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You are here: Home / Archives for puppy training tips

First Puppy Training Session

June 3, 2014 by Fanna Easter

Training Your Puppy for the First Time

Training Your Puppy
Wait for all four feet on the floor, then click and treat! solovyova/Deposit Photos

Training your puppy to have good manners is best done in the first 16 weeks. Given their short attention span, you should train your puppy in short sessions.

Five-Treat Puppy Training Session

Count out five treats and practice one or two dog behaviors until you’ve given your puppy all five treats.

Potty and play with your puppy for the next 30 minutes. Repeat this short puppy training session three times a day.

  • 1 puppy training session in the morning
  • 1 puppy training session in the afternoon
  • 1 puppy training session in the evening

Instead of treats, you can use your puppy’s morning or evening meal as the reward. This dog training session is great because you can continue to train your dog for as long as you and your puppy like.

RELATED: How to Potty Train a Puppy

One-Minute Puppy Training Session

Unlike the first puppy training session, the one-minute puppy training session requires a timer. Set your timer for one minute and practice teaching your puppy a behavior until the timer rings. Give your puppy a break. Bring him to potty and play for 30 minutes. Repeat this short puppy training session three times a day.

When training your puppy, remember to take breaks. Training breaks are invaluable during the learning process. You’ll be surprised how much your puppy learned during your short training lesson when he’s given time to think and process the behavior he’s learned.

New Behavior

Begin your next training session by practicing a behavior your puppy does really well like “sit” or “touch.” This builds your puppy’s confidence and sets him up for success. Next, introduce a new behavior, such as “down” and break into several puppy training sessions.

If your puppy is struggling, say “down.” End the training session with something your puppy does very well, such as “sit” or “touch.” Take a break and think through your training protocol.

There is a reason your puppy became confused. Maybe your treat wasn’t valued enough or you moved too fast. Think through how you could do better. Ask your dog trainer for advice—dog trainers are invaluable for troubleshooting and problem-solving, as they have trained many dogs!

RELATED: Dog Training Treats

Touch Command

Teach your puppy to respond to a cue. Practice several known behaviors back to back.

  • Example: Teach your puppy to “sit,” “down,” “sit” and “down.” This will strengthen both cues, and your puppy will learn the difference between the cues.
  • Example: Teach your puppy to “sit,” “touch,” “sit” and “touch.” Asking your puppy to “touch” will lead him out of the “sit” behavior, so you can keep practicing!

Make it fun and give him the chance to succeed with some cues he knows. It’s always more fun for your puppy when he’s rewarded for performing the right behaviors in puppy training.

WATCH: Teach Your Puppy the Touch Command

Always remember these tips when training your puppy:

– Keep sessions short with lots of rewards and plenty of break time.
– When you’re stuck, reach out to your dog trainer.
– Make puppy training fun.

What was your experience like when you first trained your puppy?

You may also like: Top 10 Puppy Training Tips

Filed Under: Puppies, Training Tagged With: how to train a puppy, puppy training, puppy training tips

Why You Should Enroll in Puppy Training Classes

April 14, 2014 by Fanna Easter

The Importance of Puppy Training Classes

Puppy Training Classes
Bigandt_Photography/iStock

One of my favorite classes to teach is puppy training class! Attending puppy training classes is vital for so many reasons. Let me explain why.

Benefits of Puppy Training Classes

  • Plain and simple: Puppy training classes provide your puppy valuable opportunities to experience new situations positively.
  • During your puppy training classes, your puppy will experience new people, puppies, dogs, places, sounds, smells, car rides, leash and collar wearing, and body handling.
  • Puppy training classes allow for plenty of opportunities to reward your puppy for polite behavior.
  • You’ll get to work with a fabulous dog trainer to assist you in training your puppy.

When to Train a Puppy

Puppies learn fast. They’re sponges just like human children, constantly learning and exploring new things in their environment. From birth to 16 weeks of age, puppies are open learning funnels. For this reason, you should train your puppy within the first 16 weeks.

During this critical time, puppies are learning how to navigate and participate in life and their environments. You should make sure you’re introducing your puppy to new experiences in a positive way.

How to Train a Puppy
Tips on socializing your puppy by DoggieDrawings.

Puppy Socialization

Most puppies will walk right up to strangers and other dogs. Puppies generally chase or approach new objects (trashcans, butterflies, flowers, etc.) with curiosity. Allow your puppy to watch, sniff and meet different types of people when he chooses to do so.

Expose your puppy to: 

  • Men
  • Women
  • Children
  • People wearing hats
  • People wearing hoodies
  • People wearing sunglasses
  • People who are walking strangely
  • People making loud noises
  • People with beards
  • People carrying and opening umbrellas
  • People jogging behind you or in front of you
  • People approaching you
  • Babies crying

How to Socialize Your Puppy

Puppy Socialization
Two puppies playing politely.

Socializing a puppy “is the process by which puppies learn the skills needed to mature into normal adult dogs,” according to Wikipedia.

Always allow your puppy to take the lead he’s when meeting a new object. He should walk to the person, dog or object on his own and you should reward your dog for it profusely. If your puppy won’t approach the object, never force or pull him toward the object. Simply ask the person or dog to move away from your puppy, or you may move the object further away.

Personally, I’m still traumatized by Santa Claus at the mall. My momma (bless her lil’ heart) picked me up while I was screaming and crying, and placed me on Santa Claus’ lap. In the picture, I was crying uncontrollably—not a cute look! While I’m comfortable seeing Santa Claus at the mall from a distance now, he still creeps me out. Don’t force your puppy to do something that he’s uncomfortable with. This will only scar your puppy to continue feeling uncomfortable in similar situations later in his life.

If Your Puppy Got Scared

Oops, your puppy got scared! It’s OK. It’s our job as dog trainers and pet parents to let puppies know that the object is safe. If your puppy becomes startled, take a step back from the object. Next, click or treat your puppy when he looks back at the scary object. Clicking and treating your puppy is the reward that lets your pet know he did the right thing.

Repeat the approach and reward the process at least 10 times to reinforce the proper behavior. You will also want to click or treat your puppy each time he walks toward the object. Again, this helps your puppy learn a scary object is OK to approach. Eventually, your puppy will touch the scary object, which is the goal.

So run, don’t walk, and enroll in a puppy training class. Your puppy will thank you with polite behavior for a lifetime!

Tell us how puppy training classes have benefited you and your puppy in the comments below.

More on puppy training:
New Puppy
How to Potty Train a Puppy
Puppy Biting
Complete New Puppy Checklist

Filed Under: Puppies, Training Tagged With: how to train your puppy, puppy training classes, puppy training tips

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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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