Why I Taught My Foster Dog Targets & Spins
Canelo is a board & train foster pup who had been living with us at PAW for six weeks. He was rescued with a severe case of Demodex mange, dehydrated, starving, and very fearful of people.
We began his training by teaching him that he has choices. Choices as to whether he wanted to be closer to us, choices as to whether he wanted to “play” with us, and choices about moving away to a more “safe” feeling spot when and if he wanted to.
One of the first behaviors that we taught Canelo was that choosing to touch a target (both a hand target and a target stick were practiced) voluntarily resulted in good things-namely spray cheese at the start. Canelo slowly determined that it actually wasn’t so scary to decide to touch the target and we communicated that he’d earned access to something he found reinforcing by conditioning a marker (both a clicker and a verbal “yes”).
Target training is a great building block behavior. It is collaborative and voluntary and works on building confidence. Too, we can teach many other behaviors once this first step has been learned.
Soon, he was targeting and improving with his fluency and latency. We worked in lots of short sessions in order to begin to build a strong reinforcement history. Next, we taught Canelo that he could also choose to touch the target in a variety of positions and eventually from distances as well. Finally, Canelo learned to follow and touch a target that moved around.
Once Canelo began to follow a moving target we taught him to “spin.” Spin isn’t a behavior that I like to teach first as the first behaviors learned have the longest reinforcement history (more practice) and as such, are often default behaviors. Thus, I’d prefer a target or a sit to be one of the “go to” behaviors. With a “spin” we also don’t want to create a stereotypic behavior ( “repetitive, invariant behaviour pattern with no obvious goal or function”, http://www.awionline.org/lab_
However, Canelo didn’t offer many sits and so we decided to teach another behavior which accomplished the same goals. The goals being that the behavior was able to be performed in a small space, performed on cue, and which would be an alternative or incompatible behavior to some less desirable ones (such as barking or jumping, for example).
So, to conclude, a couple of nice behaviors that Canelo now knows which he has in his “basket of behaviors” and can be cued and utilized for fun and training are targeting and spinning!