brookcove
Posted : 3/3/2007 9:27:55 PM
Border Collies are very bossy and definitely get into "corrections." It's one of the reasons I can't commit to 100% P+ for the rescues. They also take matters into their own paws very quickly, but they also shut down quickly if you tell them WHAT to do too much. Being told what to do is like a drug to them - they get addicted to it like crack and once you open that Pandora's box you'll need very expert help undoing the damage - a dog that freaks out when asked to think of answers on its own. So I walk a fine line here.
I use corrections to stop a dangerous behavior or get the dog's attention. A correct P+ moment should result in the dog saying "What?" not "YIKES!" As espencer said, the dog should know that he is then free to do whatever, just not
that. It's important in stock training because what I want, and what the dog just did, might be extremely close - and it is impossible to communicate the difference without the dog coming up with it on its own.
I might need the dog to get sheep out of a corner, which requires the dog to pass quietly between the sheep and the fence to the point where the sheep will move away, then stop as the sheep move quietly out. There's a zillion wrong ways to do this and only one right way,
which will be different every single time. The dog has to feel it out - all I can do is tell him, no, that wasn't it - whatever the heck you were doing there was wrong, try again. The only way I can tell it was wrong is by seeing the result of it on the sheep. All I can do is correct and ask for it again, until it happens for us.
So, in answer to the part of this thread that is addressing whether dogs are scarred for life by corrections, and whether it's always possible to accomplish something without them - no and no.
Dog training wasn't 100% brutish and harsh at any time in history, really. There has always been the same range of training methods as today, believe it or not - it's just that the more high profile animals are the ones trained compassionately, instead of the other way around. And the average person trains with an average amount of knowlege, which is to say not much. That may have changed
slightly, but I doubt it's much.
Border Collie trainers, I know, back in the old country, were a relatively gentle lot. Heck, it's a little like the dolphin thing - you can abuse the animal while training at hand, but once it's working a mile or more away from you it will come back to bite you - or
won't come back, I might say!
Shepherds and farmers tended (and still tend) to hold abusive trainers in great scorn. That's relative of course, but I have some writings from trainers in the 1920s, 40s, and 60s that would astonish you, if you think compassionate training was invented in today's generation.
One of my favorites is from the 1930s - "Let Nature show you how to train the pup, Nature knows best." This was in the context of explaining that a pup should mature at its own rate and it was best to let natural ability emerge rather than train it in forcefully.
Another trainer from the 30s through the 60s, in fact the greatest and most revered trainer and breeder of BCs ever, said, "Ye should never need tae beat a dog." He felt strongly that if you had to resort to force to get what you wanted out of a dog, that dog didn't have what it took to work - that was a lethal fault.
But shepherds didn't have the public eye back then - German shepherd, gun dog, and hound trainers were the highest profile until very recently. Now the tide has turned back the other way - certainly a good thing, but it's inaccurate to claim that recent trainers were the first to think of training dogs using self-motivation, or positive reinforcers, or in a way that allows the dog to think for itself.