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Dog Training

Dog Training

Capturing a Behavior

April 14, 2017

When I was training my big boy, Bear, I learned a little trick from my mentors in dog training. Anytime I saw something that Bear did that I liked and wanted to keep in his repertoire, I was told immediately to click and treat for it.  See, training is happening every second of the day, so why not “capture” that desired behavior.

The concept is based on operant conditioning. It’s an association between a dog’s behavior and a consequence. Of course, the consequence is the reward. My reward is based on what drives my dog. At that time, Bear was very food motivated. I used small, high value, smelly and delicious treats.

For example, I had a hard time teaching Bear the down cue. Well, eventually he would lay down on his own because he was tired. I had my clicker ready to go at a moment’s notice to click and toss that treat right between his legs in the down position.

Finally, he did lay down and boom, click and treat. His expression of “what the heck just happen” lit up the whole room. From there, I built my training sessions around that moment.

How can you capture a behavior?

  1. Treats. Have small delicious treats on you and ready to go. Another trick that I learned was to have small Tupperware containers with Zukes training treats all around the house just in case Bear presented something else that I absolutely loved.
  2. Watch. This is time to be quietly watching your baby for that behavior that you have been looking so desperately for.
  3. Click and Reward. Woohoo, it happened. The behavior has presented itself and now you must click and treat. If you don’t have a clicker, a verbal marker of yes will do. Also, you must be careful of what you mark. Timing is everything. If you clicked or verbal marked at the wrong time, you still must treat. You can fix your mistake the next time.

What are some behaviors that you might want to capture?

  • Sit
  • Down
  • Look at me or checking in
  • Bow
  • Come
  • Heel
  • Going to the bathroom
  • Any natural behaviors that you can turn into tricks!

When do you add the cue or command word to the capture behavior?

Once you have captured the desired behavior and your baby is consistently performing it clean and with no other behaviors attached, that is when you add the cue.  Remember, you only reward for what you want and ignore what you don’t want. Your training sessions should be no longer than 5 to 10 minutes and always end on a good note.

How are your training sessions going?  I would love to hear from you. Please feel free to comment below or message me privately.

Dog Training

Introduction to Clicker Training

March 8, 2017

Clicker training is a fun and effective way to teach obedience exercises, solve behavior problems and even teach tricks!

 Clicker training has been used with marine mammals for years and is a clear, effective way to communicate with your dog.  A clicker is a small plastic box with a metal tab that makes a clicking sound when pressed.  That click is a clear, consistent marker to let your dog know the moment he is doing exactly what you want.

Why would a dog care that you CLICK?

Each click is followed by a treat!  When a dog learns that a click equals treats, they will try to recreate what they just did to make you (the human) “click”.  See, the click is the “aha! moment”. Since the click is faster and consistent than the human word, the dog will learn the behavior that you are trying to teach much more quickly.

Things to remember when using this clicker:

– The clicker is not a remote control. Please do not point the clicker at your dog! It doesn’t work that way.

– Timing is so important. If you clicked wrong, you still have to treat. You can fix that oops moment on the next click.

– Keep your training sessions very short, like 5 minutes.

– Teach only one behavior at a time.

– If you are trying to teach two or more dogs, teach each dog individually first. Once each dog has mastered the behavior, then up the level of distraction to a group session.

For more information on clicker training, you can hit the web, go to your local library or search for a dog trainer that focuses on positive reinforcement and clicker training.

Here are some other links and books for your reference below:

Clicker Basics for Dogs and Puppies by Carolyn Barney, KPA-CTP, CNWI

http://carolynbarney.com/index.php?id=50

Getting Started, Clicker Training for Dogs by Karen Pryor

http://www.clickertraining.com/whatis