*If you are looking for a lost pet or a Return to Owner via Animal Control (ACO), please ring the doorbell and someone will assist you during our regularly scheduled hours. We provide return to owners everyday of the week*

Adopt a friend. Save a life. Almost Home Humane Society

Clicker Training

What is Clicker Training?

Clicker training is a method of animal training that uses a sound (a click) to tell an animal when he does something right. The clicker is a tiny plastic box with a metal tongue that you push quickly to make a clicking sound. Most people who’ve heard of the clicker know that it’s a popular tool for dog trainers, but clickers can be used to train all kinds of animals, both wild and domestic - from lions to elephants to household rats, cats and birds!

How Does the Clicker Work?

The clicker creates an efficient language between a human trainer and an animal trainee. First, a trainer teaches an animal that every time she hears the clicking sound, she gets a treat. Once the animal understands that clicks are always followed by treats, the click becomes as powerful a reward as money is to people. When this happens, the trianer can use the click to mark (identify for the animal) the instant the animal performs the right behavior. For example, if a trainer wants to teach a dog to sit, she’ll click the instant her rump hits the floors and then deliver a tasty treat. With repetition, the dog learns that sitting earns rewards.

So the click takes on a huge meaning. To the animal, it means: “what was I doing the moment my trainer clicked, that’s what she wants me to do!” The clicker in animal training is like the winning buzzer on a game show that tells a contestant she just won money! Through the clicker, the trianer communicates precisely with the dog, and that speeds up the training.

Giving the Clicker Meaning

It’s easy to introduce the clicker to your pet. Spend thirty minutes or so teaching her that the sound of the click means “treat!” For the sake of simplicity, let’s assume you are going to clicker train a dog.

  1. Sit and watch TV or read a book with your dog in the room. Have a container within reach.
  2. Place one treat in your hand and the clicker int he other. If your dog smells the treat and tries to get is by pawing, sniffing, mouthing, or barking at your, just close your hand around the treat and wait until he gives up and leaves you alone.
  3. Click once and immediately open your hand to give your dog the treat. Put another treat in your closed hand and resume watching TV or reading. Ignore your dog.
  4. Several minutes later, click and offer another treat.
  5. Continue to repeat the click-and-treat combination at varying intervals, sometimes after one minutes, sometimes after five minutes. Make sure you vary the time so that your dog doesn’t know exactly when he neck click is coming. Eventually, she’ll start to turn towards you and look expectant when she hears the click - which means she understands that the sound of the clicker means at treat is coming her way. 

Troubleshooting

If your pet runs away when he hears the click, you can make the sound softer by putting it in your pocket or wrapping a towel around your hand that’s holding the clicker. You can also try using a different sound, like the click of a retractable pen or the words “yes” or “bingo.”

Clicker Training Basics

Once your dog seems to understand the connection between the click and the treat, you’re ready to get started. Keep these guidelines in mind to ensure your clicker training success:

  • Click just once, right when your pet does what you want him to do. Think of it like pressing the shutter of a camera to take a picture of a behavior.
  • Remember to follow every click with a treat. After you click, deliver the treat to your pet’s mouth as quickly as possible.
  • It’s fine to switch between practicing two or three behaviors within a session, but work on one behavior at a time. For example, say you’re teaching a dog to sit, lie down, and raise paw. You can do ten repetitions of sit and take a quick play break. Then do ten repetitions of down, and take another quick break. Then do ten repetitions of down, and so on. 
  • Animals, like children, have short attention spans. Keep training sessions short (15 minutes or less), and stop before you or your pet gets tired of the game.
  • End training sessions on a good note, when your pet has succeeded with what you’re working on. If necessary, ask him to do something you know he can do well at the end of a session.
  • Some trainers like a click and then deliver a “jackpot” (a bunch of treats) when their pet has accomplished a particularly challenging task. Big efforts deserve big rewards!

Three Ways to Get Behavior

To click and reward a behavior you like, you first need to find a way to get your animal to do that behavior. Clicker trainers use three ways to accomplish this: catching, shaping and luring. Before starting a training session, decide which method will work best for the behavior you want, and then take a few moments to think through the steps you’ll take to accomplish your goal.

