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Published on Karen Pryor Clickertraining (http://www.clickertraining.com)

Reliability or Relationship?

By Melissa Alexander
Created 2006-10-06 01:00

Why do you train? Is it because you need your animal to do certain behaviors, and you want to be able to elicit those behaviors reliably? Or is it because you've found that training helps you build a bond with your pet and is a rewarding journey for both of you? Reliabilty or relationship?

This question was debated this week on the ClickerSolutions [1] mailing list. A list member, fairly new to clicker training [1], expressed concern when traditional training [1] and clicker [1] training were contrasted as being result-oriented versus relationship-oriented. She wanted a training method that could deliver precise, reliable results. If clicker training wasn't results-oriented, then she wasn't going to waste anymore time with it.

Different trainers have different goals, different needs, different interests. A service dog trainer needs reliable results. Someone working with an abused rescue may need the relationship-building aspect of the clicker even more than specific, reliable behaviors. Someone training a pet who shares his house and life needs BOTH relationship and reliability. Fortunately, clicker training is a complete package.

Just because one trainer emphasizes one aspect doesn't mean the other is absent or impossible. Different people are attracted to different aspects of clicker training. This is especially important to keep in mind when explaining the virtues of clicker training to a non-user. You may have been sold by the improved relationship you felt, but someone else may have more practical needs.

About the author Melissa Alexander is a writer and clicker trainer in Seattle, WA. She owns the highly popular ClickerSolutions [2] mailing list and is the author of Click for Joy [2], the award-winning, essential guide to clicker training.

Source URL:
http://www.clickertraining.com/node/715