6/26/10

Holding the sleeve after an out

I had no idea that anyone had read the blog posts I had done so far. I was encouraged when I found someone today who enjoyed reading them. Here is another one for you Kourtney!

During protection, it is quite a common scene to encounter a new handler with a dog who wants to 'kill' his won prey object by thrashing the living crap out of it. Accompanying this scene is typically the experienced Schutzhunder who points out that the dog must not be allowed to do that and should be made to hold the sleeve after having run in a circle with the prize.

What follows is generally some conflict. Dog wants to thrash sleeve. Handler makes the dog hold the sleeve calmly.

Without a doubt, a dog that circles nicely with the sleeve in its mouth and then holds the sleeve until the handler outs it or the helper is ready to re-engage, makes for a really nice flow during a training session. It also makes for long lasting training equipment. Unfortunately something that perhaps should be a means to an end sometimes becomes an end itself. There are dogs that REALLY REALLY REALLY want to thrash the sleeve about and many a handler ends up fighting with his dog to make him hold it calmly.

It is worth asking ourselves at this juncture, what is it that we are trying to accomplish? Why do we want the dog to hold the sleeve calmly? Carrying the won prey object is about the dog unloading from the stress which can accompany the bitework. It should be de-stressing for the dog. MAKING a dog forcibly hold the sleeve by training him to do so, for a dog that REALLY wants to thrash the sleeve about, has a certain level of stress associated with it for the dog - as we are making the dog do something it does not want to do ... and this is supposed to be down time for the dog.

Where did these techniques come from anyway and what where they intended to do? There are different schools of thought on this. It is worth asking those that recommend them what they are intended to accomplish.

Techniques that involve the dog running in a circle with the prey object and being encouraged to hold it when stationary, are said to have come from a time when dogs very very civil in their protection work. They were interested primarily in the man, with little desire for the equipment. One school of thought says that these techniques were developed for this very civil dog, to build a desire and enjoyment for the prey object. They are not necessarily useful for the majority of the dogs we see today with an already high interest in the prey object. Unfortunately they tend to be applied, almost obsessively, to every dog.

In addition, what the dog does once the sleeve is slipped to him, tells the helper something about the dogs state of mind after the bite. Many Malinois for example tend to get a lot of bite satisfaction from the fight itself with the man and slipping the sleeve prematurely without allowing them to unload on the man often results in (more) thrashing of the sleeve on the ground. If dogs are taught to forcibly hold the sleeve then this takes a way a piece of information that a helper can use about the dogs state of mind. Now the helper does not know whether the dog is holding the sleeve because the work is just right for him or because he has been taught to hold it. The helper could have used this information to adjust his work on the next bite.

The Utopian dog who is satisfied with the bite should be happy to unload by circling with the sleeve and holding the sleeve out of his own accord, until the helper looks at him and starts to engage him. This dog would then spit the sleeve out, not caring about it anymore, and engage with the un-sleeved helper. The helper then has the opportunity to pick up the sleeve and go into the next bite. A dog that does this is 100% in balance in his drives in the protection work. He understands clearly that the helper is part of the fight and not just something the sleeve is attached to. He is satisfied to hold the sleeve and run around with it unloading, but only while the helper remains static and uninterested in engaging him. He has gained his bite satisfaction on the man and so does not *need* to thrash the sleeve about.

I find that many a dog who thrashes a sleeve normally, when worked in a way that is appropriate to provide them the bite satisfaction on the man, tend to hold the sleeve much better once it is slipped. Of course this is not always the case. Lots of dogs simply enjoy thrashing the sleeve about and it is very ingrained behaviour. It does not mean that the work is wrong for the dog. However it does give the helper something to file at the back of his mind for the next bite. It is thus not worth taking this information away.

Lots of old timers tend to have the opinion that if the dog is allowed to thrash the sleeve about then he will be chewy and do the same on the man. I'm sure that there are dogs that are chewy and thrash on both the man and the sleeve alone when slipped. However there are a LOT of dogs who will thrash the living crap out of the sleeve but will not shift their grip on the man at all. I don't personally believe in this theory. I don't think what the dog does with the slipped sleeve has anything to do with how he bites on the man.

Everyone is of course entitled to their own opinion on these matters. The one thing that is easy to agree on is that it is harder on the equipment when a dog thrashes it about :-) Tracy, whose Giant Schnauzer Bullet is the 'thrasher-in-chief' at our club, occasionally buys the club a sleeve cover as penance for Bullet being hard on the equipment. We find this is a good compromise!

