Barbara Handelman Service Dog Trainer Courses for Everyone Interested in Service Dog Evaluation and Training
The a la carte (each available for separate purchase) service dog trainer courses in Tier 3 include abbreviated lessons from the BHSDT certificate program (Tier 1). The lessons are altered – there are no homework assignments, training challenges or critiques, nor opportunities for discussion as exist in Tier 1.
Instructors will answer brief, emailed questions about course content. Students wanting instructor input about selecting or training a service dog candidate may contract directly with a member of the BHSDT instructor-team for their time and services. Time with the instructors to answer questions about dog behavior or training problems may be purchased, on a fee-per-hour basis.
Included with the courses are abundant links to articles and other materials for self-study. There are quizzes required for those seeking CEUs.
These a la carte service dog trainer courses are great for owner trainers wanting to expand their knowledge of service dog selection, essential service dog laws, training techniques, and other important topics in the service dog field.
The a la carte lessons are also excellent for Professional Service Dog Trainers and Coaches wanting to supplement their existing knowledge of key areas in the service dog field while earning CEUs.
Please note: Without instructor input, practical application and interactive critiques of the students’ acquired knowledge, these lessons do not qualify students to train service dogs for clients with disabilities.

What Students May Expect in The Tier 3 Courses
Access to lectures and other course materials developed by Barbara Handelman, for the three Tiers of this comprehensive Service Dog trainers’ program.
● Access to Collected References and Resources which include research studies; blog entries; lectures and videos available online; as well as published and unpublished papers by renowned individuals in the service animal industry.
Lessons Offered in BHSDT Tier 3
NOTE: Prices/Costs for the Tier 3 lessons vary based on the number and length of included lectures, as well as the depth and breadth of the reading materials and other resources offered with each lesson.
NO PREREQUISITES OR APPLICATION ARE REQUIRED FOR THE BHSDT TIER 3
Laws Related to Service Dogs
Cost: $75
Description: Understanding the laws and regulations applicable to Service Dogs is essential for all service dog trainers and handlers. Reading, understanding, and regularly reviewing these laws, policies and regulations is essential for any person training or handling a service dog. The laws covered in this Lesson apply to dogs and handlers in the USA only.
CEUs
CCPDT: 1 CBCC-KA or 1 CPDT-KA CEUs
IAABC: Pending
Ethics and Etiquette for Service Dogs and Their Handlers
Cost: $55
Description: This lesson will cover standards for a service dog’s behavior when working in public. Disabled handlers have ethical responsibilities to uphold the standards for the sake of their dog’s safety and welfare. They must also consider the impact of poor behavior on the businesses the dogs enter; and recognize that a poorly behaved service dog, in public, may make other service dog partners less welcome.
CEUs
CCPDT: 3 CPDT-KA CEUs
IAABC: 3 CEUs
What is a Service Dog Task?
Cost: $225
Description: A task is a chain of behaviors or skills performed in response to verbal, hand signal and/or contextual cues. Students will become familiar with a range of tasks they might train a dog to perform. Students will discover how tasks are different from the trainer’s perspective and the dog’s perspective. The component behaviors can be configured and reconfigured to comprise many different tasks. Contextual cues often vary but the dog must have sufficient cognitive plasticity to recognize similar contexts and perform the same set of skills in multiple situations. Students will learn that any task may be broken down into its component parts, and then the parts may be configured and reconfigured to create new tasks.
CEUs
CCPDT: 4 CBCC-KA or 4 CPDT-KA CEUs
IAABC: 4 CEUs
Selecting Service Dog Candidates
Cost: $225
Description: This course is an introduction to traditional temperament evaluations that have been modified by two highly experienced temperament evaluators who are also service dog trainers and animal behaviorists. Students will be exposed to protocols for necessary evaluation components, how to set up an evaluation session with a litter of puppies, or a single older dog, and how to rate the information gathered to determine the appropriateness of the puppy or dog evaluated to become a service dog in training.
- This course also includes access to the two-hour video-on-demand “Selecting Canine Candidates for Assistance Dogs and other Working Careers.” CEUs available after quiz completion.
