Clicker Training Makes It Easy to Train the Little Details
This is one of the things I really like about clicker training. A good clicker student is always listening to you and trying to figure out how to get the click. I like to use clicker training to improve the quality of Cole's movements.
If I am working on a behavior that Cole is really good at, I ask him to get better. Let's say he is parked out, but he isn't parked out perfectly. I want all of his feet square. In the early days, sometimes he would have one foot further in front of the other. He would look at me; waiting for his click. Instead of a click, I tapped my foot on the ground. He didn't know what it meant, but he tried a few things and finally he evened out his feet--and got the click.
With a little practice, he now knows that if he isn't square and I tap my foot, that squaring up will get me to click him.
The details can even get smaller than that. I won't click him when he is parked out unless his ears are pointing forward, and I will wait until they are. These days, they are nearly always forward. Of course, he can't turn his head to the side if he wants a click, either.
There are more practical things you can train the details on. Sometimes we will be practicing our walk/trot transitions by doing a series of them with clicks. If he swishes his tail on the transition, he doesn't get a click. He doesn't get reprimanded for it, either. He just doesn't get a click. The swishing just fades away...
When we aren't practicing transitions but just riding around, I certainly don't click him for every single one--but if he does a perfect one, he will often get a click. I like perfect, and I want it to happen, again. The most likely way to get a repeat is the click it.
Clicker trainers just have to decide what is perfect and keep working to get it.
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