Letter from Karen Pryor
Teaching Dogs Vol 4 Iss 4&5
Saturday afternoon at ClickerExpo
we always have the Panel Discussion. Sounds boring?
Actually it’s a high point. The questions are
interesting, the answers are pithy, and the panelists
are FUNNY. Put six of us on the same platform, plus our
moderator Aaron who is funny non-stop anyway, and you
get a lot of laughs in that hour and a half, as well as
a lot of good info. “Better than the Tonight
Show,” one attendee said, “plus you
don’t have to stay up late.”
Anyway, at the panel discussion
in Newport in April the serious question was asked,
“What makes a good trainer? Can you tell that
someone is going to be a good trainer?”
I answered first, and said no, I
can’t tell. Sometimes a person who seems all
thumbs and resistance when they first try can suddenly
‘get it’ two years later and blossom into a
fantastically inventive trainer. On the other hand
there are fast starters, the person who picked up
a clicker to work with a horse, say, and then tells
you, “That worked so well I went inside and
trained the cat, the dog, the kids’ guinea pig
and the parakeet.” That quick learner, however,
may not develop further. The panelists noted that some
people are content to stay at the entry level stage.
Kathy Sdao said that she looks
for creativity and the ability to “think
laterally,” to see several ways around a problem
rather than being blocked by it. Ken Ramirez works in
the marine mammal world, the zoo world and the
working dog world, and has probably developed more
professional trainers than any of us. Ken said he looks
for intense interest in the operant technology,
combined with compassion for the animal. What a great
word:
compassion.
It made me think about our
attendees. We teach and teach for three intense days
(with compassion for our learners, I hope, because
it’s a strenuous experience). It’s easy
during those three days to spot people who are not yet
‘getting it,’ if only because of the rich
and startling variety of their superstitious habits and
explanations. But which of those attentive faces is
going to become a great trainer? Which ones will be
making the next wave of innovations in operant training
and science? We can’t tell; but we know
they’re among us.
Time magazine recently ran an
article by Lev Grossman discussing a new phenomenon in
the growth of ideas. Grossman writes, “Things,
broadly speaking, used to be invented by a small,
shadowy elite, that might be called the People Who
appened to Be in the Room at the Time…
(engineers, sitcom writers, chefs)…They were
probably very nice and they may even have been very,
very smart, but however smart they were, they’re
almost certainly no match for a less elite but much,
much larger group: All the People Outside the
Room.”
Grossman mentions open-source
software as an example of large-group creativity, and
then goes on: “The idea that lots of people,
potentially everybody, can be involved in the process
of innovation is utterly transforming…Two things
make this possible, one obvious and one not. The
obvious one is - say it with me - the Internet. The
other one, the surprising one, is a curious phenomenon
you could call intellectual altruism. It turns out that
given the opportunity, people will donate their time
and brainpower to make the world better.”
Our ClickerExpo faculty is a
living example of that. They fly in from far away, they
sacrifice at least a week out of their personal and
working lives to join us, they could certainly make
more money doing something else—and they do it
for everyone’s benefit, including their own.
Attendees also make sacrifices, of time, of money, of
strength—and also for more than just their own
good. The skills and ideas they carry away will benefit
many others.
We can’t tell, though, who
will be a major part of the future. Who in the crowd
will come up with key creative insights, or new and
solid clicker research, or the next great teaching
paradigm? Will it be that quiet, wide-eyed young woman
from Japan? Or the group of eleven TAGteachers (eleven,
mind you!) that came from Ireland? Or that
twelve-year-old that supposedly just came along to
serve as puppy-sitter? Maybe all of them! We
don’t know. But we know you are among us. In
closing his Time essay Lev Grossman makes a prediction:
“Until now the value of a piece of intellectual
property has been defined by how few people possess it.
In the future the value will be defined by how many
people possess it.”
Exactly. And that’s what
we’re ALL doing together, at ClickerExpo: sharing
the wealth. And changing the world. One click at a
time.
Happy clicking.
Karen Pryor
©2006 Learning About Dogs, PO
Box 13, Chipping Campden, GL55 6WX. 01386 430189