Clickers_thumb

 

Clickers are not just for dog training!  

You can use clickers to train cats, rats and birds too.  There is even something called Chicken Camp where trainers learn to improve their timing and clicker training skills.  Zoos use clickers to train animals to lift lips and limbs, open mouths, bend down and perform other behaviors that make routine health checks less stressful for the animals and the keepers.  Over the years, I have come to love training with clickers.

 

 

Perhaps you've wondered, "Could my dog be clicker trained?"  

Any dog can be trained with a clicker.  If you decide to try clicker training you won't need to use the clicker forever, or even all the time.  Clickers and verbal praise can be used simultaneously to mark desired behaviors and/or variations in performance.  They are most often used by trainers to teach dogs new things.  Eventually the clicker is faded out, or shifted as new behaviors are taught.  

 



WHAT IS A CLICKER?

Clickers (shown above) are small, hand-held tools that make a CLICK-noise when pressed with the thumb.  Clickers are used when new behaviors are being learned or when known behaviors are being applied in new situations. Clickers MARK behaviors that are currently being rewarded.  Verbal Markers can also be used to teach behaviors, but the crisp, clean sound of a clicker is preferable when trying to mark precise moments of a dog's actions.  A clicker is like a high quality, professional camera that can take a photo showing drops of water falling from a glass.  Whereas my phone-camera might only show a fuzzy blur of water.  When used correctly, clickers make for crystal clear communication.

 

 A.  Standard, Box Clicker  (Cheap & clear, easy to hear sound)

B.  Karen Pryor's iClick  (Raised button is easy to push with a gloved hand)

C.  Triple Crown Clicker  (Contours to hand and is comfortable to hold)

 

DO I NEED SPECIAL TRAINING TO USE A CLICKER?

A clicker is a tool; it can be used correctly, used incorrectly and abused.  As with most tools, the product depends on the user.  For example, if I was given watercolors, a brush and instructions to paint a portrait of your dog, you would get a picture of a dog, but you might not be impressed.  Ask my mother, an artist, and you'd get a technically correct product with added style and artistic flair -a painting you could frame.  Hands-on instruction and coaching from someone who has trained with clickers will give you an advantage, but what you really need is practice.  The best thing to do is start using the clicker for simple behaviors.  

 

Stay tuned...  >>HOW WILL MY DOG KNOW WHAT THE CLICK MEANS?


Medog_small
September 23, 2009, 6:09 am
Clicker training is a great way to train your dog. There is a good website that I use Clickerworks.com It has a lot of great info, videos and more.

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