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Locked: You must purchase this stream to view it Basic Dog Obedience Stream
5 stars (21 reviews)
3 hr, 49 min
October 1, 2018
On Sept 18, 2018, Ed Frawley released a new Basic Dog Obedience DVD, Streaming Video On Demand, and Leerburg Online Course. This was not just an updated version of the original video produced back in 1982 or the many updates since. This DVD and course have 100% new content. Over the past 30 years, dog training has gone through a number of new exciting evolutions. Those changes are all covered in our new DVD. You can review a detailed outline of the DVD below. Today, we use reward-based training (marker training) to turn training sessions into games in which our dogs learn new behaviors (I.E. Sit, Down, Come, Walk on a Loose Leash). Our goal is to have a dog that looks forward to the next training session, rather than dread training. We are balanced dog trainers. This means we train new behaviors motivationally with high-value rewards. In Basic Obedience, we use food rewards. In later training, we use food or toy rewards. Our goal is for our dogs to generalizing a behavior. This means they understand the command in different situations and locations. But we also realize that every dog will eventually be placed in an environment where the distractions they face in the new environment are more interesting to the dog than our high value reward. At that point, our dog may need a correction. How much of a correction depends on the age of the dog, the temperament of the dog, the environment we have placed the dog in and what the dog has chosen not to do. There is an entire segment in out course title “The theory of corrections in dog training”. In this segment, you will learn that the purpose of a correction is not to punish a dog for bad behavior, but rather to get a behavior change. We almost always recommend new trainers error on the side of helping their dogs and not correcting their dog. We use high-value food rewards in our system. We will explain how to determine your dogs’ preference for rewards, we will teach you how to deliver a food reward without getting our fingers pinched and we will explain (in detail) how to fade using food rewards during training. We will teach you when and how to start using marker training. We demonstrate with 9 week old puppies and 9 year old rescue dogs. You will learn what engagement is, why it is the key to our training program, and how to put engagement on cue. We want our dogs to become fluent in the basic commands of sit, down, walk on a loose leash and the foundation of the basic recall. We will teach how to add duration to sit and down commands. You will learn what restrained recall games are, along with other games than build your foundation for a recall. We want our dogs to spit out things it picks up on our walks. There is a segment in our video where we show you how to teach the YUCK or LEAVE-IT command. Our Basic Obedience DVD is exactly what the title implies. There is a ton of information that covers the basic foundation of dog training. Our next DVD in the series is titled "Intermediate Dog Training." In the DVD, we take what you have learned in Basic Obedience and expand the training into more complicated behaviors. What will our DVD teach you? How to develop a basis for simple obedience How to gain control of an unexpected situation with your dog When to and not to correct your dog How to effectively organize a training session How to time your praises (rewards) OUTLINE Chapter 1: Your Foundation Ed Frawley's Resume to Teach Understanding Good Management We must become a Balanced Dog Trainer Why we train with Food? How to stop using Food How we split Exercises into Small Parts for Training Theory of Corrections Build Your Dog's Training Plan Chapter 2: Reward-Based Training What is Reward based Training - Marker Training How we Deliver a Food Reward How we Start Training - Charge the Mark Why Engagement is So Important Putting Engagement on Cue Chapter 3: Lures/Gestures & Training the Sit and Down Gestures / Lures / Adding the Command Training the Sit Train the Down Adding Duration to the Sit and Down What a good Training Session Looks Like Why the Stay is also an intermediate Command Chapter 4: Training Loose Leash Walking Walk on a Loose Leash Training the Yuck or Leave-It Chapter 5: The Basic Recall The Recall is your most Important Command Rules of the Recall Restrained Recalls Food Toss Recall Long Line Recalls Chapter 6: Where to go From Here Our Intermediate Online Course - Your Next Step Leerburg's Recommended Advanced DVD's Dog Sports - Are they for you?
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Basic Dog Obedience Stream

Uploaded on October 1, 2018 • 3 hr, 49 min

On Sept 18, 2018, Ed Frawley released a new Basic Dog Obedience DVD, Streaming Video On Demand, and Leerburg Online Course. This was not just an updated version of the original video produced back in 1982 or the many updates since. This DVD and course have 100% new content.

Over the past 30 years, dog training has gone through a number of new exciting evolutions. Those changes are all covered in our new DVD. You can review a detailed outline of the DVD below.

Today, we use reward-based training (marker training) to turn training sessions into games in which our dogs learn new behaviors (I.E. Sit, Down, Come, Walk on a Loose Leash). Our goal is to have a dog that looks forward to the next training session, rather than dread training.

