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- Frequently Asked Questions (FAQS);faqs.246
-
-
-
- Koehler, William. _The Koehler Method of Dog Training_. Howell Books.
-
- Milani, Myrna M., DVM. _The Weekend Dog_. Signet (Penguin Books USA,
- Inc.) (1985). ISBN: 0-451-15731-1 (paperback).
- This book outlines practical solutions for working people with dogs.
- It has excellent suggestions for understanding dog behavior,
- particularly destructive or unwanted behavior. Gives all kinds of
- practical solutions to the problems of adequate exercise, adequate
- training, housebreaking, and so forth.
-
- Strickland, Winifred G. _Expert Obedience Training for Dogs_. Third
- revised edition. Howell Book House (Macmillan Publishing Company),
- New York. 1987. ISBN: 0-02-615000-X (hardcover).
- Strickland is a well known dog trainer. Covers all aspects of
- training and competition including the formal training for AKC
- obedience trials (novice, open, utility, tracking). Includes some
- general care (health and feeding) tips. Author has also written
- _Obedience Class Instruction for Dogs_.
-
- Tucker, Michael. _Dog Training Step by Step_.
- Tucker is an ex GDB instructor and his books are easy to read and
- follow. His others are _Dog Training Made Easy_, _Solving Your Dog
- Problems_.
-
- 2. What is best for your dog?
-
- This really depends on the temperament and intelligence of your dog,
- and your own ability. There is no one method that works for all dogs
- since breed and temperment plays a large part.
-
- 3. Consistency, Timing, and Patience
-
- Good results in obedience training require large doses of the above.
- You must be consistent: use the same word for a particular command
- every time (e.g., don't use "Come" sometimes and "Come here" other
- times). You must develop a fine sense of timing when introducing new
- commands and later correcting behavior on learned commands. Patience
- is needed: losing your temper is counterproductive. Get the whole
- family to agree on the commands, but have only one person train the
- dog to minimize confusion for the dog.
-
- Establish a daily training period, preferably just before dinner. It
- can be as short as twenty minutes, or longer. Establishing a routine
- helps.
-
- Don't expect overnight success. It can take up to two years of
- consistent work, depending on the dog, for a properly trained dog.
- (This is where the patience comes in!)
-
- 4. Praise
-
- You must praise often and unambiguously. A smile won't do it. Give
- abundant verbal praise, scratch your dog on the head, etc.
-
- Try making the command word part of a praise phrase. In this case,
- whenever your dog is in the desired heel position, you could say
- something like "Good heel!" in a praising tone of voice. Note that
- you only give the command *once* but that the command word is repeated
- in the praise phrase for reinforcement. That seems to satisfy the
- objective of the proponents of repeating the command (i.e. letting the
- dog hear the command often) without actually repeating it as a
- command. Further, because it is being said when the dog is doing it
- right rather than during a correction the dog doesn't create any
- negative association with the command as the latter is likely to
- cause.
-
- 5. When should I start?
-
- If you have a puppy -- don't wait! Enroll in a kindergarten puppy
- class once its up on its shots. Don't wait until the pup is 6 months
- old to start anything.
-
- Training before "six months of age" is fine if you see the puppy
- having fun with these lessons. Just remember to keep the lessons
- short, don't loose patience when your puppy suddenly forgets
- everything it ever knew, and give it plenty of time just to be a
- puppy. In the long term, the time you spend with your puppy
- exploring, playing together and meeting new people is probably more
- important important than your short "training" sessions, but both
- activities are very helpful.
-
- Remember:
-
- * Make it fun *for the pup*.
- * Expect setbacks. Just because the pup understood what you meant
- yesterday, doesn't mean he'll remember it today. This means
- *lots* of repetition. Teach the basic commands: sit, stay, and
- come for now.
