Remarkable Behaviour

Remarkable Behaviour Assistance Dog Owner Training Guidance. Ruth Bell is a qualified B. Psyc/Behv. Sc.. Using positive methods to train you/your dog. Providing training as a B.

Trained Assistance Dogs sometimes available for placement or as a trial to see if an AD is right for you or your child. Psyc/Behavioral Scientist as a NDIS or private contractor.

13/11/2025

Despite assistance dog Max wearing a vest and Garth Murray carrying his accreditation, they still faced illegal discrimination on a round-Australia charity walk, with one publican even calling the police on them.

The need for Service Dogs (Australian = Assistance Dog) is far greater than the organisations available to supply them. ...
12/09/2025

The need for Service Dogs (Australian = Assistance Dog) is far greater than the organisations available to supply them. The tasks that an AS/SD does for a PWD can be varied. Please be aware, not all disabilities are visible. That the large orgs train their in training AD/SD before they are placed as accredited dogs. That in Australia an "in training" or owner trained dogs has the same Access rights and responsibilities as an org trained or in training dog. A supporting letter is required from a medical or other health professional stating the AD provides assistance that mitigates the humans disability. Do not judge the breed but the need, a small dog can be a medical alert or PTSD dog easily, where larger dogs are needed for mobility or other tasks. Many of the Gundog breeds are chosen as ADs due to their ability to assimilate into the busy noisy human world.

BLOOM'S TAXONOMY EXPLAINEDBloom's Taxonomy is a hierarchical framework developed by Benjamin Bloom in 1956, used to clas...
21/08/2025

BLOOM'S TAXONOMY EXPLAINED

Bloom's Taxonomy is a hierarchical framework developed by Benjamin Bloom in 1956, used to classify educational objectives and learning outcomes. It consists of six levels of understanding:
Remembering: Recalling facts and basic concepts.
⏺️Understanding: Explaining ideas or concepts.
⏺️Applying: Using information in new situations.
⏺️Analyzing: Breaking information into parts to explore
⏺️understandings and relationships.
⏺️Evaluating: Justifying a decision or course of action.
⏺️Creating: Producing new or original work.

Interesting
12/08/2025

Interesting

PDA (Pathological Demand Avoidance) is widely understood to be a profile on the autism spectrum, though we are still at an early stage in our understanding and PDA research is in its infancy.

Whilst autism is a widely recognised term, our understanding of the full breadth and complexity of the autism spectrum is still evolving.

The National Autistic Society explains autism as “a lifelong developmental disability which affects how people communicate and interact with the world”. Many autistic advocates embrace the social model of disability and view a range of neurological differences as being part of a natural human variation (neurodiversity).

We know that autism is dimensional – it involves a complex and overlapping pattern of strengths, differences and challenges that present differently from one individual to another and in the same individual over time or in different environments.

A cluster of traits can be called a presentation or a profile – in some cases this can be quite different from what some people think autism ‘looks like’.

This can lead to presentations in some people – including autistic women and girls, and PDA individuals – being missed altogether, misunderstood or misdiagnosed, which can in turn lead to poor outcomes.

All research points to early identification and tailored support being the best predictor of positive long-term outcomes. Recognising these profiles signposts the approaches or support that will be most helpful for each individual.

A PDA profile of autism means that individuals share autistic characteristics …

currently defined as “persistent difficulties with social communication and social interaction” and “restricted and repetitive patterns of behaviour, activities or interests” present since early childhood to the extent that these “limit and impair everyday functioning” (according to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual Fifth Edition (DSM-5))
often including a different sensory experience in relation to sight, smell, taste, touch, hearing, vestibular, proprioception and interoception.
… and in addition:

have a need for control which is often anxiety related
are driven to avoid everyday demands and expectations (including things that they want to do or enjoy) to an extreme extent
tend to use approaches that are ‘social in nature’ in order to avoid demands
present with many of the ‘key features’ of PDA rather than just one or two
tend not to respond to conventional parenting, teaching or support approaches

For more information on PDA, visit this website: https://www.pdasociety.org.uk/about-pda/autism-and-pda/

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Macclesfield, SA

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