Drilling Your Dog With Clicker Training

September 2nd, 2010 by KittyKitty

 

What works for adult dogs is effective for young puppies as well.As is the standard in dog training, the reason for clicker training is to have dogs associate the sound of the click with a certain behavior, hopefully positive.

Before continuing on, do some further reading with this article on Canis Clickertraining Academy Review.

Why behavior education holds clicker training is high regard is no surprise.The clicking sound relays to the dog the exact behavior you are looking for; it tells him why you’re rewarding him.

How it Produces the Desired Behavior.

Because you have heard many praise the usefulness of the clicker, you’re eager to know how it produces the target behavior so that you’d apply it to your pups or have your old dogs learn new tricks.The clicker training is a reward system – allowing your dog to connect the click with rewards for bidding your command.When making your dog recognize the command, “Sit,” you can gently push him rump downward while repeatedly saying the word.Click then give him a treat at the exact second his butt his the floor.Do this several times.Sooner or later, you dog associates the command with the click and the treat he recieves for doing it.

You would read an informational article here on Teach Dog Tricks.

Dog Training with a Clicker.

Don’t just believe what you hear; try it and prove what they say.Be warned however, that when you start applying the clicker on your dog, don’t forget to.

Reward at each click.The clicker is a training aid.You should not use it outside of training sessions.You won’t need the clicker beyond the time when your dog shows understanding verbal commands by carrying it out.

Be persevering.Just like humans, dogs have different IQs.Their intelligence notwithstanding, dogs are not as smart as humans.It’s logical to not expect too much of a dog especially if this is their first time being trained.Don’t be too tough on your dog or yourself.

Close each clicker session on a positively light mood.Your dog won’t forget the final thing that occured at each session.If things don’t go as planned, don’t let it end with your dog feeling bad; he’d be unwilling to try again.To be sure it ends with your dog feeling good about himself, work a final time on a command he has previously learned and you know he can carry out easily. .For example, order him to sit a couple of times just prior to calling it a day.Remind yourself to click and reward.He should now be thrilled for the next session.

Do it Correctly.

Because it’s all about precise timing, you want to make sure you’re doing it correctly.Your dog needs your timing to be perfect to easily connect the commands with the sound of the clicks.Prior to introducing the clicker to your dog, work on timing your clicks.

Want to read more? Visit How To Clicker Train A Dog .

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