Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Punishment

Dogs and cats can be reprimanded effectively with a sharp verbal “No.” Water sprayers, air horns, a can full of coins, handheld vacuums, and so on can all be used to gain your pet’s attention quickly without inflicting any pain.

If you decide to use punishment, be sure to institute it quickly, preferably within 5 seconds of the act. If you don’t apply it before this time expires, any punishment thereafter might satisfy your anger, but it will serve no useful training purpose. Don’t extend your punishment past a few seconds. Prolonged exhortations will only confuse your pet (and might cause you to lose your voice).

Never use your pet’s name during the negative reinforcement. If you do, your pet might start to associate its name with the bad act and eventually become a basket case whenever the name is called. Reserve this name calling for positive, happy experiences only.

If you do punish, always follow it up shortly thereafter with a command or drill that will lead to a praise situation. Remember that the most effective training programs rely on praise more than on punishment. For some dogs, simply withholding praise from them is punishment enough to modify their behavior! By rewarding your pet for doing good rather than punishing it for doing bad, you’ll get the positive results you are looking for much faster.

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