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You are here: Home / Archives for common dog training mistakes

Learn From Dog Training Mistakes

October 20, 2017 by Fanna Easter

Dog Training Mistakes Provide Valuable Information

Dog Training Mistakes
Kzenon/Adobe Stock

When teaching dogs new behaviors, mistakes will happen. It’s part of the learning process. During a dog training session, either the pet owner (teacher) or dog (learner) will make a mistake. While identifying and overcoming mistakes seems complicated, it really is super easy with a few tips. When mistakes happen, remind yourself that they provide valuable information you can learn from.

Human Mistakes

It’s important to remember the dog is always right. Teaching is challenging, so reward your dog, especially when she picks up on a behavior quickly and easily. As the pet owner, it’s important to set your dog up for success by following these few easy steps.

  1. Always choose a distraction-free environment to begin training your dog a new behavior.
  2. Split the behavior into easy-to-understand sections.
  3. Encourage your dog by generously rewarding steps forward.
  4. Keep dog training sessions short (1 minute long).
  5. If progress stops, identify the issue and stop the training session immediately, then resume with an updated plan.

Here’s an example of setting a dog up for success when teaching her to lie down on the floor.

  1. Practice in your home with minimal distractions.
  2. Teach your dog to sit first. Once she sits reliably, lure her front half down with a treat. Click when elbows touch the ground and reward generously.
  3. Reward each step forward.
  4. Stop the session after 1 minute.
  5. If your dog won’t lie down, step back and figure out why. Maybe try teaching your dog with a mat under her elbows or slowing down your luring hand.

Dog Mistakes

When pet owners teach their dogs new behaviors, they are building a bond of trust between them as well as learning how to communicate effectively. Remember, dogs are considered learners during training sessions, so they can’t make mistakes. Dogs (learners) are always right even when they’re confused.

Pet owners (teachers) should remember that dogs are not choosing to be stubborn; dogs are genuinely confused in those situations. If this happens, end the training session and re-evaluate your training plan. If you find yourself frustrated because progress has come to a halt, seek advice from a positive reinforcement dog trainer.

Think about it this way: If you become confused while learning how to ski, then your ski instructor has not communicated how to ski properly. As a dog trainer, if my students become confused and make mistakes, that means I didn’t communicate how to do a behavior effectively—and I own it

Identifying Mistakes

This is the hardest part. Most pet owners immediately blame their dog when training sessions become confusing. Humans have huge egos. The best way to identify dog training mistakes is to record a training session on a smartphone.

Set up the phone, so both you and your dog are easily viewable, such as propped up on top of a table. Hit the record button, walk over and teach a 1-minute training session covering a difficult behavior. End the session, then watch the video to identify the issue.

About 90% of the time, pet owners immediately identify their mistake and adjust during their next training session. If you do this and are still stumped, send the video to a professional positive reinforcement dog trainer for advice.

Learn From Mistakes

Each mistake provides valuable information. When you learn what caused the mistake, you’re less likely to repeat it. Once mistakes are identified and changes are made, dog training success progresses quickly.

Filed Under: Clients, Training Tagged With: am I making dog training mistakes, common dog training mistakes, dog behavior, dog can't learn, dog keeps making mistakes, dog refuses to learn, dog training, dog training mistakes, how to teach a dog, how to train your dog, untrainable dog, untrainable puppy

Solutions To Common Dog Training Mistakes

May 24, 2017 by Fanna Easter

Don’t Make These Dog Training Mistakes Again

Dog Training
DNF-Style/Adobe Stock

Everyone makes dog training mistakes; it’s part of the learning process. When mistakes happen, it’s important to recognize and learn from them and leave frustration at the door. If you’re making these common mistakes in dog training, give these simple solutions a try!

Mistake #1: Ego Getting in the Way

Solution: Record Your Sessions

Human egos can quickly interfere a dog training session. When pet owners justify that their choices were right and their dogs were wrong, that’s ego creeping in. Justification rears its ugly head when pet owners blame their dogs for certain choices when actually their dogs didn’t know what else to do instead.

It’s hard to hear it, but the human ego is part of each dog training mistake made. As humans, we assume we’re right and our dogs are “just not getting it.” Instead of assuming, look at each dog training session from the perspective of a learner.

