The Passive Alert!

Newsletter of Tarheel Canine Training Sanford, North Carolina August 2008
In This Issue
New Program: In Service Training
NTPDA
Decoy Seminar Upcoming
Article: Decoy as an Instrument of Operant Conditioning
Tarheel Canine Videos on Youtube
 
http://www.youtube.com/tarheelcanine
Click the above link to see videos of dogs in patrol training, detection training, green dogs hunting drive, and some nice videos of puppy training!
 
You can also view our Tarheel Canine demo video on our website!
 
New Program!
 
In Service Training Groups from Tarheel Canine
 
 
Good in-service training is hard to come by for small agencies. In the fall of 2008 Tarheel Canine Training will address this problem and will host in-service training groups in your neighborhood (Baltimore-Washington Metro, Eastern Tennessee-Western North Carolina,  North Georgia, Southeastern Pennsylvania). The training will be scheduled in four Quarterly blocks of 2-3 days of training each quarter.
 
TK9 trainers will travel to these locations and conduct in service training in detection (both narcotics & explosives), patrol, trailing, and scenario based problems to challenge your K9 teams. Annual recertification will be held during one of the quarterly in-service sessions. 
 
Benefits: Your agency will save on travel expenses (gas, hotel, meals) for training and annual recert by joining or setting up an in service group near you!
 
The price for the in-service training will be only $750 per team per year! We will require a total of 8-10 teams per area from all participating agencies. So even if you are a one man K9 unit, call today to get involved, and keep your training at the highest level possible. You owe it to your dog, and your community to be the best you can be!


You do not need to have a Tarheel Canine trained dog to participate in the in-service program. We welcome any and all in-service teams to participate in this program. 
 
Contact Jerry Bradshaw at
 
to discuss setting up an in-service program for your agency or in your area.  Call Today to be sure to get your slot!



The NTPDA is looking for members interested in networking with other police K9 professionals. There are many benefits to becoming involved with this educational organization. Some of the benefits include:
 
  • Educational Seminars Nationwide.
  • Low cost seminars & certifications.
  • Private Training Facility Accreditation.
  • Networking with K9 professionals.
  • Discounts on Equipment.
  • Private NTPDA discussion group.
  • Real World Certifications: Certify like you deploy!

Join Today!

 
 
 
  
K9 Instructor School
 
Police K9 Training at Tarheel Canine
 
 
Bradshaw's K9 Blog
 
Read about recent events at TK9, and get the latest news!
 
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Decoy Seminar in October 
We have a Police K9 Decoy seminar upcoming on October 22, 23 & 24 2008 hosted by the Kingsport TN Police Department.
 
The seminar will be a working seminar and participants will learn:
 

·          Decoy as an instrument of operant conditioning.

·          Alert on passive suspects with no equipment

·          Bringing out civil aggression.

·          Drive channeling

·          Eliminate equipment orientation in any dog.

·          Proper sleeve mechanics: sleeves don't create equipment orientation, decoys do.

·          Proper Bite suit targeting and "catch" mechanics.

·          Proper use of hidden sleeves and muzzle fighting.

·          Explanation of decoy technique for training and maintaining control commands: out, guarding, hold & bark, redirects, and call-off (recalls).

·          Integrating fundamentals into police K9 training scenarios.

 

If you would like to register for this seminars, or arrange one for your agency, please contact Jerry Bradshaw at malinois_jb@mindspring.com
 
 

 

The Decoy as an Instrument of Operant Conditioning in Patrol Training

 

By

 

Jerry Bradshaw

 
(C) 2008 Tarheel Canine Training & Girard W. Bradshaw, all rights reserved. 

 

 

It used to be thought that to decoy for a police dog required no previous training or instruction, other than choosing a guy who had no fear of dogs. Get a guy to suit up, tell him to run, and send the dog! Those days have to be over if we are to progress our dogs in their patrol work.
 
Now, we realize, that is a poor way to train your dog. The decoy is the reward mechanism for your dog's patrol training, and so we need someone in the suit who can read the dog, and reward him with a grip appropriately, to increase the likelihood of all the critical bahaviors the dog must master in the patrol phase.
 
