First, no point in teaching her NOT to bark unless you first teach her TO bark on command. Otherwise she had no clue what it is you want. And waiting until she STOPS barking is only teaching her to ignore your commands for the first umpteen times. I bet she will be stunned if she is barking, you say "bark" or "speak" and, because she is still going she barks and a treat appears! He hee. So that should be rather easy to teach. Then you teach her to bark and to quiet (that is the command I use).
You can't start rewarding her when she is lying down quietly as this is how we capture the 'down' so it doesn't translate to a quiet for them.
Also, remember that dogs are visual and body language first, verbal last. So use a visual command, dogs seem to learn these more quickly than a verbal cue only. Of course if she is barking at something out a window, you have to get her attention for the visual and that may not be easy. BUT you can pair it with FOCUS! "Focus" means stop what you are doing and listen to me. You would teach the Focus command first and reward that each time, then move on to sequencing it, so the Focus gets her attention, followed by a sit, or a down, or a quiet. Remember you need to have the treats ready for all of this.
Hope this helps!
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