Keep your Puppy’s Attention and Cut Training Time in Half
Jan 8th 2009Dog Training
Puppies love to see your happy face! It’s their favorite thing. With these five tips, his training will go twice as fast.
1.) Use potty time. Puppies love to go outside. Since you are already rewarding him for fast response outside, with loving praise and a happy face, use the excitement to work on another lesson at the same time. For example, work on his leash breaking. Even if you have a fenced in yard he should be getting at least some of his housebreaking time on a lead. A dog who is always loose in his yard when he goes will not go on-lead in a strange place. He will hold it so long you think he surely will burst. Of course this is not healthy for him, and you never know when you will need to take him out on lead. As soon as he is finished his potty and received his happy praise, say, "Wanna work?" in such an excited voice he will happily agree. Spend a few minutes with his heeling and sitting work, depending on where you are in his lessons, and give high praise. It does not have to be a full session, just an added minute or two to reinforce the lessons he is currently working on.
2.) Use meal times. When your dog is hungry and waiting for you to fix his dinner, you have his strongest attention of the day. Do not tease him with his food, ever, or take toooo long to give him his meal, but you can make a fun game out of a few little lessons before he receives his plate. For example, since he should already be learning to sit calmly off to the side as his food is being prepared, (also when you are fixing your own), work on a short version that will encourage success. Rather than asking him to sit/stay for the whole long time, reward him with little bites as you go. If he sits for 30 seconds, give him a bite with high praise, release him for a moment, and place him again with a fresh command, only repeating the command when the first one ended in success. Never repeat a command if he fails to obey. In this case, quietly with a stern face, place his body back where you first put it with a light nudge to stress the point that "here is where you are supposed to be."
3.) Use the happy time when you let him out of his crate. You do not want to make too large a fuss when releasing him, just open the door and let him out, but of course it makes him happy and focussed on you anyway. As soon as he is loose, make a session part of is rewardand say, "Wanna work?"?" and do a little 2 minute lesson, like sit, or down. Since he is excited only ask for 5 or 10 seconds at most, then praise praise praise! You must train when it is difficult for the dog to do it or he will only behave when he wants to behave, not when he needs to.
4.) Use a new toy. Just like with his food and treats, do not withhold a new toy for longer than 2 minutes or so. Get his attention with it by letting him smell and taste it a little, without releasing it to him. If you make your puppy earn complete control over a chewie or a toy, it is a huge reward for him. Do a few lessons, like a 1 minute down/stay or any other command that you are already working on. Do not introduce new lessons when the puppy is already excited. Use calm time for that.
5.) Use his regular session time. He loves his on-lead work time with you already, so before and after each work session, work on things that arent actually session work but, say, good doggy manners or just understanding English. Here’s an example: Go get his ball and say, "Cach!" or "Go get it!"!". Whatever words you choose, make sure you use the same ones all the time so he will learn about twice as fast.
If you try these techniques using a loving temper consistently, your dog will learn faster than you ever thought possible. You coudln’t ask for a better companion.
Dy Witt has bred, shown and trained her standard poodles for over 25 years. Wets and groomers of her pups sent word of how happy and well-adjusted they were. Free articles and info at: http://www.DogTraining15MinsADay.com