Workingdoglover
Posted : 11/30/2009 3:18:43 PM
Liesje
The out is something that he will learn reliably when he is at that point in the training and the work. On his tug he actually auto-outs (if I lock up, he outs on his own....I only say it and you only hear me saying it in the indoor video just to throw in some classical conditioning). I predict that he will auto-out on the sleeve fairly easily as well because he works much more in defense and fight than in prey drive (it's often the prey dogs that get really dirty and chewy on the sleeve, want to rip it off and kill it).
It's not the fast that is important but knowing whether or not the dog can work through pressure. I think I've already explained this a gazillion times so we can agree to disagree. Clicker training a dog all of his SchH skills is really setting that dog up for failure later on, not to mention that it doesn't tell you anything about your DOG, only that you are a good clicker trainer and the dog likes clicker training (haven't yet met one that doesn't).
My dog was trained to out on the tug just like yours (locking up the tug so the fun is over, and as soon as he outs, the games starts again). We did the same thing with the sleeve. The helper would drive the dog, then stop and hold the sleeve still. Rafe auto-outed the first time we tried it, and as far as I can remember he's never not outed when asked. From the dogs I've seen, this is the best way to train (as far as most reliable). I'm sure there are dogs that this wouldn't work for, however, as there are some dogs that are much more serious about things and don't consider it a "game" like the tug game.
I do have to disagree with the clicker training statement - "Clicker training a dog all of his SchH skills is really setting that dog up for failure later on..." - There is a club we've been training with in the St. Louis area that only uses clicker training. No pinch collars, e-collars, etc. are allowed on the field. Two of their dogs went to nationals and one got his SchHII there (the other was pulled due to injury). I've seen them work several times and they are good.
In regards to compulsion telling you how good your dog is - I'm not so sure. Lorna of Incredible Dobermans posted this on the dobetalk forum...
"Patrick & I are members of the International Working dog Breeders
Association. The conference was held in Belgium this year, so we were
unable to attend, but our friend Paul Mundell just returned and filled
us in.
One of the presentations was a study just completed called, "Comparison of stress and learning effects of three different training methods in dogs" by Esther Schalke of Germany.
The study compared methods of correction and training and measured cortisol levels to determine stress produced by each method/corrective device. Interestingly, the electric collar correction produced the least amount of stress, followed closely by the prong collar. The dogs that showed the most stress and produced the highest levels of cortisol were those trained solely with positive methods and when food was withheld as a correction, their stress levels were off the charts!
Between this study and the recent one on using dominance, the dog
training world seems to be justifying the "old" methods as the ones
dogs understand and deal with best. Don't know if I am correctly
expressing my thought here.
One theory that I find interesting is that because dogs live in a
rather violent society themselves, ( i.e, they bite to correct, or use
very physical body language) they seem to deal with correction that
resembles their own best - something I have tended to believe myself
for years. I know it has always worked for all of my dogs over the
years provided I have correctly read their sensitivity levels.
Anyway, thought I would share. When the study is actually published
and/or when I get the notes from the presentation, I'll post here for
those interested."
My thoughts (and this is just my opinion of the whole thing - who really knows what's going on in a dog's head?) are that training with clickers/markers is more stressful for the dog because they have to really think for themselves and figure things out instead of being more or less "shown" what to do with the traditional compulsion methods.
Again, just my opinion. I'm not saying you're wrong or that your training methods are wrong, just giving a different perspective. ;)