-
- 6. Obedience classes
-
- You may find it well worth your while, especially if you are new to
- training dogs, to attend obedience classes. Most places have local
- training schools. Be sure to check up on these places. Call the
- Better Business Bureau and your local SPCA for any specific complaints
- registered with them. Especially check carefully places where you
- ship your dog out to be trained: many of these places are suspect,
- because YOU must also be trained to handle your dog. Beware of
- advertising that claim LIFETIME warranties on the training, GUARANTEED
- solutions, etc. It is best for you and your dog to go through
- obedience training together, so that you both learn from each other.
-
-
- H. Attention
-
- An important aspect of obedience training is getting your dog's
- attention. Your dog will not perform as readily if it isn't paying
- attention to you. There are a number of things you can do to get its
- attention, and you should be sure to praise it for paying attention.
-
- The Monks of New Skete stress this a lot in their book (with the
- addition that in turn, you've got to pay attention to what your dog is
- communicating to you during training). If there's one piece of
- definitive advice about dog training this must be it.
-
- 1. Umbilical cords
-
- Put your dog on a medium-to-short leash and tie it to your belt. Now,
- go about the house on your ordinary business. Do not pay attention to
- the dog. It will quickly learn to pay attention to you to determine
- when you are going to get up and walk around, or where you are going.
- This is an especially effective exercise with puppies and also lays a
- good foundation for learning to heel later. Start with short periods
- of time, say 15 minutes, and work up as your puppy gets older and more
- familiar with this exercise.
-
- 2. Watching
-
- If you look up and catch your dog watching you (this is different from
- the staring contests mentioned above because the dog is not "staring"
- at you when it is watching you move around), praise it.
-
- 3. Food in your mouth, spitting it at your dog
-
- An excellent exercise for teaching attention. It gets the dog to
- concentrate directly on your face, not your hands or pocket. Do this
- as a separate exercise, until your dog understands that it must watch
- your face. Also, DON'T let them pick up the food from the floor or
- ground. If you do, they will learn that they don't have to catch the
- treat. They can just wait and pick it up. And don't let them come
- back later to clean up.
-
- Do not, however, use food in general when obedience training. See
- Using Food below.
-
- 4. Talking softly
-
- Talk softly to your dog. It will have to pay more attention to you.
- This is especially effective when younger, and is a good habit to get
- into.
-
-
- I. Corrections.
-
- You should never correct when you yourself are upset, angry or
- downright mad, especially at your dog. Good correction depends on
- timing, a keen awareness of what the dog is thinking, and quick
- switching between correction and praise, all of which are difficult
- when you are upset. Stop the exercise until you regain your
- equilibrium. You will have much difficulty training your dog if you
- continually get mad while doing it. In fact, if you always or often
- get mad when training your dog, someone else should train it. You
- will get absolutely nowhere yelling at your dog.
-
- 1. Young puppies
-
- The dictum "don't train before 6 months of age" doesn't make any sense
- unless you're talking about the *correction* involved in formal
- obedience training. If you think about it, you train your dog all the
- time whether you realize it or not. Dogs are great at picking up your
- body language and tone of voice. Even if you're not trying to train
- them, they're "training" themselves using the clues we give them (and
- many "problems" are classic cases of the dogs misunderstanding their
- owner's signals).
-
- If possible with a young puppy it is best to use the "correction" of
- distraction. When you deny the puppy something, try to replace it
- with a positive activity rather than just being negative and oppressive
- all the time. Otherwise, limit your corrections to a verbal "no."
-
- 2. Older dogs
-
- There comes a time in training any dog that it must do what you ask
- just because you asked the dog to do it. You have been helping your
- dog with this particular task for a while and you see the look in its
- eye that says, "Yes, I know what you want, but I don't want to do that
- right now." This is very different than the look that says, "Huh???"
- You do have to know the dog you are training and be able to tell the
- difference between these looks. That is just part of being a trainer,
- and no one can really teach you this skill, but you do have to learn
- it.
-
- Always praise the dog immediately when it listens to your corrections.
- Again, this gives the "jekyll and hyde" feel to dealing with your dog.
- But it is very important to immediately praise your dog for listening
- to you. This helps build confidence and keeps the dogs from having
- that "hang-dog" look when performing.