We are balanced dog trainers. This means we train new behaviors motivationally with high-value rewards. In Basic Obedience, we use food rewards. In later training, we use food or toy rewards.

Our goal is for our dogs to generalizing a behavior. This means they understand the command in different situations and locations. But we also realize that every dog will eventually be placed in an environment where the distractions they face in the new environment are more interesting to the dog than our high value reward.

At that point, our dog may need a correction. How much of a correction depends on the age of the dog, the temperament of the dog, the environment we have placed the dog in and what the dog has chosen not to do. There is an entire segment in out course title “The theory of corrections in dog training”. In this segment, you will learn that the purpose of a correction is not to punish a dog for bad behavior, but rather to get a behavior change. We almost always recommend new trainers error on the side of helping their dogs and not correcting their dog.

We use high-value food rewards in our system. We will explain how to determine your dogs’ preference for rewards, we will teach you how to deliver a food reward without getting our fingers pinched and we will explain (in detail) how to fade using food rewards during training.

We will teach you when and how to start using marker training. We demonstrate with 9 week old puppies and 9 year old rescue dogs. You will learn what engagement is, why it is the key to our training program, and how to put engagement on cue.

We want our dogs to become fluent in the basic commands of sit, down, walk on a loose leash and the foundation of the basic recall. We will teach how to add duration to sit and down commands. You will learn what restrained recall games are, along with other games than build your foundation for a recall. We want our dogs to spit out things it picks up on our walks. There is a segment in our video where we show you how to teach the YUCK or LEAVE-IT command.

Our Basic Obedience DVD is exactly what the title implies. There is a ton of information that covers the basic foundation of dog training. Our next DVD in the series is titled "Intermediate Dog Training." In the DVD, we take what you have learned in Basic Obedience and expand the training into more complicated behaviors.

What will our DVD teach you?

  • How to develop a basis for simple obedience
  • How to gain control of an unexpected situation with your dog
  • When to and not to correct your dog
  • How to effectively organize a training session
  • How to time your praises (rewards)

OUTLINE

  • Chapter 1: Your Foundation
  • Ed Frawley's Resume to Teach
  • Understanding Good Management
  • We must become a Balanced Dog Trainer
  • Why we train with Food? How to stop using Food
  • How we split Exercises into Small Parts for Training
  • Theory of Corrections
  • Build Your Dog's Training Plan
  • Chapter 2: Reward-Based Training
  • What is Reward based Training - Marker Training
  • How we Deliver a Food Reward
  • How we Start Training - Charge the Mark
  • Why Engagement is So Important
  • Putting Engagement on Cue
  • Chapter 3: Lures/Gestures & Training the Sit and Down
  • Gestures / Lures / Adding the Command
  • Training the Sit
  • Train the Down
  • Adding Duration to the Sit and Down
  • What a good Training Session Looks Like
  • Why the Stay is also an intermediate Command
  • Chapter 4: Training Loose Leash Walking
  • Walk on a Loose Leash
  • Training the Yuck or Leave-It
  • Chapter 5: The Basic Recall
  • The Recall is your most Important Command
  • Rules of the Recall
  • Restrained Recalls
  • Food Toss Recall
  • Long Line Recalls
  • Chapter 6: Where to go From Here
  • Our Intermediate Online Course - Your Next Step
  • Leerburg's Recommended Advanced DVD's
  • Dog Sports - Are they for you?

Comments

Average rating:
5 star rating
4.5 stars (376 ratings)
Your rating:
staffydog
February 16, 2024
Really nice course, lots of sensible information and examples for new dog owners who want to train in a balanced way.
jay197
December 21, 2023
Highly informative, and much easier to follow than the previous video.
AtticusFinch
March 26, 2023
Excellent!
sbrunetti
February 25, 2023
great
pstreav
August 13, 2022
Very good foundation for basic understanding of how a dog thinks. Focus on that, and how to properly react with training using motivational methods, and your dog will be a rock star.