CEUs
CCPDT: 10 CPDT-KA (4 CBCC-KA) CEUs
IAABC: 10 CEUs
Canine Cognition and Intelligent Disobedience
Cost: $65
Description: This lesson is based on a webinar given by Barbara Handelman and Ken McCort. Together, they discuss whether “Intelligent Disobedience” is a myth or a reality in the daily activities of service dogs working for people with a wide range of disabilities. During this lesson, Barbara discusses how “intelligent disobedience” is defined and understood by service dog trainers. She debunks many myths, and explains how dogs learn a hierarchy of cues, and respond to them when multiple cues are present. Most importantly, she discusses the types of environmental cues that dogs recognize and follow, despite having been given a contradictory verbal directive. Ken McCort discusses how intentionality plays out in a dog’s response to verbal cues in the presence of contradictory environmental cues. He guides students through a basic understanding of a dog’s “Theory of Mind” or “Consciousness” – the ability to perceive himself in relation to his surroundings and the canine’s capacity for intentionality.
CEUs
CCPDT: 1 CPDT-KA and 2 CBCC-KA (3CPDT-KA) CEUs
IAABC:
Why Clicker Training for Service dogs
Cost: $65
Description: Clicker training is a proven, successful method for training service dogs of all types. Clicker training is based on the science of Learning Theory. Students will read “Why Clicker Training for Service Dogs”, by Debi Davis and Barbara Handelman, in order to gain understanding of how and why clicker training is a preferred method for training service dogs. There is an extensive reading list for this class, each of the articles and blog posts illustrate how clicker training is utilized in the training of service animal foundation skills and tasks.
CEUs
CCPDT: 4 CPDT-KA CEUs
IAABC: 4 CEUs
Video Training Journal: The First Year of a Service Dog Puppy-Candidate’s Life
Cost: $165
Description: In this chronological video journal, students see many of the “formal” training sessions from Puppy Pan’s first year of life. The videos are narrated throughout with explanations of the training documented. Errorless learning was always the aim of training – frustration was minimized and playful interaction was emphasized. Training sessions were short and a playful time with a purposeful goal. This journal provides a rare opportunity to see how learning occurs sequentially, in small, incremental steps, with lots of repetition, and equal opportunities for positive reinforcement. Training sessions progress from basic targeting behaviors to application of targeting into complex chained behaviors that ultimately become service dog tasks. Students will watch how the foundation behaviors are built, how the 4 D’s (Distraction, Duration, Distance, and Difficulty) are applied to strengthen the puppy’s learning, and how chained behaviors are built and reconfigured to become a variety of service dog tasks. The behaviors taught include the multi-step process of building a working retrieve. By watching one puppy develop through training and maturation, over the course of a year, students will see how an experienced trainer uses treat delivery and rate of reinforcement to strengthen behaviors. Students will also see how errorless learning decreases frustration, and allows training to become an interactive and creative game for the trainer and puppy to play together.
I really enjoyed watching Pan’s training year in video. It was fun to watch him problem solve the individual sessions and eventually get to the point of learning the complex tasks. Starting from the beginning and seeing him start with nose targeting the hand, transferring that skill to the stick and then generalizing similar skills to his feet shows how those vital foundation behaviors can be taught and generalized through clicker training. That by individually teaching the dog to think through the scenarios without much input from the handler is vital to creating a dog who can problem solve. The videos also depicted lots of work building difficulty of individual tasks, around distractions, working at distance, and adding duration. It was fun to see Piper’s responses to the larger animals, and Pan having to work around children and food at the farmer’s market. The video of Pan building his working retrieve was a great way to view the chaining of individual skills, and then to see that transfer over and build with targeting for him to take things from you to deliver to someone else and then deliver back to you. I found Pan’s puppy frustration very interesting with the push top ball toy. It was a valuable lesson to see how being aware of how long your sessions with a dog run for as well as how you reinforce them while making things more difficult or increasing the criteria without losing their interest. It was interesting to hear how Pan’s love of balls never transferred over to a full love of a playing retrieve, and that his retrieve really was all about work for him. And you could definitely see how a very strong desire to hand target is an extremely important component of teaching a working retrieve. Colleen Lange – BHSDT Tier 1 Student.
CEUs
CCPDT: 8 CPDT-KA CEUs
IAABC: Pending
Socialization and Public Access Training
Cost: $65
Description: Many people confuse socialization with socializing. Socializing with an occasional visiting dog in the pup’s home, or local environment is not enough. Taking a young puppy to a dog park, turning it loose to be approached by bullying dogs, and pushy puppies – would qualify as socializing, not socialization. This class introduces the concept of socialization; when it should begin; and how it continues throughout the life-time of a working service dog.
