Teach Your Dog to Enter and Exit a Kennel Calmly Using Clicker Training

Kenneled dogs exhibit wild behavior upon entering or leaving the kennel because they need company. Our instinct is to respond to this need. It flatters us and triggers our sympathy. However, offering no response or actually withholding our entry is the kindest action you can take. Here's how to train successful kennel enter and exit, using clicker training.

Steps

  1. Approach the dog's kennel or outside pen. Most likely the dog will be jumping and/or barking. (If you get to the kennel and the dog keeps all four paws on the floor and is not barking go to #2.) Just stand there saying nothing, and give him ten seconds to stop barking and have all four paws on the floor. If he can't control himself, turn your back to the dog and step away. Keep your head turned enough to watch for good behavior. When he is quiet and has four-on-the-floor, click, turn, and toss the kibble into the kennel. Remain facing the kennel door and step toward it. Give him 10 seconds to get control of himself (four-on-the-floor and no barking). If the dog remains calm go to #2; if the dog jumps or barks turn your back and step away. It may take only a few times of doing this, or it may take many repetitions, but the dog will learn to control his behavior. You do not go to the next step until the dog is quiet and standing (or sitting). If the dog isn’t “getting it", try moving to the next kennel and begin clicking that dog. Competition is frequently a good motivator. Work the neighbor dog for a few clicks, and then move back to the first dog again. They do learn by watching what works for another dog.
  2. Reach for the door of the kennel; open it using your body to block any exit by the dog. Walk in with your shoulder turned into the dog and have food in the hand closest to the dog, letting him smell it and nibble at it. You aren't actually feeding any of the food until you can shut the kennel door behind you. At any point, if the dog has lost control, you back out, shut the door and go back to step #1. You are never angry; you are a calm immovable force. You are putting the dog in charge of getting what he wants if he is calm because that is all you will reinforce.
  3. Once in the kennel, pat and touch the dog quietly; hook the leash to the collar. If the dog jumps or barks stand with your foot on the leash so the dog can't jump on you, and then turn your back. Wait for calmness, turn back around and offer the food reward from your hand if you can, or drop it on the floor if the dog is nippy. Remember to look for any opportunity to click and then treat the dog for even the smallest moments of calmness--like four on the floor, eye contact, looking at you, moving away from the kennel door, etc. Once in the kennel and when the dog is calm, put on the leash.
  4. Now you are ready to exit. The dog should be sitting or standing as you move to the door. If he can't be calm, turn, and walk away from the door with the dog and wait till his self-control returns, then reinforce (click and give a treat), and try again. You should precede the dog through the door. If he won't let you turn around walking back into the kennel, again wait for calm, then reinforce and try again. Once you lead through the door, proceed outside quickly.

Tips

  • The more clicks followed by treats, the faster the dog will get it.

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References

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