Full disclosure: The above information is something I have gotten from Michael Ellis at one of the seminars he did for us. He seems to have thought through this quite a bit and explains theory behind protection work very well. I would highly recommend attending one of his seminars or courses at his school if you are more interested in these ideas.

6/14/10

New puppy... and not a Terv!

Christopher met a litter of Shepherd puppies at the GSSCC Ontario regionals, fell in love and is now the proud owner of Atom Von Fulk:





Atom is already showing amazing focus, is confident of everything and eager to explore. We are really looking forward to their future together!

6/12/10

Using Verbal Cues in Problem Solving

Dogs are masters of body language and naturally respond better to physical rather than verbal cues. This is why when we teach new exercises, we teach a physical cue first - for example using a lure to teach a platz, and then fading the lure to create the physical cue.

A verbal cue is then added BEFORE the physical one to create a classically conditioned response to the physical cue. The dog anticipates the physical cue and thus learns that the verbal cue alone is sufficient to achieve its reward once it performs the desired exercise.

Verbal cues are an extremely useful training tool in problem solving and are useful well beyond simply putting the exercises that the dog must perform in trial (sitz, platz, hier etc.) under verbal cues - as we must to achieve our titles.

I believe that in responding to verbal cues, a dog must think much harder than it does when responding to aphysical cue alone. I believe that the result is that the dog thinks harder about its behaviour and eventually learns to self correct by anticipating the verbal cue. When this is coupled with the dog being rewarded for the correct behaviour, it makes for a self reinforcing cycle with the dog being rewarded for it correcting its own behaviour.

It is probably easiest to explain my thoughts on this with examples of how verbal cues can be used in this way.

Teaching Correct Heel Position Beside the Left Leg

Two of the most common errors we are likely to find in our own heeling, from time to time, are forging and crowding. Here I am talking about a dog that knows the position beside the left leg quite well and is generally does not crowd when heeling. Even in a well trained dog that knows the position, you will encounter times when the dog is not in the perfect position.

If you re into micro-managing this behaviour, and attempting to get it correct, then I think it is worthwhile to have your dog know the verbal cue 'Back'. You teach the dog this verbal cue outside of formal heeling.

Teaching the type of 'Back' that we are after here is best done in three phases. The first phase is to start stationary with the dog in a stand beside the handler, on a short leash. Best to do this exercise so the dog is beside a wall. The handler says 'Back' and then one second later takes a deliberate step backward. Since the leash is short, the dog has no choice but to step back with the handler. Doing this beside a wall teaches the dog to walk straight backward. The handler marks the correct behaviour with his release marker (OK, click - whatever you use - I'm assuming you are using operant conditioning), and then rewards the dog.

Once the dog is at the point where the handler can say 'Back' and the dog immediately moves back without the physical cue of the handler moving backward (don't forget to jackpot your dog when he does this the first time!!), now we are ready to move to the next phase.

The next phase of Back is to teach your dog that you want it to move back when you use the cue even if you say it while you are walking forward. You set your dog up similarly - short leash, against a wall. Now you are heeling forward with the dog and say 'Back'. One a second later you deliberately and abruptly step back, causing the dog to do it with you and marking and rewarding when the dog does. Important to remember that you must use the cue while are still moving forward at your natural heeling pace. If you use the cue at the same time as you break your stried to move backward then the physical cue of you breaking your stride will over-ride the verbal and your dog will be dependent on it. We are after the dog responding to the verbal cue alone. This is simple for me to state in words but it is not easy for any of us to do in practice. You must think about this deliberately and practise this without a dog several times - best with a spotter, to ensure it becomes second nature before you apply it with a dog.

Once you have practised the above many times and have a dog that will reliably step back when you say 'Back' while you continue to walk forward, you now enter the third and final phase. Again do this beside a wall to encourage the dog stepping straight back. Something different in this phase with the first two phases is that unlike phase one and two where the behaviour ended and the dog got released once the dog took the step back, here the 'Back' and its response on the dogs part, is now put together with you and the dog continuing your forward motion into heeling with the dog's step back only being a slight interruption. To ensure that your dog is rewarded for the correct behaviour you do need to reward the dog. I recommend that if you normally release and reward with a tug at the end, you might want to incorporate food here.