-
- 3. Proofing
-
- Proofing is a method where you make sure your dog understands a
- command, *after* you have taught the dog the command. It isn't fair
- to proof a dog on a command when it is still learning what it means.
-
- For example, you teach your dog to stay. After making it stay in a
- relatively distraction-free environment, you step up the pressure.
- You throw balls up in the air and catch them, squeak toys, have
- someone stand near your dog and talk softly to it. If your dog gets
- up, gently put it back. If after doing this for a while, the dog
- still gets up, then you start putting him back less gently, i.e.
- taking your dog roughly by the collar and putting it back, escalating
- to picking your dog up by the collar so that its front legs come off
- the ground and VERY slowly putting it back in its place, escalating to
- picking the dog up by its skin so that its front legs come off the
- ground and VERY slowly putting it back. Some dogs get the idea more
- quickly than others; stop your correction when it stays down.
-
- When your dog passes this step, increase the pressure by throwing
- balls all around him, bouncing them on the ground, etc. Also, someone
- else should try to offer him food, make strange noises such as
- clapping , barking like a dog, meowing like a cat, using toys or
- things that make strange noises.
-
- When your dog passes this step, increase the pressure by putting it on
- a stay and having someone shout in a loud voice "ROVER, COME!" (do not
- use your dog's name), "OK", "DOWN" (if doing a sit stay). If at home,
- put him on a stay and go and ring the doorbell. It should take
- several months (6-8) to work through all of these distractions and
- care must be taken to not blow the dog's mind by putting him in a
- situation that he is not ready for or by never letting the dog "win"
- (i.e., successfully perform an exercise).
-
- Always let the dog "win" on the last exercise in the session. That
- is, end the sessions on positive notes, with much praise. This keeps
- your dog interested in the work.
-
-
- J. Using Food.
-
- According to the last chapter of Diane Bauman's book _Beyond Basic Dog
- Training_ there is more to dog training and to trainer-dog
- relationships than just the dog performing for food and toys. The dog
- should have a relationship with you and work to please you and work
- for your praise. That should be the important thing in your training,
- the relationship.
-
- Remember, the goal in obedience is consistency. If you have a
- hard-charging dog when you train with treats and toys, but have a
- slow, depressed dog when you take the treats away, getting any kind of
- consistent performance out of the dog will be VERY difficult. Sure,
- with a slow dog you may loose a few points for lack of "Utmost
- willingness" but if the dog does every sit correctly, every front
- correctly and works confidently, you will still do well in the show
- ring.
-
- Further, there are many cases of dogs trained using these techniques
- that are "ring-wise." They know they will not be corrected nor will
- they be rewarded "properly" for their performance, so why should they
- work?
-
-
- K. Training and Corrective Collars.
-
- There are several kinds of collars. There are the plain flat buckled
- ones for everyday use available in a wide variety of colors, sizes and
- fastners (from buckles to quick-release).
-
- Note that puppies do not need corrective collars.
-
- For training purposes, there are choke collars (also called training
- collars), pinch collars and prong collars. Used properly, there is
- nothing wrong with any of these collars, although they often look
- rather alarming. The point is that these collars are for control, not
- for pain infliction. Yanking savagely on these collars is
- counterproductive; firm corrections get the point across without
- injury. Try this experiment: wrap each of the collars around your arm
- in turn and have someone experienced with corrections give a
- correction to your arm.
-
- The Monks of New Skete have a very sensible discussion about choke or
- training collars. In _The Art of Raising a Puppy_, they emphasize:
-
- "A combination of related elements must all work together [to make
- leash corrections properly]:
-
- -a properly fitted training collar that is put on correctly
- -a leash that is held so that there is always some slack
- between you and your pup
- -a three step correction consisting of a "No" with a leash pop,
- repetition of the command, and immediate praise upon compliance.
-
- ...for most breeds we recommend a soft braided nylon training
- collar that is snug going over the pup's head and which rests
- comfortably high on its neck. Because nylon collars are lightweight
- and flexible, they do not tend to slide down to the bottom of the pup's
- neck as many steel collars do, so you can make easier, more effective
- corrections."
