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CC210: Patience in the Details: Impulse Control, Body Awareness & Precision Through Conditioning

Course Details

 

This course helps dogs learn patience, precision, and self-control through structured pattern games and targeted conditioning exercises. Each week blends mental focus work with physical awareness to build calm, thoughtful movement (see syllabus for details).

Pattern games provide predictability and emotional regulation, while conditioning enhances coordination, strength, and focus. Through clear communication and consistent routines, dogs develop the ability to think before reacting: ideal for dogs who struggle with self-regulation, need confidence in stimulating environments, or are refining precision for sport or fitness work. 

Teaching Approach

This class will use written lectures and video demonstrations each week. Each lecture will be broken down into small pieces.  There will be video examples demonstrating all exercises included and how to train them.  Since everyone has their own learning style, I encourage students to move at their own pace. Each dog and handler are a unique team and I will do my best to meet everyone where they are skill wise. Some fitness equipment will be needed. A place/platform of some type big enough for the dog to sit and stand on. some inflatable equipment/ foam pads, wood pieces, pavers, stacking bars etc we can use for foot targets etc. I am creative and happy to help explore items you likely already have vs buying new things. A quiet place to work indoors is fine, we won't need a ton of space. 

Ashley EscobarInstructor: Ashley Escobar

Ashley Escobar (she/her) has been training dogs and their people for 20 years. She is a retired college professor of mathematics and is a Certified Canine Fitness Trainer (CCFT) as well as a Certified Human and Canine Physical Trainer. ..(Click here for full bio and to view Ashley's upcoming courses)

Syllabus

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New class - syllabus subject to change

Week 1: The Foundation of Stillness: Creating Predictability
Lecture Topics:
1. What “patience in the details” means for dogs and handlers
2. How predictability reduces anxiety and supports learning
3. Building focus through repetition and rhythm
4. Choice based games – foundation with it’s your choice
Pattern Game:
• Round Left Round Right Game: Establishing rhythm and calm engagement
Conditioning Focus:
• Front Foot Targeting (low platform or mat): builds awareness of placement and stillness
• Weight Shifting: gentle side-to-side sways while the dog stands squarely
• Micro Duration Holds: rewarding moments of physical balance and calm posture

Week 2: Developing Self-Control Through Structure
Lecture Topics:
1. The connection between controlled movement and emotional regulation
2. Using start-button behaviors to encourage choice and patience
3. Layering clarity through repetition and routine
Pattern Game:
• On Off game
Conditioning Focus:
• Sit-to-Stand Transitions: slow, controlled repetitions to strengthen hind-end engagement
• Diagonal Leg Lifts: gently lifting one paw at a time to build proprioception
• Chin Rest Hold: teaching stationary focus and body stillness through contact

Week 3: Precision in Motion
Lecture Topics:
1. Teaching thoughtful, precise movement
2. How reinforcement placement builds accuracy and body control
3. Encouraging calm problem-solving during movement
Pattern Game:
• Middle / Around Pattern: predictable movement around the handler builds spatial awareness and rhythm
Conditioning Focus:
• Front Foot Target to Platform + Step Off: encourages controlled forward movement
• Diagonal Paw Targeting: for fine motor coordination
• Bendy Targets Movement Patterns: to connect motion with mindful body shifts

Week 4: Thinking Through Arousal
Lecture Topics:
1. Building focus through excitement and recovery
2. Recognizing when arousal turns reactive
3. Reset strategies for emotional regulation
Pattern Game:
• Orientation Game with Movement: connect → move → pause → reconnect
Conditioning Focus:
• Rear Foot Targeting: teaching hind-end awareness and pause control
• Back-Up to Platform: promotes rear-end engagement and proprioceptive precision
• Stop/Go Transitions: reinforcing calm halts after motion

Week 5: Integrating Focus and Coordination
Lecture Topics:
1. Combining physical coordination with cognitive focus
2. How small mechanical details build long-term patience
3. Using handler motion to shape calm, precise following behavior
Pattern Game:
• Cone / Platform Sequences: structured routes with pause points and turns
Conditioning Focus:
• Diagonal Limb Coordination (Cross-Body Work): slow controlled movements over low poles or ground targets
• Step-Ups & Downs on Platforms: smooth transitions between surfaces
• Lateral Movements (Side Steps): to increase proprioception and handler focus

