates with a reward, such as a clicker or whistle.

(The advantage of a conditioned reinforcer is that it becomes possible to show the subject precisely what it was you liked because you can indicate without any delay. A lot of training problems are simply due to problems in communication. For example, when you yell at your dog for jumping into the lake and it comes over to you and you then tell it off forcefully, how does the dog know that you are telling it off for jumping in the lake rather than coming over to you when you call? And should you be surprised when you find your dog won't come reliably when you call for it?)

Dolphins were (are?) considered different to other animals in their level of intelligence, playfulness, curiosity and friendliness to humans. I found it absolutely fascinating that Pryor has found that when other animals - dogs, horses, bears and even fish - are trained only using positive reinforcement they show the same characteristics as dolphins. Even more interesting is Pryor's finding that if even a small amount of negative training (all of which involve use of a punisher) is mixed in you lose all or virtually all of the benefits. And what good sense this makes: how could a dog that is regularly throttled with a chain by its 'beloved' owner have the same level of trust, curiosity and freedom from fear as one that was only praised when it did something that was desired? This has extremely important ramifications for our conduct in our daily lives.

One of the principal benefits of Pryor's book is that she teaches us that it is often helpful to make an effort to see the situation from the other side. This sounds trite but is actually the opposite: a simple but very powerful tool. Often problems originate from a communication problem and/or because we find we are actually not rewarding or punishing the behaviour we think we are (as my dog example above shows).

I have found Pryor's methods immensely liberating. Previously I always felt that is was somehow my 'duty' to try to correct unwanted behaviour (whether is was something my girlfriend did, service I was unhappy about at a restaurant, or whatever). Thus I either ended up with an unpleasant situation (when is remonstrating with people pleasant?) or felt that I had given up because I was weak. Now I understand that one can and should just wait for behaviour one wants and deliberately reward it. This is the difference between a life filled with negativity and the total opposite. And the results are also better! What a marvellous gift Karen Pryor has given us.