In phase three, you and the dog are heeling beside the wall. When your dog is obviously one or more step forged from the heel position, you say 'Back', your dog will step back, now you mark with a bridge command (I use 'Good') and reward your dog with food in the correct position to re-inforce the step back it took. While you are doing this you keep walking forward and not break a stride. It is not necessary to use food. Your dog will generally be able to respond to the bridge ('Goood') if you have already correctly established it as a secondary reinforcer using operant conditioning. I like food because it immediately rewards the dog in the right position for the behaviour it performed.

Once you have the 'Back' command firmly established, what you *should* be able to use it for during your normal heeling is as soon as you see your dog step out of position (ahead by one step), you say 'Back', your dog responds through the very extensive conditioning you have done from phase one to three, by taking a step back, you say 'goood' and continue heeling. Initially, it is a good idea to mark the end of the exercise and reward with the primary reinforcer after the dog has correctly responded to the 'Back' and stepped back into position.

Once your dog is proficient and you are correctly using 'Back' every time your dog steps out of position, you will find that the dog starts anticipating your use of the command and steps back into position itself. This is suttle. Expect this and reward it with a jackpot the first time your dog does this.

When you use verbal cues to micro manage your dogs behaviour in this way, it creates for a very powerful tool that you can use while heeling without breaking a stride.

There is an additional physical cue that is worthwhile using with 'Back' which I have not mentioned so far because this article is primarily about using verbal cues. If you have taught your dog to move with light leash pressure, then your dog can respond quite well to a couple of taps on the prong in the backward direction, after you say 'Back'. I'm not talking about a correction here. I am taking about light taps on the prong which are intended to communicate direction to your dog. Puppies are best taught to move with leash pressure in this way (and yes I mean with a prong). You are not cranking on your prong when you are doing this. What you are doing is simply communicating to your dog which direction you wish it to move. You have to teach your dog to do this by deliberately rewarding for movement with leash pressure. You can insert a couple of light backward taps on the leash / prong in this way, right after the 'Back' command in phase one and two but before the strong physical cue of you taking the step back. This way you have two tools at your disposal to manipulate your dog during heeling to fix its position - the verbal cue and a light physical cue.

In the spirit of full disclosure, I must point out that with Farrah, I have, during teaching of the 'Back', used it somewhat incorrectly and made her more dependent on a physical cue than she should be.

Teaching a Dog to Center on the Man in the Blind

I must start by pointing out that I have not yet applied what I discuss in this section. I hope to do this in the coming weeks with a couple of dogs in the club if their handlers want to work on it together with me. I will report back in a future post on how well it worked.

After a lot of repetition of receiving bites from one hand, many many dogs tend to move to the side of that sleeve in the hold and bark. The hold and bark can start to look a bit weak in some cases and in others you might loose a few points for the dog not centering on the man - even if the hold and bark is quite strong otherwise.

The totality of reasons why dogs start to hold and bark sleeve-side are probably beyond the scope of this current post. One obvious reason is the sign tracking behaviour that I described in the previous paragraph. It is worth noting however, that it is a certain type of protection work that is probably more prone to a dog occupying the sleeve-side position. Training a dog out of a more predatory type of aggression than defensive aggression will result in more of this behaviour. While I like a dog to be active in its aggression in the blind, I believe that the proper picture is possible to achieve without the more traditional techniques of focusing the dog on the man by eliciting defensive aggression (whipping the dog in the blind and so on).

I make no excuse out of the fact that I dislike eliciting a purely defensive response out of the dog as I believe that the proper picture can be achieved with a dog being rewarded for focusing on the man for his reward - the bite.

I don't mean to suggest that I don't like to see a dog being a bit defensive in the blind. What I don't like is to force that response in the ways it is traditionally done. My reasons are that I believe that a lot of dogs that are simply not built for this tend to needlessly look worse in the blind than they otherwise would. Additionally, I believe that even the dogs that are built for this tend to desensitize very quickly to it. Then the helper finds himself having to escalate to achieve the same response from the dog.

Back to the point at hand of the verbal cue. There are different ways to elicit the dog to fix its position in the blind. Using a barrier is one but it is a bit of a crutch and I don't believe that it creates a lasting response.

