Guest KOJAK Posted April 28, 2006 Share Posted April 28, 2006 WHEN WILL MY DOG BE TRAINED? "I can't wait till my dog is TRAINED!" -- as if that is an END?! ..and when will TRAINED be? When he sits? When he lies down? When he always comes? When he doesn't jump on people? When he doesn't get into the trash? When he can heel off leash? When he can do a directed retrieve? When he can track a missing person? When he can herd sheep into a pen? You must decide what TRAINED means to you and your dog. TRAINED, is NOT an end - it is a lifelong journey. Kind of like our own education - We learn new things daily. TRAINED is not magical - it won't happen without outside influence. If YOU are NOT that outside influence, other things WILL be (i.e.; the dog won't wait for you to train him!): · You put old bread out on the ground for the birds - your dog finds it and eats all of it. He has just been trained to eat the bread - food is a strong reward for behaviour. · One of his toys is partially under a bush in the garden. He uses his paws to get to it and digs a hole in the process. He gets his toy and the garden gets a hole. He was just trained how to get a hard to reach object he wants. The object itself (the toy) was his reward. · A delivery person comes to the door with a package while you aren't home. Your dog, who is learning to alert when strangers come to the door, jumps at the window, barking and banging on the window. The delivery person leaves the package and walks away. Your dog has just learned that the barking and lunging "chased" the stranger in away. LACK of training on your part is STILL TRAINING!! · Your dog shows fear of thunderstorms, fireworks and gunshots. During a nasty thunderstorm, his eyes bug, ears go back - he paces and pants with his mouth wide open. You go to him and stroke him calmly, murmuring, "It's OK, it's ok." The next thunderstorm happens a few weeks later, and he acts worse. He tries to dig under the dresser or hides in the tub. You go to him, hug him and pet him and again tell him "It's OK, you're alright.". You wonder why his fear reaction has increased when you are working so hard to calm him. He IS learning - and you ARE teaching him! You are teaching him to be afraid of storms. Petting, stroking, hugging, soothing talk - all are ways to PRAISE your dog . In this example, the dog is being inadvertently praised for his fearful behaviour. · "He acts JUST FINE at home. I don't know WHY he gets so crazy here at dog school." This is why. When you do your training sessions at home, you chase the kids outside, turn off the radio and TV (because it distracts you), go to a quiet area and just train. Then, when the dog encounters all the external stimulation at dog school, he can't handle it because he wasn't TRAINED with it. In order to have a TRAINED dog, he must be taught to behave correctly in ANY situation he will encounter: crowds, groups of dogs, vet clinic, groomer, front of your house, down the street, in your backyard, at the park during a ball game, when it is sunny, rainy, snowing, blowing, cold, hot, with birds, or cats around - ANY situation or place you can think of. TRAINED is what you accept, promote and control. · "If I leave him outside for a while, what can he get into?" · "If he isn't to be crated when I'm not home, what can happen that I cannot control?" · "I know if I leave food on the counter, he will eat it when I'm not looking. How can I work to change this?" · "If that loose dog runs up to us in the park, how can I handle the situation?" · "I see a cat ahead on our walk and I know my dog will want to chase. How do I control his actions BEFORE he gets out of control?" TRAINING means working and thinking one step ahead of your dog. · Your dog loves to fetch. Balls, toys, anything will work. He always tries to get you to participate by jumping on your lap and depositing a toy. This time, you are reading the paper and your dog jumps up with his toy and crumples the paper. "NO!, I don't WANT to play!", you say as you toss the toy away. Your dog retrieves the toy and comes back (he thinks "that throw was OK, but let's try for a better one!") This time, he doesn't jump on your lap, but nudges under the paper at your hand. You push him away several times, telling him "NO!", until finally you get angry, take the toy and throw it and tell him to go away. Your dog has just learned that patience is a virtue. If he pesters you long enough, he'll get to play! · You meet up with a friend on your walk with your dog, and you stop to chat for a while. Your dog is impatient, and starts to pace and prance. You are busy talking, but want him to sit quietly at your side. Telling him firmly to SIT, you go back to your conversation and don't realize he never sat. Your dog has just learned that he can ignore your commands. Seeing later that he didn't SIT, you tell him again. Again he ignores your command. Finally, you break away from your conversation and angrily command him to SIT. Well, he has learned he can ignore your commands UNLESS you have a hissy and get mad! · Eating dinner, or even snacks, causes your dog to sit at your feet, drool and stare. You wish he wouldn't be such a beggar. After several minutes of enduring the stares and getting no response to your commands to "go and lie