How to Choose a Dog Trainer adapted from “How
to choose a dog trainer”
By Gail Tenney, dog trainer
As a dog trainer I get calls all the time from people that are having issues
with their dog. Most of the time the behaviors are just normal dog behaviors
that dogs do and all that is needed is some basic obedience training and behavior
modification.
What I tell clients is simply this “Go into any book store and you will
see dozens of dog training books, but there are only two methods of training
a dog. One-way is the Traditional method (also called the compulsive
method) which is when a choke or prong collar is used and the focus is on “correcting”
(choking) the dog to get it to do the behavior you want”. The second and
relatively new way to train is called Operant Conditioning
(you will most likely hear it called Positive Reinforcement).
Instead of focusing on what your dog is doing wrong you focus on what your dog
is doing right and then you reinforce that behavior with a treat or toy and
praise. For example “If I gave you a $1,000 dollars to sit in a chair
for one minute would you do it? Are you more likely to do it again if I ask
you to do it again later and pay you another $1,000? Would you prefer to be
yanked with a choke collar to get you to sit in the chair and would you look
forward to sitting in that chair again”? Putting it in personal terms
helps make people see things differently.
A Brief History of Dog Training
In 1910 a German by the name of Col. Konrad Most wrote a book called “Training
Dogs- A Manual”. In 1954 the book was translated into English and Konrad
Most became known as the father of “Traditional” dog training. It
became the model used to train military dogs. It is based on using a choke collar
and “correcting” (choking) a dog to get it to do what you want.
It was commonplace to take a dog and hang it from the choke collar if the dog
did something the handler didn’t want it to do. This type of training
has been used on family pets and is still very prevalent today as a way to train
any breed of dog from a German Shepard to a Chihuahua.
The choke collar does just that, it chokes your dog. There is evidence that
90% of the dogs wearing choke collars get broken blood vessels, collapsed tracheas
and trauma to the spine not to mention that the thyroid gland sits right there
too. In aggressive dogs it increases aggression and in submissive dogs it increases
fear. Dogs learn by association. If the dog gets excited and sees a person,
an animal or even a small child and jumps towards them, the collar tightens
which causes pain which causes the dog to think “hmm, whenever I see that
child, I feel pain, I guess I don’t like that child”. The dog associates
the child as the cause of pain.
In 1938 a man by the name of B.F. Skinner arrived on the psychology scene with
a new principle of human and animal learning called Operant Conditioning.
It is based on the idea that if you get rewarded for doing something, you are
more likely to do it again to get the reward. What Skinner’s principle
of learning basically says is this:
A response (for instance your dog sits) when followed by a reinforcer (your
dog gets a treat for sitting) is strengthened and is therefore more likely to
occur again.
This principle is based on the idea that getting rewarded makes you want to
do something again. You go to work - you get a paycheck. You do your homework
- you get to watch TV. The same applies to training a dog. The problem is you
can’t tell a dog that if he sits 20 times today you will take him to see
a movie. Dogs don’t care about movies or money or a new pair of shoes.
What they do care about is food. If your dog does a behavior you like; you reward
him with a treat. The treat becomes the “tool” to reinforce a behavior.
It is simple. No jerking on choke collars needed to get the behavior you want.
Although Skinner was interested in the learning model in general, it wasn’t
until two of his students, Marion Breland and her first husband Keller Breland
took this concept and used it to train animals. In the early 1940’s they
started Animal Behavior Enterprises, a business that trained and provided animals
for commercial purposes.
Unfortunately World War Two came along and with it the Traditional method of
dog training became solidified. In 1950 however, Keller Breland was hired by
Marine land
to develop a training program for marine animals. He developed a system of positive
reinforcement training that is still in use today. It has taken awhile but slowly
positive reinforcement training is coming into the forefront as the preferable
way to train.
So the first thing I would ask if I wanted to hire a dog trainer is: “What
method of training do you do?” Do you use a choke collar or do you use
the positive reinforcement method. Ask them how long they have been training,
how did they become a dog trainer, etc. Don’t assume that because someone
says they are a dog trainer they have the necessary experience. Don’t
be afraid to ask these questions. A good trainer will be happy to answer them.
Your dog is an important part of the family and deserves to be treated by a
gentle and knowledgeable person.
The most important tool you can use when training your dog is your intuition.
If a trainer says something you don’t like or that feels wrong to you
trust your instincts. Listen to your intuition and don’t do it. I am here
to work with my clients, to empower them and their relationship with their dog.
The relationship you have with your trainer, whether it is for only one session
or many sessions, should make you feel good.