Kim_MacMillan
Posted : 12/22/2009 6:31:08 AM
I will use all three methods with my dogs, depending on what we are teaching.
I do use a lot of capturing for easy, known behaviours. I have used capturing to teach the sit and down behaviours of all my dogs. I also use capturing to simply reinforce good manners - sitting for something, laying patiently during supper, etc - things that not really develop new behaviour cues but develop good habits - I do a lot of habit-forming in my home such that in a short time these things do not need to be rewarded with anything but the life rewards the dog is seeking.
I use luring to teach some behaviours. I taught Gaci's spin (left/right) with luring, although when I lure, I work to eliminate the lure as soon as I can. As soon as the dog is getting even a baby idea, I fade the lure and finish up with shaping. I find with my guys, they are not great lureres, because we don't use that as a big training tool, and they don't "get it" as much as they "get" shaping. I also don't like a whole lot how they act with lures. You can see they clearly aren't thinking much with lures, they are just following your hand (or target) with their nose until the treat is delivered. I have found, myself, that luring is the one that gets you into the most trouble in terms of developing strong, consistent behaviours The dogs (and the people) begin to depend on the lure too much, such that the lure itself (and often the food/reward!) is required for the behaviour sequence to happenn. I like to train with food off my body, so that the dog learns the behaviour is associated with other things like a verbal or physical cue, so luring doesn't fit into a lot of what I do.
Shaping, I am a big fan of. Because I'm heavy into performance work, shaping is required to teach a lot of complex things. To teach a go out, or complete agility contacts, or weave poles in the way that I teach it, shaping is pretty much required. I do a lot of shaping with my dogs. The only difference is that I have to microshape with Shimmer, whereas I can often chunk a little larger with Gaci because of how they each learn. But they learn the same skills with the same strength, and they just love using their brains themselves! I like shaping because I know that it creates new pathways in the brain that luring does not, and it can develop confidence in ways that both capturing and luring cannot really do. It's the same thing between always showing children what to do, versus letting them figure it out but giving guidance where necessary, and even just giving them the opportunity to experiment to figure those things out - it is widely known that the brains develop differently in the creativity they have, how they solve problems, and how they deal with the frustration that comes with not knowing something.
I think all three have a valuable place in training, and it really depends on your goals and what you want out of a dog. I want a bright, thinking, engaged dog who pretty much figures out its own skills because when I'm out there on the agility field I want the same problem solving abilities to come into play, and I want to be confident those skills are rock solid and that the dog is responding to minute cues rather than having to shout out the name of every obstacle in the dog's path. I want the dog to know to follow my body without asking it to, and to take every obstacle in its direct line (called driving a line), without any need for me to say anything. I want my dog to understand that foot movements that indicate a front cross, without confusing the dog. I see people out there who pretty much guide the dog alongside with "Over, over, tunnel, over, chute!" and while it's fine as an option, I don't want to have to tell my dog each obstacle it could take in words - it knows from far subtler training skills.
I think a great thing to include in this conversation, as well, is the value of backchaining!! An amazing, yet often underutilized tool that has a huge part in teaching dogs complex behaviour sequences!