A good decoy can go a long way to improving a dog's performance. Every training session is loaded with behavioral feedback to the dog. The decoy is the one in control of that feedback. Would you allow an untrained person to work your dog in obedience, or handle him in tracking? When you use an unskilled decoy you are doing exactly that. The decoy trains the dog in patrol work. Behaviors shown by the dog are either rewarded properly or not, and if we do not reward the dog for releasing, or coming back on a recalled attack, for example, we run the risk of seeing these behaviors deteriorate as the dog makes his own reward system by taking dirty grips or running through his recalls.
 
Proper timing, mechanics of catching the dog to avoid jams, technique to catch dogs in the front of the suit (not all bad guys are running away) on more confrontational bites, how to push the dog in defense and then relieve the pressure to improve the dogs ability to channel drives - these are some of the skills the decoy must learn.
 
Look at the four quadrants of operant conditioning below, known as the "Consequenses of Behavior," and the associated examples of how the decoy, through his actions is the instrument we use to condition the dog during patrol training.
 
The Consequences of Behavior
 
The probability of a behavior recurring is affected by the consequences of the behavior itself. We speak of two consequences: Reinforcement (a reinforcing consequence is one that will increase the frequency of a behavior) and Punishment (a punishing consequence is one that will decrease the frequency of a behavior). Now, both reinforcement and punishment can be either positive or negative, thus we have four consequences we must define:
 
Positive Reinforcement: A particular behavior is strengthened due to a desirable consequence. For example a dog barks aggressively after the alert command is given, and receives a grip as a reward, increasing the likelihood he will bark when we alert him.
 
Negative Reinforcement: eliminating some undesirable consequence strengthens a particular behavior. For example, in training the out with a difficult dog, we pull tight on the pinch collar (rather than making a correction) or choke collar, applying pressure, and when the dog outs, we relieve the pressure.
 
Negative Punishment: withholding the reinforcing consequence weakens a particular behavior. For example, the dog stops barking in the hold and bark exercise for find and bark training. The handler snatches the dog back with the long line, and the decoy escapes out of sight. The dog is re-sent to the decoy, and the reward grip is withheld in this manner until the dog barks continuously.
 
Positive Punishment: A particular behavior is weakened by the presentation of an unpleasant consequence. For example, the dog wants to run out of a down command to the bite before we give the send command, so we apply a correction for the down, and send him only when he is holding the down properly. The same can be done with eye contact, heeling around decoys, sitting around decoys to enhance control over your dog when he is in "bite mode."

 It is critical that decoys, handlers and trainers understand these consequences of behavior and how to apply them. Good decoys know when to apply each consequence, and why. If your decoy skills and dog reading could use a boost, contact TK9 to schedule to attend one of our decoy seminars. What you will get out of the seminar is a very modern and advanced treatment of both mechanics, safety, scenario training and how to reward key behaviors such as the alert on passive individuals with no equipment, passive biting, civil aggression improvement, and much more. What you will get is listed above in the seminar description at the top of this e-mail.
 
Note: This segment is adapted from the author's book: Controlled Aggression in Theory & Practice, available in the Tarheel Canine Pro Shop at www.tarheelcanine.com/proshop.cfm See the description of the book directly below this article.
 
"It's what you learn, after you know it all, that's important."
Earl Weaver, Former Manager, Baltimore Orioles.

 

 
Book CoverBook: Controlled Aggression in Theory & Practice
 
 
This training manual was written for police K9 professionals and covers basic foundation training such as testing green K9 prospects for patrol suitability, training drive development, drive channeling, working in the bite suit, human orientation (combatting equipment orientation). The book further features key skills training including training guarding behavior, out on command, redirected bites and the out and return, and the best way to train a call off with little to no pressure on the dog. If you have trouble with the recall (call-off) exercise being reliable, the information alone on training the call off in a new and different way is worth the price of the book hands down.
 
Pre-Order your published copy now at a reduced price. Pre-Orders will ship September 1, 2008.  

Our Price: $ 20.00
List Price: $24.99
S & H:$3.00

 
Email Jerry directly for all pre-orders at the new price!