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1. Offered Behaviour
Offered behaviour is
just
waiting for your dog to perform the action of
his own accord (e.g. lie down).
Once he performs the action, click and
treat – then wait for the behaviour to happen
again.
Your dog will soon work out
that the click and treat is in his control –
he can make the click and treat happen just by
repeating what he has been rewarded for.
Let’s look at an example of
offered behaviour :
Exercise
– The “Watch”
This is an excellent
starting exercise and an illustration of OFFERED
behaviour.
Wait
for the dog to look at you – when he does,
click and treat;
Do this for a
few repetitions ;
Your
dog should soon realise “if I look at you, I
get a click and a treat” and his response will
get faster and faster!
2.
Luring
Sometimes your dog needs some
help and you can do this through a technique
called luring.
Luring is when we present
some encouragement to the dog but remember, the
clicker method is hands off – we are looking
to guide him.
Luring falls
into some of the training behaviours you will
have already used, for example – if you want
your dog to come to you from a distance, you may
wave his favourite toy at him.
Lets look at
an example of luring and how the clicker fits
in:
Exercise
– The Down
This is an example of LURED behaviour.
Place
your dog into a sit;
Place
a treat to his nose and slowly draw it down his
chest;
It
will be a natural reaction for his shoulders to
go down or he may go into a down – click and
treat any of these behaviours;
If
he only lowers his shoulders, click and treat
for a few repetitions then stop;
Your
dog should then go that little further and lower
his shoulders more or go into the down – click
and treat.
3.
Shaping
Shaping
is the cornerstone of clicker training – you
can use either offered or luring to shape the
end result.
By clicking
and treating each stage of an exercise, you
don’t need to wait for the end result and this
is “shaping”.
This is
where we are getting the dog to use his brain to
work out what is required.
This is fun for the dog and exercises his
brain – we don’t want a bored dog, we want
an enthusiastic one!
Let’s look
at an example of behaviour shaping.
There are many exercises that use shaping
but heelwork tends to be the best illustrator :
Exercise
– Heelwork
This is an example of a SHAPED behaviour.
Start
with your dog off the lead;
If
your dog walks within a certain radius of you
(e.g. 1 metre), click and treat;
After
a few repetitions, stop clicking and treating;
Click
and treat if your dog comes within ½ a metre;
After
a few repetitions, stop clicking and treating;
Walk
to the side of your dog and if he goes to your
left (doesn’t matter about the distance),
click and treat;
After
a few repetitions, stop clicking and treating;
Click
and treat if your dog comes closer but on your
left;
After
a few repetitions, stop clicking and treating.
We
are teaching the dog “shaped” behaviour –
we are starting off with very loose criteria and
slowly raising the odds.
4.
Targeting
Clicker
training can also incorporate “Targeting”
and this involves the dog following a target
(usually a target stick).
This is useful for
teaching heelwork, contact points, pick ups,
etc.
Targeting
falls into the “Luring” method as we are
pointing the dog in the right direction.
It is
especially useful for teaching close heelwork,
target points etc.
What we are
aiming to do is to teach the dog there is
something to focus his attention on.
You can use anything for a target stick
– your hand, your foot, a piece of cane.
I use my old riding crop as it’s the
only use it has!
Lets look at teaching the dog how to use
a target stick.
Exercise
– Targeting
This is how to teach
your dog to use a target stick.
Offer
the target stick just in front of the dogs nose;
He
should be curious and sniff it – click and
treat!
He
will soon pick up on this so stop clicking and
treating;
Move
the target stick away a very short distance,
your dog should follow it – click and treat!
Continue
this for a few repetitions until he follows the
stick then move onto different directions (over
his head, onto the floor, left, right etc).
Each
time your dog follows the stick, click and
treat!
When
you are happy with this, start to vary the click
and treat – he should show more determination
and start to bump the stick with his nose.
Click and treat!
When
you are completely happy he is following the
target stick – introduce a command (e.g.
Touch)
**NOTE**
If your dog has a tendency to bite or mouth the
target stick, time the click and treat just
before his mouth gets to it!
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