The needle slid easily into the vein and its lethal contents were injected slowly. The final good-byes had been said and now, as tears streamed down his face, the owner reflected on what went wrong as he watched his dog die. He thought about how hard he’d tried. He had sought out the best dog trainer he could find. When the behavior didn’t improve, he had sought out another. No one, it seemed, either could or would offer him a balanced dog training solution to solve the behavior problem. This ultimately had proven terminal.
If the above paragraph seems overly dramatic, I can assure you it is exactly how many dog and owner relationships end. In my opinion, many such endings are needless and can be rightfully attributed to a philosophy that ironically calls itself “dog-friendly.” The philosophy I’m speaking of is the “PP” (purely positive) approach. This philosophy is based entirely on facilitating behavioral change by awarding or withholding positive reinforcement. Sometimes also commonly known as PROC (Positive Reinforcement Operant Conditioning). In some areas of the country its trainers have become so numerous they are all the public can access.
Part of the Problem
The problem I have with the purely positive philosophy is that it lacks balance. Purely positive trainers don’t use corrections, claiming any aversive punishment is unnecessary. Many among their ranks refer to anyone who uses corrections or punishment as cruel and their equipment and methods as abusive. Having a real problem with the word “no,” or any other word with a similar meaning, their pursuit of getting such words out of the trainers’ vocabulary has an almost fetish like quality. Both in their dealings with the public and their dealings with other trainers, I find many of its practitioners to be arrogant, zealous and dishonest.
This Does Not Apply Everyone
I want to make it clear that my remarks are directed primarily at the evangelical promoters and the zealous fanatics within this movement. I do not, however, want to paint all trainers that follow such a philosophy with the same brush. Narrow-minded people occupy every ideology as do zealots. Within the professional dog training community there are some trainers who have developed very good skills with a positive approach. Many freely admit they use this approach because it is their own preference. They concede there are other methods that at times might need to be used and if they aren’t in a position to use these alternatives, they will refer the client to someone who can. They do not use inflammatory and derogatory terms to label colleagues who have chosen different techniques.
I have no problem with these trainers, rather I hold them in high regard. They state their choice and are not attempting to limit others their right to choose. While they may remain unconvinced another approach might work better, they will not try to eliminate it from the realm of possibilities and choices. The honest among them will acknowledge that just as they were free to operate from choice, so should others be free to choose.
PROC vs Balanced Trainers
There is nothing offered by PROC methods which is not also available in a more balanced approach. In addition to the tools and approaches used by the purely positive trainers, balanced dog training adds the use of whatever corrections are necessary to make the point completely clear to the dog. Corrections are simply information to offer clarity about what is wrong, what the consequence is, and helps a dog de-escalate. Then, when they are able to be in a less stimulated state, it creates space that allows them to learn what they need to do to get rewarded.
The PROC trainer, therefore, offers far less than the balanced trainer. There is less information to the dog and fewer options to the owner. Other than time-outs, “ignore him when he’s bad,” controlling all ‘resources’ and withholding all rewards, there is a real poverty of effective consequences. If those don’t work, they will often label the dog as not trainable. Worst of all, rather than try using effective corrections, the lethal injection is often all they are prepared to offer. There should be more information (regarding behavior changing consequences) for the dog before that final and drastic step is taken.
Purely Positive Training Falsehoods
Much about the Purely Positive Training movement is dishonest. Some of the more common claims, made by pure positive practitioners, are that their method is:
“the most effective, reliable and humane method for training the dog.”
Such claims are frequently attached to statements that, “punishment-based methods don’t work.” Many among them consider a punishment-based trainer as anyone who uses any kind of physical correction and they classify any method, that includes corrections, as dangerous and “far too risky.”
Contrary to their claims, a PROC training approach is not as effective. Additionally, this approach takes considerably longer to reach any level of reliability even close to a balanced dog training approach. In some instances, reliability cannot be viable using a positive only approach. Additionally, some dogs will not be trainable until we incorporate the appropriate corrections. When this lack of reliability, and the increased time PP training takes is raised with PROC trainers, a common response is that they are willing to take longer because their approach is humane. Several things about this attitude bother me: It’s your money and time they are working with. The longer they take, the more it costs you. Their suggestion that PP is more humane is false and this assertion is paramount to emotional blackmail.
Balanced Dog Training Is The Way To Go
Balanced dog training is about 15% more effective, is considerably more efficient with faster results and has a far better track record for producing the changes necessary to allow the dog to remain in his home.
The statistics I cited above are from a lecture given to a Toronto audience in the early 1990’s by Dr. Ian Dunbar. (I refer to Dr. Dunbar because these days he is so highly regarded by many in the PP movement. Many Purely Positive trainers view him as the vanguard of the “dog-friendly” training concept.) He stated that:
- The most effective training occurs when positive rewards are in combination with positive punishment
(Example: Praise/reward in combination with correction/punishment). - Under controlled testing for reliability, when positive only methods were used the reliability factor could be brought no higher than the low to mid 80% range. The range was between 83 – 85%.
- When adding punishments with the appropriate timing, there was an increase in the reliability by 12-14% to a maximum of 97%.
- No one was able to observe a 100% reliable response.
(Example: perfect on all aspects of the tests under a wide range of varying circumstances).
A Clear Advantage
That 12-14% differential means a balanced dog training approach can clearly help more dogs and is more effective. It means that this approach can save some dogs that would otherwise die. However, in discussions looking at the relative effectiveness of a balanced approach vs. a PROC approach, a far more disturbing attitude sometimes emerges. When confronted with the suggestion that using a correction would successfully modify the potentially lethal behavior (which had not responded favorably to a PP approach), their rallying cry became,
“The dog would rather be dead than corrected.”
The crux of the problem is their presumption they know something that escapes the rest of us.
Because they are adamant that aversive corrections are not necessary and with their commitment to that ideology, they would rather kill the dog than correct it. They would rather kill a few dogs than review and possibly change some of their beliefs. Since they hold the arrogant belief that they are kinder, more humane, enlightened and “dog friendly” than those who would correct, they are confident in believing they can speak for dogs. Whatever they want is what the dog wants! Keep in mind, this is your dog they are talking about. Their philosophy fails and your dog dies.
Incorporating Positive Reinforcement with Balanced Training
By now the reader may be wondering where positive reinforcement fits into a balanced dog training approach. Answer: EVERY training sequence includes positive reinforcement. A good trainer will base their approach on the needs of the dog they are training. They are flexible enough to use the right amount of positives and negatives in just the right quantity to produce the desired outcome. A good trainer will also know the limits of their own training ability and the methods they choose to use. They will know when to refer the client to a practitioner whose skills might be more suitable to the dog’s needs.
There’s Always An Option
Drawing a parallel to the medical model might help here. Imagine you are taking a family member to a specialist in internal medicine. The loved one is very ill. The internist identifies a life-threatening problem that requires surgery. Surgery is outside this doctor’s scope of practice. Which response would you expect from the doctor?
A) “We’ve done all that we can do and nothing more can be done. It’s time to say good-bye.”
B) “Don’t go near those surgeons, they are only interested in mutilating your loved one.”
C) “Your loved one needs surgery which I don’t do, let me refer you to someone who does.”
In my mind’s eye I can picture the dog (from the opening paragraph) on the table frantically struggling to live. As the death juice spreads through his body, as the dog’s vision goes to black, I can imagine his last thoughts as being:
“Why this? What did I do wrong? Why didn’t somebody stop me.”