-
- To prevent your dog from injury from corrective collars, do not leave
- them on when you are not around. Its usual collar should be a plain
- flat bucked collar; save the choke and prong collars for actual
- training and when you are around.
-
-
- L. Learning to Sit.
-
- Command, "Sit!". Pull straight up on your leash (do not jerk),
- simultaneously push (do not hit) down on the dog's rump. After the
- dog knows the exercise, a tap on the rump is appropriate if the dog
- refuses to sit.
-
- Another way is to have the dog focus on your hand. Say "sit," move
- your hand over its head so that it must sit to keep it focused.
- Praise it when it is sitting.
-
-
- M. Down, Stay, Off.
-
- One caveat is to be sure that you are consistent with "down" and
- "off." Do not use them interchangeably, you will only confuse your
- dog. "Down" should be the classic "lie down on the floor" command,
- "off" needs to be "get all your paws on the ground (and off me or off
- the chair) NOW!"
-
- Traditionally, you start by putting the dog in a sit position. Then,
- using your hand, or a toy, guide its nose down until it's in a down
- position.
-
-
- N. Heeling
-
- To make the process of learning to heel easier, start when your dog is
- a puppy. Don't expect it to heel, but discourage from the beginning
- any forging (lunging) or lagging on the leash. Keep the puppy focused
- on you when on leash. This may mean constantly talking to your pup to
- keep its attention. Pretty soon, you'll have a pup that stays pretty
- close to you on leash and doesn't pull in any direction. The umbilical
- cord approach suggested for attention can be a good way to start and
- maintain this. Don't worry about "perfect heeling" for several months
- yet; it is too much to ask of a puppy right away.
-
- When you and your dog are ready to learn heeling, there are several
- approaches to take.
-
- * Try binding, where you have only a few inches of slack on your
- leash. Hold the lead like a baseball bat handle, with your hands
- almost on his collar. "Plaster" you arms against your body. When
- you start off (with your left leg) tell him heel and hold him
- right there at your side. If he pulls ahead, add pressure in the
- lead backwards and say "get back". Once he stops pulling tell him
- "good boy". Stop and do about four straight lines first (no turns
- yet). Just counter any way he pulls with either "get back",
- "get-up" "get-in" or "get out". When he is in the right spot,
- tell him he's good. Just do a few short heels first and increase
- length. As he learns where heel is, he should stop pulling then
- you can let more leash out and do the same thing. If he starts
- pulling again, go right back down to just a few inches.
-
- * Put your dog on a 6 foot leash with either a choke collar (not
- prong) or flat collar. Hold the loop of the leash in your right
- hand and keep your hand against your waist. Loop the slack over
- the thumb of that hand. Walk around the back yard and when your
- dog walks past you and is not paying attention, turn 180 degrees,
- drop the slack from the leash and RUN! Your Dog will get turned
- around and will have to follow. As soon as the leash is slack
- STOP moving. Say "good <name>," pick up the slack and walk around
- the yard again. Whenever your dog goes ahead of you and it can't
- see you, drop slack, turn and RUN again. Don't jerk the leash
- like a correction. You want a constant pull and if you keep your
- hand against your waist a jerk on the leash won't happen.
-
- * Practice your foot work. Make sure you are clear with your
- about-turns, left-turns and right turns. Bauman illustrates the
- way to turn with photographs in her book. Being clear with your
- turns helps clue your dog into when you are going to turn.
-
- * Along with foot work is timing - count out loud "1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2"
- and keep each pace the same length. When going slow it's "1 and 2
- and 1 and 2" same length paces but at 1/2 time. Fast is "121212"
- again but twice as fast and with the same length paces.
-
- * Simple direction changes help as well: do an "about-face" turn
- whenever the heel starts disintegrating. That way, your dog has
- to stay closer to you to watch where you're going.
-
-
- O. Learning Recall.