Working on my 2nd dog, a GSD, with this program. My last dog, Malinois, was amazing after a few hundred hours of work using this method. Hoping it is even better the 2nd round as I have learned more.
Kosof
July 19, 2022
One of the best courses you can find to start work with your dog. Thanks!!!
Earthaven
June 21, 2021
Breaks training into small, easy-to-understand bits, and then shows how to put it all together. Makes training enjoyable for dog and trainer. I personally like to use the Walkabout or Flexi lead better than the leather/or long rope leads for training--as there is one-hand control and less fumbling with taking it up and letting out the length. This leaves a hand free to give rewards. I like your sections on management--I was happy to see that I had worked this stuff out for myself in a multi-dog household--prior to watching. It was just nice to get the validation that a good "dog parent" doesn't have to let all of their dogs run all over the house and interact together--especially if they are really not ready for it. I have too much respect for my old dog to let him be mauled by a rambunctious puppy, for example. Another thing, I don't spay/neuter, so strict management is really essential, for everyone's sanity--especially mine! Thanx for your highly detailed, careful, and very organized presentations!
Norverner
April 10, 2021
Lots of eye-openers in this if your only experience is with one of those "8-week classes," as they call them. This course is much more congruent with what I thought should have been taught. My dog was a year-old Rottweiler mix out of the shelter, a ball of clay when I got him, and had he not just happened to be strongly pack-driven and wanted to hang around me I would have been in trouble. Those classes would have been useless in the real world. They mentioned the concept of long-line training in the take-home material but it was never demonstrated or practiced, and of course static collars would have been unthinkable. In one session the instructor (who had the title "Dr." and "Certified Pet Dog Trainer") even described a nightmare the previous weekend when her own dog ran off after a rabbit on a camping trip and they wound up having to leave without it, and miraculously someone ran across it a couple days later and returned it to her. Exactly the sort of problem this course describes. Regarding the concept of dog management, I managed mine fairly closely, especially compared to others, but after this I would do even more, because in retrospect there could have been ugly, unnecessary incidences when people visited with their dogs, and having given him too much freedom outdoors, etc. Look forward to the intermediate course.
terrylewis
July 24, 2020
Very good, thank you.
JoeyC
December 18, 2019
This course was amazing!
It taught me so much! Everyone check out my dogs instagram @yourstruly_unpredictable I have a few very disobedient dogs, because of this one of my dogs was hit by a car and we've got a fundraiser going on right now but... this course is extremely detailed and I can insure you that this course isn't a scam.
You'll see my before and after in at least 3-6 months on instagram.
naturalhorseboy
September 17, 2019
The way you are presenting and the setup of the format is almost better than playing with my Dog. Thank you! Ned Murphy
dirtydw
September 2, 2019
5/5 Stars... 9/10 Stars if it were 10.
This was a great explanation and video glossary of training basics and principles for operant conditioning.
The only missing thing that could have easily been provided were examples of dog training plans (reps, duration etc).
I understand with limited time in the video, we can't assume everything would be covered but all in all, this was fantastic and I recommend it to everyone who is embarking upon the endeavor of dog training.
Cheers
Make a plan and follow it.
Henrique
May 8, 2019
Hi, mr. Ed! I would like to know what's in the content of this dvd! It's not clear about the content! I love your courses! I have a lot of them!
clark3643
February 17, 2019
Great Video. Great to start your training career
GatorBest
October 30, 2018
much better rework
Migwa
November 27, 2017
Great information. Easy to understand and follow. It answered several questions I had and reinforced some things I was already doing. It also helped with putting things in perspective. I highly recommend this to anyone starting out in dog training.
Motleydog
December 26, 2013
Mr Frawley,

I enjoy your dogs. I also really like the tree idea for jumpy dogs. I work with a lot of women who buy these giant dogs for protection and they like to jump on them and everyone else. Even a very small person can use this technique effectively. It also limits the chances of redirected aggression. Hope you don't mind if I use it.

Thank you,
Motley and Jeau
Motley dog dog training
Broomfield/Boulder CO
nineandhalfwks69
August 12, 2013
EXCELLENT VIDEO!! Every dog owner should have this video. Even if you are a dog trainer already you should get it just for review. I've gotten 4 videos so far and look at them over and over again and it's always something that I missed the first time I watched it.

Great job Ed!!
adriano7rofeh
December 31, 2012
FANTASTIC VIDEO! This video has blessed our family greatly with our Alpha Female Shepherd Shalom. We are amazed in how quickly our 4 mo old Shepherd has grown to be such a great dog thanks to applying Ed's advice. I have applied it and seen the results.
All dog owners should have his DVDs. Our family bought Pack Structure, Basic Obedience, Puppy 8 Weeks to..., How to raise a Working Puppy... they are full of great information and wisdom.

Thanks Ed and Staff!

Dr Valentin
casabasari
October 6, 2012
It's a very well done video. I just used the on-demand streaming video, and I did not have any problem and started learning just after pay. A lot of information is provided in the DVD, very complete and additional tips to understand training obedience.
Rortega
September 4, 2012
Excelent information for new trainers. Everybody should start with this video.
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