mshanson3121
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jan 16, 2015
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Do any of you have a service dog for your child's ASD/Aspergers/SPD etc? If so, in what ways do they help? Also, what do you do with them when you go to Disney?
My friend's son's dog is considered a service dog and the service it provides is to calm her son when needed, move her son out of a situation which is agitating him - it actually herds him. It's really amazing. But, that said, due to her son's autism they would never go to a place like Disney as it would be far too be over stimulating for him. The dog goes to school with him, and when they leave the house, but they're pretty selective with where they go. In other words, his need for the dog is real, but that also means that he's unlikely to ever see the inside of an amusement park.
How is the dog trained to calm the boy? I know how emotional support dogs work, but I would love to know the training behind a service dog for that. It's great that the dog can sense when the boy is agitated and can move him away.
I have no idea. They got him through an organization that trains the dogs for people with autism. They didn't train him. Like I said, it sort of herds him away from what's bothering him. The dog somehow senses when the boy needs it. Not all dogs can do this sort of thing, just like not all dogs can be seeing eye dogs, or hearing dogs. This dog just happened to have the talent for doing this work. I think, if I remember, they had to go to a week long training camp with the dog.How is the dog trained to calm the boy? I know how emotional support dogs work, but I would love to know the training behind a service dog for that. It's great that the dog can sense when the boy is agitated and can move him away.
I'm sure there's lots of ways. This one pulls at the persons arms and creates a distraction to stop her from continuing to hit herself.
That was a controversial video when it came out - people claimed it was a set-up, but I thought it showed some good techniques to train for. Either way, the dog is definitely helpful when it tries to restrain the arms. I was just wondering about the 'calming' training, not the restraining. Calming is usually passive, so to be trained to do something for it would be a definite service dog thing.
A dog can also be trained to "calm" by being trained to provide the constraining feeling children and adults with ASD find comforting. So in this case the dog usually guides the person to sit or lay down and then puts their body across the person to add the pressure they find calming. For bigger kids a dog make put their front paws on the childs shoulders and put their weight on to the child. It takes a very well trained and in tune dog to be able to do that.