Still not convinced? Record your dog training sessions using a dog camera and review afterwards. Are your instructions clear to you? If you’re still not convinced, mute the video and ask a truthful friend what behavior you’re teaching in the video. If you nor someone else aren’t sure, then your dog certainly isn’t either.

Mistake #2: Touching Your Dog

Solution: Use a Clicker and Treats

Humans are very tactile, resulting in numerous mistakes during dog training sessions. When teaching new dog training behaviors, refrain from touching, pushing, pulling or forcing a dog into a behavior. Physically reaching out and touching dogs get in the way.

Use a hands off approach via clicker and treats instead. At first, it might be difficult using new dog training techniques because you’re learning something new, but it’s so worth it. (Remember, your dog is learning to adapt to this training technique as well!)

Hands off dog training means no physical or verbal corrections either. Remove your dog’s leash when practicing behaviors in your home. If your dog disengages, then you need better treats or your dog will become completely confused. For dog training sessions outdoors, attach your dog’s leash to a body harness instead of a collar. This prevents collar corrections.

Taking a hands off approach to training your dog will boost your dog’s success. Quickly reward any of your dog’s attempts toward the desired behavior. As a rule, you should be rewarding more than withholding treats.

If your dog makes a mistake—remember, it’s part of the learning process—just withhold a treat. Take a break and rethink your training plan, and keep your ego in check please.

Mistake #3: Using Low Value Treats

Solution: Use Treats Your Dog Loves

Dog training treats are your dog’s paycheck, so pay him or her extremely well. Using treats during training is not bribery; it’s far from it. Rewarding good behaviors with yummy treats works, and it works super fast. High value treats include chopped up hot dogs, baked chicken, cheese cubes or anything your dog absolutely adores. Using a high value treat will make training your dog so much easier because your dog wants to earn it.

Mistake #4: Using Huge Cheese Chunks

Solution: Break Treats Into Small Pieces

Break training treats into small pieces. Pea-sized treats work best for all dogs. Clicking and tossing pea-sized treats ensures excitement during training, and sessions move quickly with lots of success.

While it’s tempting to toss a huge cheese chunk every time, it’s actually slowing down the process. Dogs take forever to eat a cheese chunk (well, most do), and they’ll fill up on the treat fast. There’s nothing wrong with tossing a cheese chunk, but use it strategically.

Save large cheese chunks for breakthrough moments, such as your dog responding to a cue for the first time, ignoring another dog or coming when called.

Mistake #5: Making Assumptions

Solution: Practice the Behavior

Again, the human ego is the cause of this common dog training mistake. Pet owners assume things too quickly, and will justify why their dogs should know a cue. Do the following sound familiar?

  • “But he’s done this behavior before.”
  • “He knows how to do this.”
  • “She’s ignoring me.”
  • “She knows better.”
  • “He’s choosing not to listen to me.”
  • “This is the first time this has happened.”

This is justification. Instead of assuming and justifying, teach your dog the behavior. 🙂

Dogs ignore a cue for two reasons: 1) They’ve never practiced the behavior in a specific situation before (e.g. a squirrel runs in front of them) or 2) They’re confused. So many times, pet owners convince themselves that canine confusion doesn’t exist, and their dogs should know the behavior.

Yes, human ego rears its ugly head again. Practice a behavior in a myriad of situations, including an environment where a squirrel runs in front of your dog. Always remember, dogs are a living soul, not a robot, so understand they may not respond every time.

Happy Training!

Filed Under: Behavior, Clients, Training Tagged With: common dog training mistakes, dog obedience mistakes, dog obedience tips, dog trainer advice, dog trainer tips, dog training, dog training errors, dog training mistakes, Dog Training Tips, how to train a dog, my dog stopped listening to me, stubborn dog training

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Dog Training Nation is a community of dog trainers, dog owners and dog lovers. Our mission is to provide trainers and owners valuable information to enrich dogs' lives. We cover a range of topics, from socializing puppies to dealing with aggressive dog behavior to selecting the best dog products. It is our hope you share our content to make the dog and owner world a better place.

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Dog Training Nation is a dog training blog for pet owners and dog lovers. We cover a range of topics from puppy socialization tips to dog aggression to dog health. It is our hope you share our content to make the world a better place for dogs.

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