Dog owners would absolutely enjoy more sharing a house, a car or even spending the time together walking your dog in the public, when your dog can be told to eliminate outside (house training), to come, to sit or to stay easily at your direction.
Obedience Training also show very clear sign of responsible ownership, it is so widely known that if your dog can display these basic obedience commands as well as walking on leash with ease and some other simple task, your dog can earn the American Kennel Club (AKC) Canine Good Citizen Certification.
This Certification is a testimony that your dog is sociable, well behaved and not dangerous to people in general. In some state this CGC Certification is a benchmark of your dog behavior and responsible dog ownership.
Dog owners more than others those who are new in general faces difficulty in training their dog, it is because they do not understand that dogs think and act different from us. They failed to make much development in dog training because they failed to realize that dog communicate differently from us.
The major mistake made by new dog owners is having a lot of command and inconsistency in their training routines. Remember that consistency is very important, do not say 2 words for the same of action that you want your dog to obey.
Here below are some commonly used basic dog obedience commands that you should start with prior going to other more advance command, that will aid you as dog owner to feel comfortable bringing your dog for a walk in the park or in public areas.
Come: this command is used to recall your dog
Sit: this command tell your dog to be in sitting position.
Stay: the dog must keep still in any position whether it is sitting, down or in that location where the command is given until released by you
Down: this command tells the dog to go down with its front feet and rear legs are touching the ground.
Here are some tips how you can really improve the effectiveness and the rate of your dog learning:
1. At all times you must use the same command words and in the same tone or speed of speaking
2. Have tolerance, your dog will fail you.
3. The dog has single track mind, teach one thing at a time, do not try to teach a lot of command in one single training session
4. When your dog did anything right or wrong, your rewards and punishment should come almost immediately. Do not punish or reward after a long time break from the act itself because your dog will not be able to relate the two.
5. Increase bonding with your dog by bringing him out for an exercise or play with him. All training session should be based on this relationship.
6. Prior training your dog, you should get highly regarde dog training manual and go through it thoroughly before starting your dog training session. It is harder to ask your dog to unlearn wrong things than learning new things
7. Never call your dog to come to you to punish, you will give them wrong understanding that the word come means punishment.
8. Do not permit other people to give any command to your dog especially when you are training him.
9. Do not train your dog when you are not in the mood or when you are not feeling well.
10. Never get violence with your dog.
Obedience Training is a clear sign of responsible dog ownership. Every responsible dog owner should endeavor to train his/her dog to at least acquire these basic obedience skills.
Dog Obedience Training Classes
If your dog refused to eat during the early stages of training, stop the program and have a play session or calm your dog until it is relaxed and begins to accept treats again. This process may require 3 to 4 sessions but it is worth going through it to develop your dog's positive attitude towards obedience.
Conduct 3 training sessions a day, each session lasting approximately 20 minutes while allowing at least 1 hour rest in-between sessions. In a 2-week period, there should be a total of 30 sessions.
Week 1 And Week 2
1) Teach your dog the "heel" command. Repeat a series of 3 to 5 circles and perform 5 series of 4-step "heels" per session.
2) Teach the "sit" and "release" command. Command your dog to "sit", let it stay in the sit position for a moment then give the "release" command to release your dog from the "sit". Repeat this series 5 times per session.
3) For each session, work on a series of 1 exercise and move to another exercise (i.e., work on one series of 4-step "heel", then a series of "sit" and "break", and finally a series of 4-step "heels"?).
Although dogs need repetition to learn a skill, you need a variety of exercises to keep them interested as they bore easily.
Week 3 And Week 4
1) Reinforce the "heel" command. Test the "heel" command from lessons learned from week 1 and week 2.
2) Reinforcing the "sit" and "release" command. Begin training your dog to hold the "sit" position starting from 5 seconds and gradually stretching the time to 10 seconds.
3) Begin teaching your dog the "down" command (use treats to lure your dog to teach it the command). Repeat the series 2 times per session in week 3 and 3 times per session in week 4.
Week 5 And Week 6
1) Continue to reinforce and test the "heel", "sit" and "release" commands. Begin to include distractions when training "heel" and "sit" to train your dog to continue focusing on you even there are distractions.
2) Extend the concept of holding position to build patience by extending the "sit" from 5 , 10 seconds to 30 seconds , 1 minute before releasing the "sit" command.
When you test your dog, you should repeat each test until it passes the test 3 consecutive times.
3) Start to reinforce the "down" command in week 5 by removing the treat and shoulder help. During week 6, begin reinforcing without any bodily assistance. You can reintroduce treats as the reward but do not tempt your dog. Only reward your dog after it has successfully completed the "down" command.
Training sessions may become more stressful for both you and your dog as you progress from the teaching phase and enter into the more difficult reinforcing phase. If you find a particular test too tough for both of you; stop the exercise and continue to practice the skills individually, you can repeat that particular test a few days later.
While the length and regularity of the sessions remain unchanged since the first week, the sessions are becoming less predictable and require varieties to make them as interesting and effective as they can be.
Week 7 And Week 8
1) While continuing to reinforce and test the "heel", "sit" and "release" commands, don't forget to reinforce the "down" command as well. In 1 of every 3 sessions, add distractions to your basic commands. Improve "down from a "stand" exercise with the "down" command.
2) Extend the time-span of the holding position and begin teaching the "stay" command.
3) Begin combining the different commands when training. Teach "sit" and "down" from your front and testing motion "down" and motion "sit".
4) Start teaching the "come" command. Put your dog on "sit/stay" position, while walking backwards monitor the position holding skills. Body language plays an important role in teaching this command and sending the wrong signals sometimes causes your dog not to hold the position.
Week 9, Week 10 And After
1) Reinforce "stay" and "come" command. Always practice a short leash recall to reinforce the final finish position. Repeat at least 10 times per session. "Come" is the most important command but the least practiced of all the other commands.
2) Conduct test and reinforce all obedience commands. Practice all commands equally, working on each command as little as 1 or as many as 5 repetitions per series though you should avoid creating patterns.
Make exercises targeted towards your practical obedience application. Include distraction training in at least 1 out of every 3 obedience practice sessions
Both Leo Enoch & Joanne Dogtrainster.com are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
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