Our Team

  • Beau Bushnell / Owner - Trainer

    Beau is a highly skilled dog trainer who was born and raised in Grants Pass, Oregon. In 2016, he founded Southern Oregon Dog Training with Aleesha, and since then, he has helped more than 2000 dogs and their owners.

    What sets Beau apart from other trainers is his expertise in dealing with all levels of behavior challenges, including aggression towards people and other animals. He has a wealth of experience in working with dogs of all ages, breeds, and sizes, and his training methods are tailored to suit the specific needs of each dog.

    Beau's specialty lies in training service dogs and family/companion dogs. He believes that a well-trained dog can bring joy and companionship to a family, and that every dog has the potential to be a well-behaved member of the household. Beau's approach to training involves teaching owners the necessary adjustments they need to make to help their dogs make progress. He works closely with owners to develop customized training plans that are easy to follow and yield long-lasting results.

    Over the years, Beau has earned a reputation for being a patient, kind, and effective trainer. He is passionate about his work and takes pride in helping dogs and their owners achieve their training goals. If you are looking for a dog trainer who can help you and your dog overcome behavior challenges and build a strong bond, Beau is the perfect choice.

    Over the past eight years, he has dedicated his time to the art of dog training, working with clients to address their pets' unique challenges. His ultimate goal is to help dogs lead happy, healthy lives while fostering a strong bond between pet and owner..

    Experience and schooling

    -8 years of dog training experience.

    -Association of Professional Dog Trainers schooling

    -Production and Safety Management.

    -8 years at Oregon Electric Group / ISG

  • Aleesha Bushnell CPDT-KA / Owner - Trainer

    Aleesha was born and raised in Grants Pass, Oregon. In 2016, she co-founded Southern Oregon Dog Training (SODT) along with Beau. Her role in the company extends beyond that of a mere co-owner, as she is also responsible for the home education of her two children. Furthermore, she actively manages and updates SODT's social media accounts, and frequently assists in the company's training sessions.

    Aleesha draws upon her extensive knowledge in the fields of medicine and animal behavior to ensure that SODT remains at the forefront of continuing education. Her expertise, coupled with her passion for humane training methods, ensures that the company employs the latest and most effective training methodologies. As a result, SODT is able to deliver high-quality training and maintain its reputation as a reliable and ethical dog training company.

    Experience & schooling

    -Canine Behavior Professional Accredited Diploma through Canine Principles

    -Certified Professional Dog Trainer-Knowledge Assessed

    -Admixture Tech mixing chemotherapy treatments

    -Certified Pharmacy Technician with an associates in pharmacy leadership

  • Bethany Dawson / Trainer

    Born and raised in Grant's Pass, Oregon. She has worked with animals from day one growing up on a homestead gentleman's ranch with cattle, pigs, chickens, ducks, goats, dogs and plenty more. Her passion for working specifically with dogs began in 2018 when she adopted a bully mix who she trained to be her service dog. Bethany was initially a client here at SODT, but a couple years and a few dogs later she has joined the team as one of our trainers.

    Bethany’s schooling and research was mainly done in nutrition and metabolic processes. With this knowledge, she is able to assist us in further understanding intricacies of metabolism and the biochemical processes behind the emotions and behaviors we see in many animals.

    She is personable, a good listener/problem solver and can explain training methods and goals in a variety of ways to best suit the client's needs.

    Experience & schooling

    -Large animal vet care

    -Bachelors of Art in Chemistry, minors in Biology and Spanish (2019) SOU

    -Associate of Art Oregon Transfer Degree (2014) RCC

    -Oregon Transfer Degree (2014)

    -Property Management

    -15 years of full contact martial arts

Association of professional dog trainers position statement
What Is LIMA?

