Sunday, September 10, 2006

Puppy Training Tip: using your tone of voice in training your puppy

When talking to your puppy, it's not so much what you say, but how you say it.

Your puppy is far more responsive to your tone of voice than he is to the actual words you use, so, while training your puppy, you need to make sure that you pay atetntion to the tone of your voice every time you give your puppy a training command.

Below is an excellent artcile by Hagar Lagarto which will help you understand how to use the right tone of voice while training your puppy.

The Command Voice

Article by Hagar Lagarto

When giving commands to a dog, a calm, firm, authoritative voice is most effective. Dogs do not respond well to hesitant, pleading voices, nor to yelling, which might sound to the dog like threatening barking or scolding. It is also important that the word used for the command and the pitch of the voice be consistent each time the command is delivered so that the dog can more easily learn what the owner means (siiiiiiiiiiiit does not sound the same as sit, for example).

Using the puppy's name before a command ensures that the dog knows that a command is coming, that it is for him (rather than for other dogs, children, or people), and that he should pay attention. This is important because dogs hear a lot of human speech that has no relevance for them at all, and it is easy for them to disregard commands amongst the babble.

To reinforce the command, the dog always gets some kind of reward or reinforcement (praise and usually a treat or toy) when it performs the action correctly. This helps the dog to understand that he has done a good thing.

Note that not all dogs are trained to voice command. Many working breeds of dog are not trained to a voice command at all; they are taught to obey a combination of whistles and hand signals. Deaf dogs are perfectly capable of learning to obey visual signals alone. Many obedience classes teach hand signals for common commands in addition to voice signals; these signals can be useful in quiet situations, at a distance, and in advanced obedience competitions.

The specific command words are not important, although common words in English include sit, down, come, and stay. Short, clear words that are easily understood by other humans are generally recommended; that way, people will understand what a handler is telling his dog to do and other handlers have a good chance of controlling someone else's dog if necessary. In fact, dogs can learn commands in any language or other communications medium, including whistles, mouth sounds, hand gestures, and so forth.

(Hagar lagarto is a long time Pet lover with many articles and websites on the subject.You can get much more info at pet.freehostia.com)

Steve

Puppy Training Tip

Sunday, September 03, 2006

Puppy training tip - start with consistency

Puppy Training Tip - Start with Consistency

When you start training your puppy, the first key is consistency.

Your puppy needs to understand the rules. He wants to be a good puppy and he'll behave well if he knows what that means.

You need to make sure that his puppy training helps him do this.

A puppy will learn a new behavior when that behavior is consistently rewarded and will stop behaviors that are consistently punished.

However, if you only reward your puppy occasionally in the early stages of training a behavior, the puppy is unlikely to associate the reward with the behavior and the behavior is unlikely to stick.

On the flipside, if you only punish a behavior from time to time, you will probably just confuse and upset your puppy. He won't really understand why he's being punished.

So, my first puppy training tip is to help your puppy learn good behavior by making sure that the puppy training is consistent.

Steve


Puppy training tip

Thursday, August 31, 2006

Puppy Training Tip

Welcome to Puppy Training Tip. If you want to train your puppy to be happy and well behaved, Puppy Training Tip will teach you how.

Steve

Puppy Training Tip