When he makes eye contact with me, I give him an open flash of my hand (to visually mark the correct behavior instead of the sound of a clicker like the do in Positive Reinforcement Clicker Training to mark the right behavior) and then I give him a treat. I sign and touch my nose with Nitro to give him the cue for “watch me” sign. Your first training should be mini sessions of working on getting the deaf dog to look at you. The deaf puppy or dog needs to be looking at you directly at you FIRST before you can actually give the dog a sign command. To read more about Tether Training, please click here. If you want to knock your training up a notch, then you can do some Tether Training while using directional signing the whole time your dog is tethered to you. I sign when it is time to eat, when it is time to go outside (they have to “sit” and “wait” to eat, go outside, come inside ect) and also I point in different directions when I am walking through the house so they can learn and understand directional signing. For example, I sign a “W” every time I fill up their water bowl. Try to get into the habit of signing to your deaf dog throughout your daily routine instead of just signing in your training sessions. You just need to tweak your training a little bit. Training a deaf puppy isn’t that much different then training a hearing puppy. The video below shot by Alisha McGraw pretty much covers many of the basic deaf dog sign cues you will need to learn. Lately I’ve been getting so many questions on our Deaf Dogs Rock Facebook page asking about how to tell or train a deaf puppy “no”, “sit” or “laydown”.
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