e-Training for Dogs

Online Dog Training Class | Puppy Dog Training Online | Search and Rescue Dog Training

  • Home
  • About
    • History of e-Training
    • Faculty
    • Guest Lecturers
    • Students
  • Online Learning
    • For the Dog Professional
      • Canine Professional Programs
      • Individual Courses for Professionals A-Z
      • Individual Courses for Professionals-By Interest
      • Lecture Series
        • Ethology and Canine Behavior Lecture Series
        • Service Dog Training Lecture Series
      • CCPDT CEU Approved Courses
      • IAABC CEU Approved Courses
      • NADOI Accredited Courses for CEUs
    • For the Dog Enthusiast
      • Individual Courses A to Z for the Dog Enthusiast
      • Individual Courses by Interest for the Dog Enthusiast
    • Pet-Sitting Courses
    • Animal Wellness and Animal Hospice
    • Veterinary Professional Courses
    • Equine Enthusiasts Online Courses
  • FAQ
  • Blog
  • Contact
  • Links
You are here: Home / Blog

Animal Professionals and Compassion Fatigue

June 22, 2017 By Cheryl Aguiar |

Animal professionals and compassion fatigueAnimal professionals and compassion fatigue

Speaker: Sheilagh O’Sullivan, M.A. 

The rate of suicide in the veterinary profession is almost twice that of the dental profession, “more than twice that of the medical profession, and 4 times the rate in the general population” (Suicide in veterinary medicine: Let’s talk about it, Stoewen, 2015). Animal care-givers, such as rescue workers, shelter workers, veterinary technicians and others typically have inadequate professional support, high client expectations, limited personal finances, a high possibility of client conflict and unmet client expectations, and, emotional exhaustion (compassion fatigue). Dealing with these stressors in the long-term is unhealthy at best, and deadly at worst.

Deep emotional and physical exhaustion is a hallmark of compassion fatigue, vicarious trauma, and burnout resulting in a shift in a caregiver’s, volunteer’s or helping professional’s sense of hope and optimism about the future and the value of their work in the home, as a volunteer, or professional. The level of fatigue a helper experiences can ebb and flow from one day to the next, and even very healthy helpers with optimal life/work balance and self-care strategies can experience a higher than normal level of fatigue when they are overloaded, are working with a lot of traumatic content, or find they are suddenly overwhelmed with situations that are chronically in crisis.

canine assisted therapy
Courtesy of Patricia Tirrell

So what is compassion fatigue and what protective factors exist to help minimize its impact? Join us in this webinar and find out!

Includes a discussion of the following topics:

  • Defining and understanding compassion fatigue, vicarious trauma and burnout
  • Symptom checklist
  • Identifying triggers
  • Evaluating self-care – handouts will be provided to assist participants in this evaluation

Available as a recording.

Cost: $25.00

 

 

CEU’s Available:
2 IAABC CEU’s
2 CCPDT CEU’s
2 ABCDT-L2 CEU’s
2 NADOI CEU’s
2 PPAB/PPG

Members of APDT, CCPDT, IAABC, ABCDT-L2 or NADOI receive over 25% off.All Lecture Series Webinars are only $18.00 each. See instructions below on how to find the password to take part in this professional discount.

IAABC members, Click HERE to apply your discount.
Email cheryl@e-trainingfordogs for the passcode.

NADOI, CCPDT, ABCDT-L2, PPG, IACP and APDT members, click HERE to apply for your discount.
Email cheryl@e-trainingfordogs for the passcode.

Filed Under: Blog |

Starting and Running a Successful Animal Rescue

April 29, 2017 By Cheryl Aguiar |

animal rescueSo you want to start an animal rescue?

When you’re rescuing animals, it’s easy to let your emotions control your actions. But starting a rescue can’t be done on a whim. This course provides you with tips and information to get you started and keep you running.

Course information: 90-minute webinar comprised of six 15-minute modules on the do’s and don’ts of getting your animal rescue up and running successfully. Included will be set times to interact with students (not required, but available). A private Facebook group for exchanging ideas, feedback, and interacting with Instructors and other students is also included.

Instructors: Carin Ford, CPDT-KA, and Michele Amendola, CPDT-KA, founders of DogsHome rescue

Covered in this course:

  • How to get started.
  • Putting it on paper-CRITICAL!
  • Promoting yourself-Marketing tips and techniques.
  • Friend-raising and fundraising
  • Your Dogs
  • What If …? Handling Problems and Surprises

Course Cost: $85.00 USD

CEUs:
CCPDT – 3 CEUs (total)
CPDT-KSA – 1.5 CEUs

IAABC – 3 CEUs
NADOI – 2 CEUs
PPAB/PPG – 1.5 CEUs

Length of time to access this course: 12 months. Extensions may be granted on an individual basis.

You must also read and agree to the E-Training for Dogs, Inc. Standard Terms and Conditions prior to taking a course: Click HERE to read these. You will be asked when you register if you have read them and will not be allowed to take the course if you do not agree to the terms.

Filed Under: Blog |

Dogs as Detectors of Disease

April 5, 2017 By Cheryl Aguiar |

dogs as detectors of diseaseCan a dog sniff out disease? How do they do it? How can you train a dog to detect disease?