Others include having the helper move his body to get the dog to move with him into the proper position. Many good helpers are in-tune with the dog and can do this well. I am beginning to experiment with this with varying degrees of success. I find that I can only do this about 50% of the time. Another good way is to use some other physical cue to get the dog to fix its position. In the case of one dog at our club, Frankie, our club helper demonstrated to me how he was doing this with the stick held in his right hand but tapping the dog under the sleeve, reaching across the dog's body, nn the right side of the dogs body. The handler assisted by helping move the dog with a bit of leash pressure. Of course when you are working on fixing position like this, the dog only gets the bite when he is in the right position.

I believe that it is very worthwhile to put the act of the dog fixing his position under a verbal cue. Of course you can only do this once you have found a physical cue that works well for that particular dog, to fix its position.

I believe that once the dog learns to fix his position on verbal cue alone, it becomes much easier for the dog to fix his position in the absence of the cue as he tends to anticipate it. In addition, you can then use it in situations where you ensure that the dog will be incorrect in its position and you make him correct by reminding him with the verbal cue. You should then be able to move side to side with the dog being able to fix his position and do a centered hold and bark on the man.

You can do this with a physical cue too except I think that that is too easy for the dog and a verbal one makes the dog think on his own quite a bit more. I believe he is more prone to anticipate and self-correct his behaviour when you put these fixes under a verbal cue and use them that way.

To turbocharge this kind of problem solving, I also believe you need to move to two sleeves so the dog stops predicting where the sleeve is coming from. If the dog is particularly sleeve focused and actually looking ta the sleeve alone or back and forth between sleeve and man then simply fixing his position is not adequate, I think you need to move the sleeves behind your body (provided that the dog is safe as a heavily sleeve focused dog will generally be), and produce a bite from either side so that the dog cannot predict. Such a dog also benefits from the helper actually dropping the left arm sleeve in full sight of the dog while hiding the right arm sleeve behind the helper and presenting the bite with the right arm sleeve, or a hidden sleeve. This convinces the dog that the visual presence of the left arm sleeve is immaterial with respect to where the bite is going to come from.

While this post has now gone well beyond the verbal cue, I thought these points are worth making in the context of the problem being discussed. The verbal cue is one tool in helping with this overall problem.

In my own opinion, I prefer any and all of these techniques than simply the old fashioned response of making the dog artificially more defensive in the blind. I prefer that response to come from psychological pressure applied to the right dog that can handle it appropriately by a good helper in the blind. I find this to be more appropriate because in trial the dog comes upon a static helper and must bring his own aggression to the blind for the picture to look good. A dog that comes upon an imposing self confident helper on a strange field at a high level of competition faces a degree of psychological stress and must bring some active aggression into the blind in the face of it.

Full disclosure again. I am not a vastly experienced helper with wide experience in fixing these types of issues. I am quite new to helper work myself. These are simply my observations based on limited experience and as I get the opportunity to apply my thoughts, I will report back on what works and what doesn't for me.

I would love to hear your thoughts and experiences on what techniques you apply to address the training issues that I have discussed here.

Aamer Sachedina






6/8/10

Group shot

We tried to get a group shot this past weekend but it didn't go so smoothly. They are all so funny I have to post them all – takes 1-8. Enjoy! Click for big.















6/7/10

Valerie & Fresca, HIT



May 15 /16 Valerie and Fresca competed in SchH3 at Scarborough Select Schutzhund Club under judge W. Szentmiklosi. He was a judge with a very sharp pencil, but even with scores of 87/84/76 Fresca still managed to be High SchH3 - although the protection score smarted a bit and caused some surprise, since her performance was generally considered to be pretty good. But the judge felt her bites could have been harder and fuller and so she was heavily penalized for having an off day. She still ended with High Obedience and High Tracking and overall High in Trial - but not one of her best performances.

Anticipation - A powerful training tool

Dogs anticipate. Motiviated, driven dogs anticipate more then their less driven counterparts. It is a natural part of the learning process for the dog and most competitive trainers should not only expect it but make it part of their training repertoire to sharpen up their dogs performance.

Almost all of us use anticipation when we use classical conditioning to teach our dogs verbal commands. It goes something like this:
- Lure the behaviour you want to teach (e.g. move hand with treat from dogs nose, down to the ground between its paws to teach it a platz)
- Fade the lure away so that a hand signal is firmly established for the behaviour.
- Now you are ready to teach a verbal command. Say the command "platz" first, THEN, do the hand signal to get the dog into the right position.

