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Chapter 15: Adding Verbal Cues

Verbal cues should be paired to a behavior only after two conditions are met. In this chapter, we’re going to discuss these two conditions and go over why you should never say a verbal cue over and over when first training new behaviors to a puppy.

Early in a puppy’s training, the puppy learns which behavior we want from him based on the context of the situation. For example, every time we go to our designated training place, we start our session by rewarding the puppy for simply sitting and giving eye contact. We don’t tell him to sit. We just wait for him to offer the behavior. The puppy will quickly learn that every time we go to a certain place and just stand there and look at him, he can offer a sit and be rewarded for it.

Soon after training the puppy to sit, we begin luring the puppy into a down. The puppy learns that if he follows food held close to his face, he will earn his reward.  We don’t have to tell him to follow it. Following food comes naturally. 

Then we fade the lure and the puppy learns that when we look at and point towards the ground, he can earn reward by going into a down every time we point to the ground. There are no verbal cues.  The puppy just knows what we want based on the context of the situation.

Dogs are extremely contextual. They also are instinctively good at following body language. They understand tone of voice easily. However, differentiating between different words does not come easy. Dogs have to learn to understand verbal cues.

When to Add a Verbal Cue to a Behavior

Because understanding words is difficult for dogs and because we speak hundreds of words in just a few minutes, dogs learn early to tune out what to them sounds like babble from us. When we repeat a word over and over again before or even while we are training a behavior, the word has no meaning and the dog will practice the habit of tuning out his trainer.  Therefore, pair a word with a behavior after the the following milestones have been met. 

  1. The dog knows how to perform a complete and correct version of the behavior in response to a physical cue or based on context.  
  2. The trainer can predict when the dog will offer the behavior.

Dogs learn best when behaviors are broken down into the smallest parts that can be trained separately.  Every aspect of a behavior needs to be taught until the full behavior is trained.  If a trainer teaches a verbal cue to a puppy before the behavior is completely learned, the puppy could pair an incomplete version of the behavior to the cue. Therefore, wait until all aspects of the behavior are completely learned.

Should You Wait for Perfection Before Naming a Behavior?

There is a common saying amongst dog trainers that says, “Don’t name it until you love it.” While this is true in a since, I would like to caution those who might be perfectionists that this statement could be taken to the extreme.  A behavior does not have to be perfect to be sufficiently trained to be named. It needs to completely trained.

For example, when pairing the “right here” verbal to getting in heel position, the dog needs to understand that he needs to loop behind us or back up to get in heel position whenever we point behind us while we twist our bodies to our left. However, the dog does not need to know how to get into a perfectly straight heel position before we give the behavior a verbal cue.

Good understanding is the goal before adding the verbal cue. Perfection is not. If I were waiting for perfection on certain behaviors like heeling or coming to front, even an OTCH dog might still not have a name for those behaviors! Perfection is not needed before you name a behavior.  

Steps for Adding Verbal Cues to Behaviors

If your puppy has a good understanding of the behavior you’re wanting and you can anticipate before your puppy performs it, it’s time to name it. Simply say the name of the behavior just before the puppy does it! 

If the puppy has been performing the behavior in response to physical cues, simply say the verbal cue just before you give the physical cue. For example, our puppies are trained to go into the down position when we point to the ground with our hand. Therefore, to introduce the “down” verbal cue, I’d say “down” and then immediately after would point to the ground. 

At first, the point would come less than a second after the verbal “down,” but then I would very gradually increase the time between the point and the down. Eventually the puppy will begin anticipating that the physical cue will follow the verbal and will offer the down before you point. At this point, you can fade the physical cue.

If the puppy doesn’t go into the down after the verbal alone, try waiting a second. Then, give the physical cue if he still doesn’t go down. Do not repeat the verbal over and over. This will encourage tune outs.

Some behaviors are not initially trained with a physical cue and instead the puppy performs the behavior in response to contextual cues such as is the case when we train the “sit”. Our puppies learn pretty quickly that sitting with eye contact is the first behavior we reinforce in those initial training sessions. They tend to sit almost immediately when we take them to their designated training place. Therefore, we’re able to introduce the verbal cue simply by saying it as soon as the puppy turns to face us at the start of a session.  We say “sit” as soon as the puppy faces us knowing with a good deal of certainty that the puppy is about to sit. If the puppy doesn’t sit, we simply wait for it.

Once your puppy has practiced hearing the verbal paired with the behavior dozens of times, try saying the cue when the context is still similar to how you’ve been practicing the behavior, but when the puppy is not about to do the behavior anyway. 

Practice having your puppy respond to the verbal cue dozens (if not hundreds) of times. Then it’s time to take the training of the behavior to the next level: generalization.

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