“LIMA” is an acronym for the phrase “least intrusive, minimally aversive.” LIMA describes a trainer or behavior consultant who uses the least intrusive, minimally aversive strategy out of a set of humane and effective tactics likely to succeed in achieving a training or behavior change objective with minimal risk of producing aversive side effects. LIMA adherence also requires consultants to be adequately educated and skilled in order to ensure that the least intrusive and aversive procedure is used. 1

LIMA does not justify the use of punishment in lieu of other effective interventions and strategies. In the vast majority of cases, desired behavior change can be affected by focusing on the animal’s environment, physical well-being, and operant and classical interventions such as differential reinforcement of an alternative behavior, desensitization, and counter-conditioning.

LIMA Is Competence-Based

LIMA requires trainers/consultants to work to increase the use of positive reinforcement and eliminate the use of punishment when working with animal and human clients. In order to ensure best practices, consultants should pursue and maintain competence in animal behavior consulting and training through continuing education, and hands-on experience. Trainers/consultants should not advise on problems outside the recognized boundaries of their competencies and experience. 2

Positive Reinforcement and Understanding the Learner

Positive reinforcement should be the first line of teaching, training, and behavior change program considered, and should be applied consistently. Positive reinforcement is associated with the lowest incidence of aggression, attention seeking, avoidance, and fear in learners. 3

Only the learner determines what may be reinforcing. It is crucial that the trainer/consultant understands and has the ability to appropriately apply this principle. This fact may mean that the trainer/consultant assesses any handling, petting, food, tool, and environment each time the learner experiences them. Personal bias must not determine the learner’s experience. The measure of each stimulus is whether the learner’s target behavior is strengthening or weakening, not the trainer/consultant’s intent or preference.

Systematic Problem Solving and Strategies

The trainer/consultant is responsible for ensuring learner success through a consistent, systematic approach that identifies a specific target behavior, the purpose of that behavior, and the consequences that maintain the behavior.

A variety of learning and behavior change strategies may come into play during a case. Ethical use of this variety always depends on the trainer/consultant’s ability to adequately problem solve and to understand the impact of each action on the learner, as well as sensitivity toward the learner’s experience.

Preventing Abuse

We seek to prevent the abuses and potential repercussions of inappropriate, poorly applied, and inhumane uses of punishment and of overly-restrictive management and confinement strategies. The potential effects of punishment can include aggression or counter-aggression; suppressed behavior (preventing the trainer/consultant from adequately reading the animal); increased anxiety and fear; physical harm; a negative association with the owner or handler; increased unwanted behavior; and, new, unwanted behaviors. 5

Choice and Control for the Learner

LIMA guidelines require that trainer/consultants always offer the learner as much control and choice as possible. Trainer/consultants must treat each individual of any species with respect and awareness of the learner’s individual nature, preferences, abilities, and needs. 6

What Do You Want the Animal todo?

We focus on reinforcing desired behaviors, and always ask the question, “What do you want the animal to do?” Relying on punishment in training does not answer this question, and therefore offers no acceptable behavior for the animal to learn to replace the unwanted behavior. These LIMA guidelines do not justify the use of aversive methods and tools including, but not limited to, the use of electronic, choke or prong collars in lieu of other effective positive reinforcement interventions and strategies.

When making training and behavior modification decisions, trainers/consultants should understand and follow the Humane Hierarchy of Behavior Change – Procedures for Humane and Effective Practices.

For these reasons, we, strongly support the humane and thoughtful application of LIMA protocols, and we applaud those individuals and organizations working with animals and humans within LIMA guidelines.

Purpose

The Humane Hierarchy serves to guide professionals in their decision-making process during training and behavior modification. Additionally, it assists owners and animal care professionals in understanding the standard of care to be applied in determining training practices and methodologies and the order of implementation for applying those training practices and methodologies.

Hierarchy of Procedures for Humane and Effective Practice

1.Health, nutritional, and physical factors

2.Antecedents: Redesign setting events, change motivations, and add or remove discriminative stimuli (cues) for the problem behavior.

3.Positive Reinforcement: Employ approaches that contingently deliver a consequence to increase the probability that the desired behavior will occur.

4.Differential Reinforcement of Alternative Behavior: Reinforce an acceptable replacement behavior and remove the maintaining reinforcer for the problem behavior.