This lecture will examine dogs as disease detectors, in other words, using dogs as biomedical detection tools. Given that we are interested in whether dogs are able to sniff out disease, Catherine Reeve, will briefly review the incredible olfactory ability of dogs by presenting the basic physiology of the dog’s olfactory system. We will then discuss the basic chemistry of physiological change in humans, thereby highlighting how and why dogs are well suited for disease detection. Next, Catherine will present summaries of academic studies examining dogs’ ability to detect disease (cancers and inflammatory diseases), infections (MRSA), and physiological states (seizures and diabetic hypoglycemia), including her own research examining dogs’ ability to detect hypoglycemia in breath samples from individuals with Type 1 Diabetes. In summarizing these studies, Ms. Reeve will highlight the different training and sampling methods used and then discuss how these differences may influence their findings. Finally, she will summarize the current state of the field and present personal recommendations for moving forward.

Catherine Reeve is a PhD candidate at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada under the supervision of Dr. Simon Gadbois, and her research is focused on whether dogs with no previous sniffer dog training can be trained to detect hypoglycemia in breath samples obtained from individuals with Type 1 Diabetes.

Available as a recording of a Live webinar.

Cost: $25.00

 

CEU’s Available:
2 IAABC CEU’s
2 CCPDT CEU’s
2 ABCDT-L2 CEU’s
2 NADOI CEU’s
2 PPAB/PPG

Members of APDT, CCPDT, IAABC, ABCDT-L2 or NADOI receive over 25% off.All Lecture Series Webinars are only $18.00 each. See instructions below on how to find the password to take part in this professional discount.

IAABC members, Click HERE to apply your discount.
Email cheryl@e-trainingfordogs for the passcode.

NADOI, CCPDT, ABCDT-L2, PPG, IACP and APDT members, click HERE to apply for your discount.
Email cheryl@e-trainingfordogs for the passcode.

Filed Under: Blog, Dog Behavior, Dog Training, Lecture Series |

Canine Professional Compassion Fatigue – Building Resiliency

March 28, 2017 By Cheryl Aguiar |

Canine Professional Compassion FatiguePouring From An Empty Cup – Addressing Compassion Fatigue, Vicarious Trauma, and Burnout – Building Resiliency 

Prerequisites:  None

Purpose:  This webinar course, Canine Professional Compassion Fatigue, provides information and strategies to assist those in all helping professions and volunteers work to identify and address Compassion Fatigue, Vicarious Trauma, and Burnout in an effort to ensure that they enjoy meaningful, rejuvenating work in the demanding  role as helper.

Course Info: Deep emotional and physical exhaustion is a hallmark of compassion fatigue, vicarious trauma, and burnout resulting in a shift in a caregiver’s, volunteer’s or helping professional’s sense of hope and optimism about the future and the value of their work in the home, as a volunteer, or professional. The level of fatigue a helper experiences can ebb and flow from one day to the next, and even very healthy helpers with optimal life/work balance and self-careCanine Professional Compassion Fatigue strategies can experience a higher than normal level of fatigue when they are overloaded, are working with a lot of traumatic content, or find they are suddenly overwhelmed with situations that are chronically in crisis.

This course defines compassion fatigue, vicarious trauma, and burnout then provides detailed information on the impact of, and solutions for, compassion fatigue, vicarious trauma, and burnout for caregivers, volunteers, and helping professionals.

Instructor:  Sheilagh O’Sullivan, M.A.

What you can expect to learn from this Course:

  • Understanding compassion fatigue, vicarious trauma and burnout
  • Symptom checklist
  • Identifying triggers
  • Evaluating self-care
  • Developing a personalised strategic plan for identifying and treating compassion fatigue, vicarious trauma, and burnout
  • A self-study WORK-book to help you identify and address stress, burnout and compassion fatigue in your own life

Course Cost: $25.00 USD

CEU’s Available:
CCPDT: 2
IAABC: 2
NADOI: 2
PPAB/PPG: 2
ABCDT-L2 – 2 CEUs
RACE: 2 CEUs “This program 1106-29424 is approved by the AAVSB RACE to offer a total of 2.00 CE Credits (2.00 max) being available to any one veterinarian: and/or 2.00 Veterinary Technician CE Credits (2.00 max). This RACE approval is for the subject matter categories of: Category Three: Non-Scientific-Practice Management/Professional Development using the delivery method of Non-Interactive-Distance. This approval is valid in jurisdictions which recognize AAVSB RACE; however, participants are responsible for ascertaining each board’s CE requirements. RACE does not “accredit” or “endorse” or “certify” any program or person, nor does RACE approval validate the content of the program.”

Length of time to access this course: 6 months. Extensions may be granted on an individual basis.

You must also read and agree to the E-Training for Dogs, Inc. Standard Terms and Conditions prior to taking a course: Click HERE to read these. You will be asked when you register if you have read them and will not be allowed to take the course if you do not agree to the terms.

