Clicker Training Library — Latest Items

Every month, we bring you the best in positive animal training information. Check back here to discover the latest in research, ideas, tips and stories from Karen Pryor Clickertraining.

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Karen Pryor's picture

Clicker vs. Traditional Training: What's the Real Difference?

I was talking on the phone recently to a magazine writer—a nice guy who used to be a working cowboy. He spends a lot of time thinking about kind vs. cruel animal training.  "So, is that the real difference between clicker training and traditional training?" he asked. "Is it that one is more positive than the other?

KPCT's picture

Excerpts from Reaching the Animal Mind

One of the pleasures of Karen’s new book, Reaching the Animal Mind: What Clicker Training Teaches Us About Animals, is the way science is made accessible through compelling stories of real training events.

Casey Lomonaco's picture

How to Create a Reactive Human in 10 Minutes or Less

Recently, I was chatting in the classroom with a few of our more experienced students. They mentioned encountering the following scenario quite often while exercising their dogs at a local park:

Individual is walking dog on leash. Dog sees other dog, barks, leash goes tight. Owner pulls dog back on leash, saying, "Be nice! Be nice!" and fumbling with a tight leash until the distraction has passed. 

Sounds like a recipe for reactivity, right?

Casey Lomonaco's picture

How to Create a Reactive Human in 10 Minutes or Less

Recently, I was chatting in the classroom with a few of our more experienced students. They mentioned encountering the following scenario quite often while exercising their dogs at a local park:

Individual is walking dog on leash. Dog sees other dog, barks, leash goes tight. Owner pulls dog back on leash, saying, "Be nice! Be nice!" and fumbling with a tight leash until the distraction has passed. 

Sounds like a recipe for reactivity, right?

Karen Pryor's picture

Got Puppy Nipping? Take the Clicker Approach

All puppies like to play and wrestle and nip each other. When they come to live with people, they want to play in the same way. They don't know that our skin is far more tender than their littermate's fur—so sometimes those nips can hurt!