-
- First of all, the golden rule of recall:
-
- *******************************************
- NEVER PUNISH YOUR DOG WHEN IT COMES TO YOU!
- *******************************************
-
- It will not want to come to you if it associates that with punishment.
- *Always* praise a dog for coming to you. Remember its associative
- powers are limited, and it will only understand that it was punished
- for coming to you, regardless of what it just did before that.
-
- 1. Starting young
-
- Understand that teaching a 1 year old dog the recall is not the ideal
- situation. Your dog should be taught the recall by 4 months or so,
- and when the dog is younger, it is much easier. By the time the dog
- is a year old, and starting to exert its dominance, the recall should
- be a well-established habit and a few relatively minor corrections
- should re-establish that habit in case there are minor lapses.
-
- 2. On leash
-
- Make a fun game of it, get your dog to understand what that command
- is. With a puppy, call its name and "COME". Get down and open your
- arms wide as your pup comes in to "funnel" it toward you. Make a big
- fuss over it.
-
- Sit your dog down, on a lead, and make it stay. Walk to the end of
- the lead and say "<name>, COME" and give it just a little pop and run
- AWAY from your dog. As your dog gets to you, make it sit in front of
- you. PRAISE, PRAISE, PRAISE!! Work on this way until your dog starts
- coming before you can give the little pop. Then get a long lead (15
- feet or so) and do the same thing. Then progress to letting it drag
- the 15 foot lead around. Call your dog as you are working in the
- yard, or doing other things. Always praise.
-
- Make your dog sit every time it comes to you. This avoids the later
- common problem of the dog running past you when you call it.
-
- 3. Off leash
-
- Don't start off leash until you know that your dog understands recall
- on a leash. The proofing techniques outlined below are only for
- correcting dogs (NOT puppies) *that understand* but *choose not to
- obey*. This is very different from the case of trying to get the dog
- to understand what you want it to do in the first place, and applying
- these kinds of corrections to a dog that does not know what you want
- will probably ruin it for obedience training.
-
- 3.1. Starting off leash
-
- Take off the leash, sit the dog, and tell it to stay. Walk away about
- 6 feet and call your dog. If it does not come, calmly and slowly walk
- up to it, take its collar in your hands, and then back up to where you
- were when you called your dog, pulling it gently along with you. When
- you get to the starting point, tell it what a good dog it is. Keep
- doing the exercise. If it still refuses to do it, lift its legs off
- the ground while going to the starting point. You will escalate the
- unpleasantness of not coming without injury. Each time you return to
- the starting point, praise your dog.
-
- 3.2. Friend nearby distraction
-
- Have a friend offer to play with your dog when you call it. If it
- doesn't come (because playing is so much more fun than doing a
- recall), go over to your dog (don't run over to it, or yell at it
- while doing so) and pull it back to the starting point. Always back
- up to your starting point, to emphasize to your dog that it should be
- in front of you and to let you look at it during the correction
- (staring is alpha behavior). For each failure, you need to escalate
- the dragging back (again, without injury or anger, if you find
- yourself getting angry and frustrated, stop the exercise until you
- calm down): hold the side of the face, both sides, the ear, the lips,
- the skin on top of the head (in escalating order).
-
- This dog knows beyond any shadow of a doubt at this point what you
- want it to do, but when the offer of a friend with a toy or with food
- is more important than obeying you command, the correction must be
- sufficiently severe. Then, it will ignore the offer of food or a toy,
- and he will come to you. When it does, without being dragged, praise
- the dog enthusiastically, as lavishly as you can.
-
- With some dogs, the exercise is not over yet, but you need to repeat
- the exercise to make certain the dog has it. With others, you get one
- good response, and you quit. Again it all depends on the dog.
-
- 3.3. Increased area
-
- When the dog is reliable in your enclosed training area, then to to a
- larger enclosed area and make sure the dog understands when the
- distances are greater. When you are up to several hundred yards,
- you've pretty much got it made. Add as many distractions as you can.