Filed Under: Blog, Individual Courses |

Lessons in Fear and Aggression In Dogs: Identifying and Solving Conditioned Fear Responses

February 23, 2017 By Cheryl Aguiar |

Fear and Aggression in Dogs

Lessons in Fear Aggression in Dogs – Part 2

Identifying and dealing with fear aggression in dogs can be difficult and sometimes seem impossible. This course continues from our first course in this series, Lessons in Fear and Aggression in Dogs: the Art of Desensitization, and teaches how to identify the triggers and to solve conditioned fear responses.

Purpose: The purpose of this course is to help the dog owner or trainer better understand fear issues, especially, a conditioned fear response; and, to teach the skills for dealing with fear and aggression issues in dogs that may result from a conditioned fear response. When it comes to working with dogs, owner and trainers never set out to create a conditioned fear response (CFR), especially given the challenges this issue creates. Unfortunately, a CFR can happen in dogs without intent and yet result in some of the most difficult fear issues you may encounter. If you plan on dealing with fear issues in dogs, it becomes imperative to learn how to identify and work to resolve conditioned fear responses.

What you can expect to learn from this course:

  • Students will learn Watson’s discovery of the CFR.
  • Pavlov’s discovery of spontaneous recovery issues when working to desensitize a CFR
  • An understanding of drives, natural and learned triggers, and how they relate to a CFR
  • Fear pathways and how they function in regard to CFR as compared to a regular fear reaction
  • The difference between stacked triggers and a CFR
  • How the Miller Rat Study offers techniques that can help resolve CFR issues
  • Technique modifications when working to resolve a CFR
  • How the additive effects of fear compares to a CFR
  • Why the Nauseated Rat Study may offer techniques for some fear issues, but is not a good technique for a CFR
  • Desensitization techniques to apply when working with fear issues and damage control should you trigger a CFR
  • Several quizzes and a final exam must be passed to earn CEUs or a Certificate of Completion

Note: Video illustrations are part of this course. The student is encouraged to review these videos several times to fully understand the subtle details in the techniques applied to actual fear issues in dogs.

There are 7-90 minutes lessons plus 7 10 item quizzes and a 32 item final exam.

Prerequisites: The student will benefit from a basic understanding of classical conditioning and operant training. The student will benefit from having taken the course Lessons in Fear and Aggression in Dogs: the Art of Desensitization prior to this class.

Reading the book: RESCUE YOUR DOG FROM FEAR: TRIED-AND-TRUE TECHNIQUES TO HELP YOUR DOG FEEL SECURE, prior to taking the class is required.

Course Time: The student is expected to progress through this course at the pace they need to readily understand the information. The student is encouraged to review information in sections and videos until all imperative points until they are well understood.

CEUs:
CCPDT- 6.5 CPDT-KA and 6.5 CBCC-KA (13 total for CPDT-KA) CEUs
IAABC- 12 CEUs
NADOI-12 CEUs
PPG/PPAB-10 CEUs
IACP
ABCDT-L2 – 13.5 CEUs

 

Cost:  $185.00 USD (For Credit-Includes Instructor contact, Certificate of Completion and CEUs)

AUDIT Cost:  $95.00 USD (NO Certificate of Completion and NO CEUs)

 

Instructor: Peggy Swager is a behaviorist with a BS in biology, a minor in education, and many college level psychology courses. One-on-one training from veterinarians working to secure injured animals for treatment. First animal behavior/training article in 1975. First dog article in 1997. Author of a double DWAA nominated – Rescue Your Dog from Fear, Award nominated DVD – Separation Anxiety, a Weekend Technique, Five Star Library Review – Training the Hard to Train, and presenter at APDT Conference in 2016.

Length of time to access this course: Access to this course will be allowed for 12 months.

You must also read and agree to the E-Training for Dogs, Inc. Standard Terms and Conditions prior to taking a course: Click HERE to read these. You will be asked when you register if you have read them and will not be allowed to take the course if you do not agree to the terms.

Please read our policy on refunds. Click HERE

Filed Under: Blog, Dog Behavior, Dog Training |

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
  • …
  • 17
  • Next Page »

Search this site:

SIgn up for our Newsletter

Sign up for our newsletter: Sign up for our newsletter

Follow Us

  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • RSS
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Link to Discounted Courses for Professionals

Link to Discounted Courses for Professionals

Link to Classroom For Current Students

Link to classroom: Student Classroom Link This link will work for current and registered students ONLY.

Lecture Series

Seeing Through a Dog's Nose-Canine Nose Lecture Series ALSO, Please check out our ethology and canine behavior lecture series, over 100 lectures Ethology and Canine Behavior Lecture Library Also available is our lecture series: Service Dog Training Lecture Series

What is E-Training for Dogs and how does it work?

What’s NEW?

CPDT-KA Attestation Form online signature

Training the Retrieve

Emotional and environmental enrichment with scent

Backing and Pivoting

The Science of Olfactory Perception and Learning

Pay Later Now Available

What’s NEW?

CPDT-KA Attestation Form online signature

Training the Retrieve

Emotional and environmental enrichment with scent

Backing and Pivoting

The Science of Olfactory Perception and Learning

Copyright © 2026 e-Training for Dogs | Privacy Policy