Some repetitions of this and your dog will platz on command before you do the hand signal, because it will anticipate the hand signal that it has learned for he behavior.

This is simple classical conditioning as we have all learned from Pavlov. When Pavlov rang the bell after the food was served to his dog, or while the food was served to the dog, the bell had no significance. It is only when the bell rang first and THEN the food was served that the dog associated the bell with food.

The odd thing is that while we all tend to know how to apply anticipation in this situation - to teach our dogs verbal commands - soon after, we forget that this is a powerful tool that can and should be used in training. Instead it becomes the thing we try to teach our dogs not to do by correcting them for it:
- Dog anticipates a "HIER" from a platz position, we start correcting it while putting it back into position.
- Dog forges ahead to walk into escape position after the helper has stepped out of the blind, bang, bang bang. It is incredible the number of dogs that forge to the point of crowding the handler walking from the call out position to the escape position. The only thing that seems to go through the handlers head is "I said foos.... the dog is forging.... correct, correct correct". It never works but the dog gets corrected session after session after session and looks the same at trial time.
- Dog automatically platzes when we have stopped at the escape position instead of sitting and waiting for the helper's command to platz, BAM. Dog gets yanked off the sit with a pinch.

Don't get me wrong here. I am not against correcting dogs. In our sport, with high drive dogs, positive punishment has its place. However when you do the same thing ten times and the dogs behaviour does not change, it is counter productive to keep doing it over and over. Ultimately the dog desensitizes to positive punishment and then you start looking for ways to up the ante with the punishment. This is a never ending cycle and nearly always causes conflict in the dogs mind. Conflict is not helpful as part of the training process. When corrections are used, we want them to be fair, crisp, precise and most importantly we want them to modify the dogs behaviour in the way we wish.

So what does blurb on positive punishment have to do with anticipation? A lot. For starters, we tend to correct quite a bit for problems that are simply caused by the dog anticipating the next step of the exercise because we have done it again and again and ... again. Like I said, dogs anticipate.

A far more effective method is to:
1) Anticipate that your dog will anticipate the next phase of each exercise if you put it together.
2) Modify your training to either prevent your dog from anticipating, or better yet, use the fact that it will anticipate during your training.

I will walk through how I do this to produce a correct foos from call out position to escape position.

To start, I nearly never actually practise escapes asking the helper to step out of the blind, foosing to the escape position and platzing the dog. Its counter productive because I KNOW that if I do this a few times in a row, my dog will start anticipating each piece and then I will be fighting with my dog to get it to do what I want it to do. These are all separate exercise that I train separately and practice separately the vast vast majority of the time. One out of ten times I will put two or more parts of the exercise together.

Asking the helper to step out of the blind, foosing to the escape position, platzing my dog there, are three different exercises for my dog. When I ask the helper to step out of the blind, the behaviour I want from my dog is for her to stay calmly in control in the basic position while the helper gets ready for the escape. To help my dog look good, I will frequently start the exercise with my helper in the blind ( no revier). My dog in basic position beside me. I ask the helper "Step out of the blind". He walks and gets ready for the escape. My dog is still in basic position. Now after the helper has set himself up for the escape, he comes back a couple seconds later and gives my dog a bit on my authorization (I use "OK as a release world). My dog is thus rewarded for staying calmly in basic position. I can do this 50% of the time when I ask the helper to step out. My dog stops guessing what is going to happen and calmly stays where she is supposed to be ... in control... because occasionally, she gets rewarded there.

Similarly, with my helper ready for the escape, I will foos my dog over and the vast vast majority of the time, I will foos in a direction AWAY from the helper before I turn around with my dog and take her to the escape position. In fact the vast majority of the time, when I say foos, I make a left about turn or a hard left turn (If my helper is to the right). I want to err on the side of my dog anticipating a turn away from the helper because in trial this will help my dog to not forge when I start walking towards the helper. Sometimes I will ask the helper to come back while we are facing away and giver her a bite in basic position. Sometimes I heel to the escape spot and with my dog still in basic position, I ask the helper to come and give her a bite there. This teaches my dog not to anticipate the platz because she gets rewarded in the basic position for performing the behaviour she is supposed to, rather than the behaviour which she things she needs to perform next.
I like to do these bites on my authorization so that the dog understands that me the handler has the ability to give the dog what she desires - the sleeve is the reward. I am not simply an entity that is in the way of the dog getting the reward.