- If your dog likes to play with other dogs, use dogs as a distraction
- and make your dog interrupt a play session to do a recall. If your
- dog ignores you, correct the dog.
-
- Only call your dog once. If the dog disobeys, don't call again,
- just correct the dog.
-
-
- P. Beyond Basic Obedience.
-
- It is, of course, beyond the scope of this article to discuss any more
- advanced obedience exercises in any kind of detail. However, there
- are many resources if you are interested in further obedience
- training.
-
- 1. Classes
-
- There are a number of classes, public and private, offered for more
- extensive obedience training. Especially if you get to know an
- experienced handler/trainer well, you can learn a lot from that
- person.
-
- 2. Books
-
- There are a several books available that devote a good deal of
- discussion to training dogs, above and beyond what most dog books do.
- These are:
-
- Bauman, Diane L. _Beyond Basic Dog Training_. New, updated edition.
- Howell Book House (Maxwell Maxmillan International), New York. 1991.
- ISBN: 0-87605-410-6.
- Emphasis is on training a "thinking" dog rather than a
- pattern-trained dog. Extensive manual on obedience training.
- Communication and understanding are discussed. A well known and
- often recommended book.
-
- Strickland, Winifred G. _Expert Obedience Training for Dogs_. Third
- revised edition. Howell Book House (Macmillan Publishing Company),
- New York. 1987. ISBN: 0-02-615000-X (hardcover).
- Strickland is a well known dog trainer. Covers all aspects of
- training and competition including the formal training for AKC
- obedience trials (novice, open, utility, tracking). Includes some
- general care (health and feeding) tips. Author has also written
- _Obedience Class Instruction for Dogs_.
-
- 3. Magazines
-
- 4. Mailing list
-
- There ia an electronic mailing list devoted to dog obedience issues.
- This is not for the novice, but for the person starting on advanced
- obedience training, as well as those experienced with these
- techniques. It is a good forum for discussing particular problems
- that may come up in the course of training your dog. The list's
- volume is moderate, with occasional peaks and valleys, depending on
- how "hot" the current topic is. For more information, send email to
- the list maintainer at obedreq@reepicheep.gcn.uoknor.edu.
-
- ----------------
- This file is Copyright (c) 1992 by Cindy Tittle Moore. It may be
- freely distributed in its entirety provided that this copyright notice
- is not removed. It may not be sold for profit nor incorporated in
- commercial documents without the author's written permission.
-
- Cindy Tittle Moore
- Internet: tittle@ics.uci.edu UUCP: ...!ucbvax!ucivax!tittle
- Bitnet : cltittle@uci USmail: PO BOX 4188, Irvine CA 92716
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- From: tittle@ics.uci.edu (Cindy Tittle Moore)
- Newsgroups: rec.pets.dogs,news.answers
- Subject: rec.pets.dogs: Companion and Working Dogs FAQ
- Supersedes: <dogs-faq/working_721807216@athena.mit.edu>
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- Date: 15 Dec 1992 18:59:22 GMT
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- in the body of the message (leave the subject line empty). If you
- don't want all of them, include only the lines of the ones you want.
- You do have to repeat the path information for each file.
-
- This is still rough in some places. In particular, I would like:
- 1) additional information on water rescue
- 2) additional info on dogs & frisbee & any other "game" activity
-
- VI. Companion and Working Dogs.
-
- A. Dogs for the Blind
- B. Hearing and Signal Dogs.
- C. Canine Companions for Independence.
- D. Therapy Dogs.
- E. Search and Rescue Dogs.
- F. Water Rescue Dogs.
- G. Narcotics and Evidence Dogs.
- H. Schutzhund.
- I. Police Dogs.
- J. Sled Dogs.
- K. Gaming Dogs.
-
-
- A. Dogs for the Blind
-
- My thanks to Rusty Wright for the information on Guide Dogs.
-
- Dogs can be trained to accompany and guide blind people. Most
- commonly referred to as "Seeing Eye Dogs" or "Guide Dogs," there are
- actually several organizations within the US and many abroad that
- train dogs to guide the blind.
-