down", you give in and hand him some food from your dish. Dogs learn very well to be patient (and persistent) to get what they want. TRAINING means consistency and meaning what you convey both verbally and non-verbally. TRAINING means following through with your commands. · When your dogs does what you want, when you want - LET HIM KNOW! You certainly let him know when he is bad - you need to concentrate on when he is GOOD, so he will know and learn. TRAINING means praise when something is correctly done. There is a law in dog training that says: YOU HAVE THE DOG YOU WANT think about it.... love my german shepherds kojak :p ;) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NaturallyWild Posted May 4, 2006 Share Posted May 4, 2006 Very well put. If only more dog clubs/vets/pupy schools provided a summary like this before they started training, a lot more people would understand what they are trying to acheive and maybe why somethings are apparently going wrong. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dachie Chick Posted January 9, 2007 Share Posted January 9, 2007 That is very true! Thank you for posting that very useful information, no mater how many posts you read nothing puts it as simple as this Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rainey Posted August 20, 2007 Share Posted August 20, 2007 Great read, puts it into perspective! Thanks for sharing. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tatelina Posted April 20, 2008 Share Posted April 20, 2008 (edited) Oh wow. Why on earth has this dissapeard into the depths of DOL? (and don't ask me how I came across it either.. I can't remember. *blush*) BUMP! Thanks for posting! Edited to say: Heh! Didn't even notice it's a pinned topic. *blush* Edited April 26, 2008 by Tatelina Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mason_Gibbs Posted July 26, 2011 Share Posted July 26, 2011 Great post! I will continue to train my dog his whole life - he has his CCD only and has heaps more to learn Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tara8430 Posted September 26, 2011 Share Posted September 26, 2011 Whats CCD Mason? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
suziwong66 Posted September 26, 2011 Share Posted September 26, 2011 it's an obedience title = Community Companion Dog class. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MarieEvans Posted December 13, 2012 Share Posted December 13, 2012 TRAINING means consistency and meaning what you convey both verbally and non-verbally. TRAINING means following through with your commands. · When your dogs does what you want, when you want - LET HIM KNOW! You certainly let him know when he is bad - you need to concentrate on when he is GOOD, so he will know and learn. TRAINING means praise when something is correctly done. I totally agree. It's crazy how some dog owners would train their dog and expect them to do well when they aren't even training them right. They think beating their dog into a pulp every time he does the wrong thing will make the dog learn when it doesn't even help at all. Very well said. This information should be known by good dog owners and spread to everyone who wants to have a dog. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lulu Posted December 1, 2017 Share Posted December 1, 2017 On 28/04/2006 at 1:00 PM, Guest KOJAK said: WHEN WILL MY DOG BE TRAINED? "I can't wait till my dog is TRAINED!" -- as if that is an END?! ..and when will TRAINED be? When he sits? When he lies down? When he always comes? When he doesn't jump on people? When he doesn't get into the trash? When he can heel off leash? When he can do a directed retrieve? When he can track a missing person? When he can herd sheep into a pen? You must decide what TRAINED means to you and your dog. TRAINED, is NOT an end - it is a lifelong journey. Kind of like our own education - We learn new things daily. TRAINED is not magical - it won't happen without outside influence. If YOU are NOT that outside influence, other things WILL be (i.e.; the dog won't wait for you to train him!): · You put old bread out on the ground for the birds - your dog finds it and eats all of it. He has just been trained to eat the bread - food is a strong reward for behaviour. · One of his toys is partially under a bush in the garden. He uses his paws to get to it and digs a hole in the process. He gets his toy and the garden gets a hole. He was just trained how to get a hard to reach object he wants. The object itself (the toy) was his reward. · A delivery person comes to the door with a package while you aren't home. Your dog, who is learning to alert when strangers come to the door, jumps at the window, barking and banging on the window. The delivery person leaves the package and walks away. Your dog has just learned that the barking and lunging "chased" the stranger in away. LACK of training on your part is STILL TRAINING!! · Your dog shows fear of thunderstorms, fireworks and gunshots. During a nasty thunderstorm, his eyes bug, ears go back - he paces and pants with his mouth wide open. You go to him and stroke him calmly, murmuring, "It's OK, it's ok." The next thunderstorm happens a few weeks later, and he acts worse. He tries to dig under the dresser or hides in the tub. You go to him, hug him