By now you are probably wondering "does this guy ever practise an escape?" Sure I do. However, I rarely do it after practising the setup that I am referring to above. When I want to practise an escape, I go a spot on the field and platz my dog, then I ask the helper to get into position. Now I walk away and the helper takes off for the escape. The escape itself is a different exercise to the dog from the three steps in the setup.

The key to making the performance look good is to break exercises into tiny little pieces and practicing them separately during training and occasionally putting different pieces together. It takes a certain amount of patience to reward all of these little things but if you are after the minutiae as I am, to get a picture that looks correct, then you must train and reward the little things and put them together from time to time and then all together only once your dog is performing each piece perfectly. Even after your dog is a SCH3, you need to keep practising and rewarding the little pieces if you want to keep your dog from looking poor because of anticipation which you did not anticipate.

I also use anticipation extensively during obedience. A simple example is always doing a group before a sit in motion. I do a group around objects in my yard before a sit in motion. I never do a sit in motion without it. This allows my dog to anticipate the exercise that is going to follow and makes it more likely that her sit will be fast and correct if she knows it is coming up. If you use anticipation in this way, then one day your dog will sit without you asking for it during the build up for the sit in motion. ANTICIPATE THIS! Your dog is simply showing you that it is pretty darn smart and responds to classical conditioning. You knew this right? After all classical conditioning is what you used to teach verbal commands. Too many handlers fall apart when something like this happens. The appropriate response when your dog anticipates and does something like this is to simply mark it with a no reward marker (I am assuming you are using operant conditioning) - such as "WRONG", go back and do the exercise over. To prevent this type of anticipation, vary the number of steps you take in training during the build up of the out of motion exercises. Sometimes do 8, sometimes 6, sometimes 20. Another example is that I never do a stand out of motion without having my dog come into foos postion from a front. Since I reward my dog very frequently in the platz position in the out of motion exercise and train the recall separately to prevent anticipation, my dog is frequently not in a platz away from me when I am ready to do a stand in motion. So I simply get my dog into a front. I have taught my dog a front command. I always start my stand out of motion from at least this position. I say "foos", my dog gets into position and we do a stand in motion.

A very powerful use of anticipation in obedience is to get crisp out of motion exercises without the forward creeping that sometimes occurs after the command. You use, after doing out of motion exercises over and over and over ..... and over, your dog realizes that after you give the command, you keep moving forward, and forward and forward. Much of the time you have done this in the past, you have not had eyes behind your head and no you have not had a mirror around or a spotter because you are doing this on your own on a weekday morning. It is impossible to correct your dog once your dog is already in the down position after having crept into the down, while you have already walked ten steps ahead. Well, you can correct him all you want, however, it is not bound to be productive. Corrections that are not productive simply cause conflict. The method that I use for this is simple, it has two parts:

1) For starters I teach my dog that when when I give it a command out of motion, it should anticipate backward, not forward momentum on my part. This means, I say "PLATZ", then one second later, I stop walking forward and I walk backward in the direction of the dog and pass the dog walking back ward. Sometimes I reward the dog when I get to it. Other times, I walk past it and come back and reward while it is still in PLATZ position. I prefer to walk right up to the dog and deliver the reward while it is still in position. I do this 7-8 out of 10 times when I do an out of motion exercise. If I teach my dog to anticipate backward motion on my part right after the command, rather than forward motion, the command actually helps the dog stop dead and go into the appropriate position. I still have the opportunity to work on things like my dog creeping after being in position (that is a different problem from the one I have just described). I can do that separately by simply placing my dog in the appropriate position (no out of motion) and then walk away from my dog as I would if I was doing an out of motion exercise. If I do this, then I do this with a spotter or a mirror in front of me. That way the microsecond the dog creeps, I can mark it with my no reward marker, go back to my dog and redo the exercise. I don't get mad, I just pick up the dog and set it up again.

2) Secondly, most of the time I want to practise an out of motion, with me continuing to move, without a spotter or a mirror, I do it with my dog walking with me while I walk backward. This way I can see exactly what my dog does and if it creeps before going into position then I mark it and restart the exercise. Rewarding the precise moment your dog stops dead and does the exercise well also helps and for this you need to be looking at it. I have found that walking backward or looking into a mirror ahead of you is the only way.

