I once attended a day course for clicker training years ago. I received a clicker and booklet at the end of it to take home. I haven't used it, though for years I've been meaning to!
The trainer showed us how to get the dog to basically 'think' it has us trained when in fact it is the reverse. He said that once you get the dog to associate the sound of the click with a treat, it will do what you're asking in hopes of hearing the sound of the click that will allow him to get the reward. He said that it's important that the dog not see you put the treats down on the ground because the dog needs to think the treats are a result of the click and not something you did. So you toss a small treat on the ground and click the clicker so the dog begins to like the sound because it means treats are coming.
Then you increase the challenge and ask the dog to do a command. If he follows through, you toss the treat on the floor and click the clicker. I think the ultimate goal is to weed out the treats and the clicker altogether at some point and it's just used as a motivator in the beginning.
The other thing I remember the trainer saying was that a command should only be given once. If you repeat it over and over, like 'sit, sit, sit, sit' until the dog finally sits, he won't take you seriously. But if you say it once and don't give him the click sound or the treat until he does the command, then he realizes that you're only going to ask him once and if wants the treat, he'll sit, or whatever you are asking him to do.
I'm sorry I can't remember more of it, it was awhile ago and I didn't follow through with it. My boys are good at sitting and lying down and staying so that's all I really need from them.![]()
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