5.Negative Punishment, Negative Reinforcement, or Extinction (these are not listed in any order of preference):

6.Positive Punishment: Contingently deliver an aversive consequence to reduce the probability that the problem behavior will occur.

Useful Terms

Intrusiveness refers to the degree to which a procedure affects the learners control. With a less intrusive procedure, a learner retains more control.  The goal of LIMA is for its trainers/consultants to determine and use the least intrusive effective intervention which will effectively address the target behavior. In the course of an experienced trainer/consultant’s practice, he or she may identify a situation in which a relatively more intrusive procedure is necessary for an effective outcome. In such a case, a procedure that reduces the learner’s control may be the least intrusive, effective choice.

Additionally, wellness is at the top of the hierarchy to ensure that a trainer/consultant does not implement a learning solution for behavior problems due to pain or illness. The hierarchy is a cautionary tool to reduce both dogmatic rule following and practice by familiarity or convenience. It offers an ethical checkpoint for consultants to carefully consider the process by which effective outcomes can be most humanely achieved on a case-by-case basis. The hierarchy is intended to be approached in order for each case.  Rationale like, “It worked with the last case!” is not appropriate. The evaluation and behavior change program of every animal should be a study of the individual (i.e., individual animal, setting, caregiver, etc.). Changing behavior is best understood as a study of one.

References:

1 Steven Lindsay, Handbook of Applied Dog Behavior and Training Vol 3 pgs. 29 & 726.

2 Per the IAABC, APDT and CCPDT Joint Code of Conduct

3 “[The] use of positive reinforcement alone was associated with the lowest mean scores (attention- seeking score 0.33; fear (avoidance) score 0.18; aggression score 0.1). The highest mean attention-seeking score (0.49) was found in dogs whose owners used a combination of positive reinforcement and negative reinforcement. The highest mean avoidance score (0.31) was found in dogs whose owners used a combination of all categories of training method. Owners using a combination of positive reinforcement and positive punishment had dogs with the highest mean aggression score (0.27).” Emily J. Blackwell, Caroline Twells, Anne Seawright, Rachel A. Casey, The relationship between training methods and the occurrence of behavior problems, as reported by owners, in a population of domestic dogs, Journal of Veterinary Behavior: Clinical Applications and Research, Volume 3, Issue 5, September–October 2008, Pages 207-217, ISSN 1558-7878http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jveb.2007.10.008.

5 See avsabonline.org • Hutchinson RR. 1977. By-products of aversive control. In: Honig WK, Staddon JER, eds. Handbook of Operant Behavior. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall: 415-431.• Azrin NH. 1960. Effects of punishment intensity during variable-interval reinforcement. J Exp Analysis Behav 3: 123-142.• Azrin NH, Holz WC, Hake DR. 1963. Fixed-ratio punishment. J Exp Analysis Behav 6: 141-148. • Pauli AM, Bentley E, Diehl AK, Miller PE. 2006. Effects of the application of neck pressure by a collar or harness on intraocular pressure in dogs. J Am Anim Hosp Assoc 42(3): 207-211. • Drobatz KJ, Saunders HM, Pugh CR, Hendricks JC. 1995. Noncardiogenic pulmonary edema in dogs and cats: 26 cases (1987-1993). J Am Vet Med Assoc 206: 1732-1736. • Azrin NH, Rubin HB, Hutchinson RR. 1968. Biting attack by rats in response to aversive shock. J Exp Analysis Behav 11: 633-639.

6 Brambell’s Five Freedoms, used as animal and human welfare guidelines:

• Freedom from hunger or thirst by ready access to fresh water and a diet to maintain full health and vigor
• Freedom from discomfort by providing an appropriate environment including shelter and a comfortable resting area
• Freedom from pain, injury or disease by prevention or rapid diagnosis and treatment
• Freedom to express (most) normal behavior by providing sufficient space, proper facilities and company of the animal’s own kind
• Freedom from fear and distress by ensuring conditions and treatment that avoids mental suffering

7 S. Friedman, What’s Wrong with this Picture? Effectiveness is Not Enough, APDT Journal March/April 2010