CEU Event: Why Animals Need Trainers Who Adhere to the Least Intrusive Principle: Susan Friedman

When: Ongoing
Where: Online

CEUs

*CPDT-KA: 0 *CBCC-KA: 2.5
CPDT-KSA Knowledge: 0.00
CPDT-KSA Skills: 0.00

* Courses approved for CBCC-KA CEUs may be applied to a CPDT-KA or CPDT-KSA recertification. Courses approved for CPDT-KA or CPDT-KSA may not be applied to a CBCC-KA recertification.

PLEASE NOTE: CPDT-KA can earn a MAXIMUM of 12 CPDT-KSA Skills CEUS within their 3 year certification period.

Description

Improving Animal Welfare & Honing Trainers’ Skills Negative reinforcement is a bit like a train wreck: You know you should maintain speed and drive past it but you just can’t help slowing down to satisfy your curiosity. Recent interest in basic research on negative reinforcement sets the occasion to check our understanding of why animals need trainers who support the least intrusive principle for selecting behavior-change procedures. This principle doesn't preclude the use of negative reinforcement per se; rather, it limits the use of negative reinforcement when it isn't necessary, i.e., when positive reinforcement-based procedures may be equally efficient and effective. All professions have ethical guidelines — that part of applied practice that science doesn’t (indeed can’t) address. And many of them adhere to the least intrusive principle, e.g., special education, mental health, medicine and law.

Sponsor:Empowered Animals
Speaker(s):Susan Friedman, Ph.D.

Contact: Grisha Stewart
 Email: info@grishastewart.com
 Web: https://grisha.thinkific.com/courses/hierarchy