CEUs
CCPDT: 2 CPDT-KA and 4 CBCC-KA (6 CPDT-KA) CEUs
IAABC: 6 CEUs
Clicker Train Your Own Assistance Dog
Cost: $175
Description: There is no single cloak to be woven from the many threads in this “train your own assistance dog” course. It does not focus on demonstrating completed or polished tasks. Rather, the focus is on the ingredients – the behaviors the dog must know in order to construct tasks, lots of tasks. Assistance dogs serve individuals with such diverse disabilities that no single educational tool could encompass all the steps for creating finished assistance dog tasks – to serve the full range of disabilities. Specific tasks often need careful tailoring to individual teams, and differ with variables like the relative size of the dog to the handler. This is a four-part series of videos providing 4 hours of training demonstrations to watch. There are verbatim scripts that come with the Videos On Demand. The scripts allow those who are deaf or hard of hearing to read all spoken narration that accompanies the training demonstrations.
Access: Once you purchase the Clicker Train Your Own Assistance Dog modules, you can begin watching the videos-on-demand immediately. If you would like open-ended access to this video-on-demand series, you may purchase that option at any time, for an additional $20.
Karen Pryor’s review of Clicker Train Your Own Assistance Dog
This is a unique and wonderful program for learning how to clicker train the essential skills that make a good service dog. This course is presented on four video DVDs and includes a downloadable text manual. Each scene includes on-screen script for the hearing impaired, and simultaneous narration for the visually impaired. This program is for people with impairments, perhaps in wheelchairs, who are using a service dog. Barbara Handelman shows you how to turn that dog into a superb partner and assistant, through your own training. The program assumes your dog has basic obedience skills – sit, down, come, a retrieve—but it does not assume that you are a clicker trainer. That, she will show you, click by click. Barbara has taken a set of key foundation behaviors and cues that underlie every behavior a service dog can do. She shows you how they are actually shaped, via clicker training. The text is pared down and crystal clear. It’s available on a file you can print out, to make an illustrated manual. It’s also narrated, in the DVD, for the visually impaired, and written, over the action, for the hearing-impaired. The program is not broken down by end products, but by skills. Each skill section begins with clips from the first brief training session, then the second, third, fourth, with actual working service dogs being trained by their actual owners. For example we see a dog learning the behavior and the cue ‘take,’ for picking up, holding, and carrying large objects in its jaws—a dumbbell, a newspaper—and then the behavior and the cue ‘pick’ for gently picking up a pair of glasses or a credit card with its lips and front teeth. Once the skills and their cues are learned, you can combine, say, ‘Pick,’ and a previously learned ‘Pull,’ point at your feet, and the dog can immediately take your socks off. You can skip around in the DVD’s, the program is all broken down into scenes. Go back and forth, or play one scene over and over, to get the timing. Notice, as you do that, how still and calm the teachers are. There are no wasted moves, no dog-confusing chatter. Barbara explains exactly why we are quiet as we train; and exactly why there is no need for correction or reprimands. In addition to being a great self-teaching course, this program is a lesson in the multi-leveled benefits of clicker-training for developing a happy, reliable, service dog that can continue to learn all its life.
CEUs
CCPDT: 7 CPDT-KA CEUs
IAABC: 9 CEUs


Working with Service Dog Owner-Trainers – Clients





There are many aspects animal behaviorists study in a 4 or more year colleges education, such as ethics, scientific method, logic, human psychological dynamics, ethology, comparative psychology, normal/abnormal physiology and much more. Though this course will not cover everything a behaviorist studies and masters, we will provide a background in many of these in this course and set you up to further your studies in these areas as you desire. This course will give you exposure to this information and a good direction in filling in your knowledge as you become a canine behavior consultant.
The final homework will require you to prepare a formal case study. This case study can be used as part of your application to the IAABC or NADOI (along with other requirements only you can provide). We want to see you take the knowledge gained from this course and become a Certified member of the IAABC or NADOI. It will also help prepare you for the CBCC-KA exam.
Canine Behavior CBCC-KA Study Course