and pet him and again tell him "It's OK, you're alright.". You wonder why his fear reaction has increased when you are working so hard to calm him. He IS learning - and you ARE teaching him! You are teaching him to be afraid of storms. Petting, stroking, hugging, soothing talk - all are ways to PRAISE your dog . In this example, the dog is being inadvertently praised for his fearful behaviour. · "He acts JUST FINE at home. I don't know WHY he gets so crazy here at dog school." This is why. When you do your training sessions at home, you chase the kids outside, turn off the radio and TV (because it distracts you), go to a quiet area and just train. Then, when the dog encounters all the external stimulation at dog school, he can't handle it because he wasn't TRAINED with it. In order to have a TRAINED dog, he must be taught to behave correctly in ANY situation he will encounter: crowds, groups of dogs, vet clinic, groomer, front of your house, down the street, in your backyard, at the park during a ball game, when it is sunny, rainy, snowing, blowing, cold, hot, with birds, or cats around - ANY situation or place you can think of. TRAINED is what you accept, promote and control. · "If I leave him outside for a while, what can he get into?" · "If he isn't to be crated when I'm not home, what can happen that I cannot control?" · "I know if I leave food on the counter, he will eat it when I'm not looking. How can I work to change this?" · "If that loose dog runs up to us in the park, how can I handle the situation?" · "I see a cat ahead on our walk and I know my dog will want to chase. How do I control his actions BEFORE he gets out of control?" TRAINING means working and thinking one step ahead of your dog. · Your dog loves to fetch. Balls, toys, anything will work. He always tries to get you to participate by jumping on your lap and depositing a toy. This time, you are reading the paper and your dog jumps up with his toy and crumples the paper. "NO!, I don't WANT to play!", you say as you toss the toy away. Your dog retrieves the toy and comes back (he thinks "that throw was OK, but let's try for a better one!") This time, he doesn't jump on your lap, but nudges under the paper at your hand. You push him away several times, telling him "NO!", until finally you get angry, take the toy and throw it and tell him to go away. Your dog has just learned that patience is a virtue. If he pesters you long enough, he'll get to play! · You meet up with a friend on your walk with your dog, and you stop to chat for a while. Your dog is impatient, and starts to pace and prance. You are busy talking, but want him to sit quietly at your side. Telling him firmly to SIT, you go back to your conversation and don't realize he never sat. Your dog has just learned that he can ignore your commands. Seeing later that he didn't SIT, you tell him again. Again he ignores your command. Finally, you break away from your conversation and angrily command him to SIT. Well, he has learned he can ignore your commands UNLESS you have a hissy and get mad! · Eating dinner, or even snacks, causes your dog to sit at your feet, drool and stare. You wish he wouldn't be such a beggar. After several minutes of enduring the stares and getting no response to your commands to "go and lie down", you give in and hand him some food from your dish. Dogs learn very well to be patient (and persistent) to get what they want. TRAINING means consistency and meaning what you convey both verbally and non-verbally. TRAINING means following through with your commands. · When your dogs does what you want, when you want - LET HIM KNOW! You certainly let him know when he is bad - you need to concentrate on when he is GOOD, so he will know and learn. TRAINING means praise when something is correctly done. There is a law in dog training that says: YOU HAVE THE DOG YOU WANT think about it.... love my german shepherds kojak :p ;) Subscribe to Doggy Dan and get some control. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
marpera Posted June 21, 2019 Share Posted June 21, 2019 Thx for your contribution, Its very useful. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jemappelle Posted June 22, 2019 Share Posted June 22, 2019 Lovely to see Kojak's name come up after all these years. He was a valuable contributor to the forum and is greatly missed. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
studypets Posted September 17 Share Posted September 17 Hi Kojak, You’re spot on—TRAINING is a continuous process, not a final goal. It’s about consistent, everyday learning and adapting to various situations. Even unintentional behaviors, like ignoring commands or finding ways to get rewards, are part of training. Being consistent and proactive in all situations helps shape the behavior you want. Thanks for emphasizing that every moment with your dog is a chance to train and reinforce positive behavior! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rebanne Posted September 18 Share Posted September 18 @studypets you are answering a post so old that Kojack is no longer a member here. I get you are trying to push your business but maybe you should read the forum rules. 2 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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