Some trainers use a leash around the dogs belly to pull up on the dog's belly to teach the dog a fast stand on the spot. This also uses the principle of anticipation. You say the command before you pull up on the lead attached to the harness. The dog learns to anticipate the jolt up of the harness and stops on the spot. This exercise too is useless unless you say the command BEFORE you yank on the belly strap. I am not adverse to this method but I don't like messing around with additional equipment. However, I have to point out that 9 out of 10 people that I see using this say the command at the same time the yank the belly strap and Pavlov taught us a long time ago that this is entirely useless. You need to create a classically conditioned response to the command if you are going to use an aid to help your dog stop on the spot - regardless whether that aid is a belly strap or you walking backwards after you say the command. If you use the aid at the same time as saying the command then the aid is useless and you might as well not have it.

There are a vast number of places that you can use the fact that your dog will learn to anticipate exercises that are put together in Schutzhund. Each part of the exercise can be used as a secondary reinforcer by simply rewarding the dog with the primary reinforcer immediately after the secondary reinforcer you wish to establish.

For example, my GSD Meika, is not a particularly driven dog and prone to distractions especially as I approached and went around the group. To counter this tendency, I established the group, or approaching the group, as a secondary reinforcer. I simply rewarded a few feet a way from the group, as I approached the group. After doing this 10 times, she was convinced that once I got within a few feet of the group a reward was imminent and thus the group served as a secondary reinforcer. Then I switched to a variable reinforcement regimen so that at least 50% of the time, she continued getting rewarded as we approached the group. Other times she was rewarded in the group during the figure 8 and so on. The result was a fairly low drive distractable dog having fantastic focus in the group. As I approached the group in trial, her intensity went up not down. Her focus on me was superb - particularly in the group.

Similarly, to prevent a dog looking around while its handler walks up during the hold and bark in the blind or guarding phase after an out, I like to make the handler walking up a secondary reinforcer that predicts the reward (bite). I used this extensively with my dog Farrah who has about as intense a silent guard as you can expect any dog to have. To get this, I simply have the helper reward the dog with a bite as I a approach the dog before I get to the dog. Once this is established, I have the helper give the dog a bit after I get into basic position. My dog learns to anticipate that me walking up to her is a reliable predictor of a bite, rather than a predictor that I will try to pick her up and foos her away which is what 9 out of 10 handlers do over and over and over during training.

To a dog doing a guard after the out, and then heeling away with the handler on foos once the handler arrives, are two separate exercises. You can and should teach them separately and put them together sparingly. More with some dogs and less with others.

Using these techniques, a dog that would otherwise look week in the guard by looking around for his helper, looks strong and intense in the guard. Of course this dosen't mean you only give the dog a bite when the handler is beside it. Do that to often and the dog will learn to predict that he only gets a bite when the handler is there and its guarding will be lackluster otherwise. The thing is, that during training, dogs naturally do get to rebite after an out and so this enforces good guarding behaviour when the handler is not there. On the other hand, when the handler approaches, most handlers simply want to put all the steps together and the dog learns that the handler approaching is a pretty reliable indicator that it will be picked up and heeled away from what it desires (the sleeve). 9 out of 10 times this is why dogs start looking around for the handler during the guarding phase. Nervier, less independent dogs do so more than others.

You should anticipate that when you use secondary reinforcers this way, a dog will occasionally take a dirty bite out of frustration. This is simply a apart of the learning process. The helper should be ready for this and mark the behaviour. This is one example of a case where I *may* use positive punishment in the form of a stern "NO". Most dogs will figure out that this behaviour is incorrect. An alternative of course is for the helper to disengage in addition to a no reward marker (drop the sleeve and look away) and have the handler pick up the dog and repeat the exercise (a.la. Ivan Balabanov's the "Ultimate Punishment").

I prefer not to correct for anticipation. Positive punishment extinguishes behaviours. I like a dog that offers a lot of behaviours and feels comfortable doing it. I find that correcting anticipation usually causes conflict and stress. I'm not saying that I would never correct for it, just that I prefer not to. I find that something like a no reward marker that clarifies that the behaviour was incorrect, works much better. This method of course works for motivated and driven dogs that have a strong desire for whatever reward we possess. In the protection phase when the dogs drive and desire for the sleeve are high, I like the helper to use a firm NO.

In conclusion, whether you like it or not, your dog will anticipate. It is a natural part of learning. Anticipate the anticipation and use it to your advantage.

~ Aamer Sachedina