Catching

Catching means that you catch your pet in the act of doing the behavior you want. It’s the perfect method for training behaviors that your pet already does on her own, like sitting, lying down, and maybe rolling over in the grass. For example, if you want to train your dog to lie down, you can stand in your living room with your dog and just wait. After a little while, your dog will probably decide to lie down and get comfortable. The instant his body hits the floor, click and toss a treat on the ground a few feet in front of him. He’ll have to stand up to take the treat, so after he eats it, you’ll be ready to start over again. Continue the sequence of waiting for your dog to lie down on his own, and then clicking and tossing a treat the moment he does. With repetition, your dog will eventually look at your and throw herself not he ground to earn her treat.

Shaping

With shaping, you gradually build a new behavior by clicking and rewarding a series of small steps towards it. Shaping is a good method for training new behaviors (or a series of behaviors called a “chain”) that your pet doesn’t already do on her own - like raising a paw in the air, retrieving a ball, or going to a specific lie down. You start by rewarding the first small behavior that begins you pet on his journey towards the complete behavior. When he’s mastered the first step, you ask a little more from him - require him to do the next small step to earn his click and treat. For example, to get a dog to raise her paw, you might start by clicking and treating several repetitions, you delay clicking until you see her lift her front paw off the floor just one inch. When she’s good at tiny paw raises, delay your click again require her to raise her paw another inch or two higher to earn her click and treat. By reinforcing each tiny step as if it were the ultimate goal, your dog will think that learning is fun and will soon be performing the goal behavior with enthusiasm. 

Luring

Luring involves using a treat like a magnet or guide to get your pet into a desired position. The food lure (a small piece of tasty food) is held right infant of your pet’s nose and then moved while he follows it. For example, to lure a dog into a down position, hold a piece of food in front of her nose and then slowly draw it straight down in front of her chest to the floor. The food will work like a magnet, drawing your dog’s nose and then her body downward. As her elbows touch the floor, click and treat for the down. After some practice, you can just use the hand motion to prompt your dog to lie down. Make the same movement as before, but with no treat in your hand. Over many repetitions, you can gradually make this hand signal smaller and shorter. Eventually, your dog will lie down when you point to the ground. Lure and reward training is often quicker and more efficient than catching or shaping to get and reward certain behaviors.

Adding the Cue

Whether you’ve used catching, shaping or luring to get a behavior you want, your next step is to add a cue or command. If you’ve used luring, you’ll know when you’re ready when your pet consistently does the behavior you want as soon as you give your hand signal. If you’ve used catching or shaping, you can add the cue when your pet is confidently offering the behavior over and over without any other behaviors in between.

  • First say the cue word you’d like to use. Say it only once - don’t nag!
  • Then ask or wait for the behavior. Use your hand signal to prompt your pet if you were luring. If you used catching or shaping, you’ll just wait after you give the cue for your pet to offer the behavior.
  • Click and treat the instant your pet performs the behavior.

Good timing is essential. Be sure to say your cue before your pet does the behavior you want, not at the same time. If you practice the steps above in order, your pet will eventually lean what the cue means.


Final Tips

  1. After you add the cue, don’t reward the behavior anymore unless you first give the cue.
  2. Practice a new behavior in many different places so that your pet learns how to do it everywhere. Start in calm, quiet environments and slowly work up to more distracting locations.
  3. After you’ve practiced a new behavior in several different places and your pet reliably responds to your cue, you can begin to cut back on rewards for that behavior. Reward only the best responses (like the highest paw raise), or reward the behavior under the most difficult or distracting conditions. You can also reward just because you haven’t rewarded that behavior in a little while. Start using a variety of rewards, like your pet’s dinner, access to outdoors, games, toys, access to playmates - anything your pet loves can be used as a reward!
  4. Clicker training should be enjoyable for both trainer and trainee. Don’t train if you’re in a bad mood, distracted, or don’t have time to finish a session. Keep sessions short and upbeat. You’ll be amazed what a terrific student your pet is.
  5. Check out clicker training classes! Many certified professional dog trainers offer group and private lessons.