Week 6: Putting Patience into Practice
Lecture Topics:
1. Transitioning from controlled patterns to real-life adaptability
2. Maintaining emotional balance during challenge or novelty
3. Creating long-term structure and sustainability in training
Pattern Game:
• Choice-Based Pattern Sequence: combine multiple known patterns into a decision-making circuit
Conditioning Focus:
• Full-Body Flow Circuit: integrate front/rear targeting, balance holds, and controlled transitions
• Balance Pad Holds: encourage micro-adjustments for core strength and focus
• Cued Stillness + Motion Routine: alternating stationary poses and slow, deliberate steps

Prerequisites & Supplies

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No prerequisites required. My new puppy Indigo will have a working spot in this class, so you can follow along with her gold thread as she works through the material. This class is appropriate for puppies or adults.

Some fitness equipment will be needed. A place/platform of some type big enough for the dog to sit and stand on. some inflatable equipment/ foam pads, wood pieces, pavers, stacking bars etc we can use for foot targets etc. I am creative and happy to help explore items you likely already have vs buying new things. A quiet place to work indoors is fine, we won't need a ton of space. 

Sample Lecture

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What “patience in the details” means for dogs and handlers

Patience in the details means:

  • The dog can stay mentally present in small pieces of work (e.g., foot placement, holding position, waiting for release, lining up straight).
  • They are able to wait long enough to understand information instead of immediately reacting.
  • They develop the skill to process criteria, not just execute movement.

How that connects to impulse control:

Dogs with impulse control can:

  • Pause before reacting, giving the handler time to give information.
  • Stay thinking instead of going into motion, which is essential for precision behaviors (fitness positions, start lines, contacts, stays, shaping).
  • Remain calm under excitement, such as during agility, training around distractions, or when reinforcement is coming.

When a dog lacks impulse control:

  • Their brain jumps ahead faster than their body can organize.
  • They break positions, rush mechanics, and cannot learn shaping effectively because learning requires stillness and processing.

Essentially:
Impulse control is the mental skill that makes patience in small training details possible.

Impulse control is one of the most valuable life skills we can teach our dogs. Please note this not about suppressing their natural enthusiasm or joy ... it’s about teaching them how to pause, make a thoughtful choice, and move with intention.

In daily life, impulse control looks like:

  • Waiting calmly at a doorway instead of bolting out.
  • Ignoring food on the counter at home or on the ground during a walk.
  • Greeting visitors politely (with control) instead of jumping.
  • Settling on their place while the family eats dinner.

In sports and performance settings, impulse control is even more critical:

  • Holding a start line until released, even when adrenaline is high.
  • Staying committed to the dog walk contact instead of leaping off early.
  • Focusing on you instead of the environment full of distractions like other dogs, people, noise, or toys.
  • Being able to reset quickly after a mistake, instead of spinning out or losing connection.
  • Having the ability to remain in a state of optiomal arousal and move their bodies with control. 

    there are so many scenarios but the above is just to give you a few. 

Many times we only associate “impulse control issues” with the obvious behaviors like mentioned above ... rushing out doors, diving for food, barking at distractions, or running off course. And it’s true: when a dog is so reactive to the environment that they can’t focus, training becomes an uphill battle. They’re too busy processing the world to process you. But there is another, less obvious version of impulse control challenges that we see frequently in sport and performance dogs. These are dogs who technically stay with the handler, do their job, and remain engaged ... but they lack physical impulse control. Instead of thinking and responding with intention, they begin to move faster than they can organize their body or brain.

This shows up not as disobedience, but as:

  • knocked bars
  • wide turns
  • failure to collect
  • frantic or rushed movement
  • taking equipment sloppily
  • performing the pattern but without accuracy or clarity

These dogs want to work, and on the surface they “look fine,” but internally they are still in a reactive state. Their arousal level is high enough that the body is moving faster than the brain can plan. In sports, this is just as much an impulse control issue as the dog who takes off running. It’s not that the dog isn’t working ... it’s that they’re working too fast to think.

This is why we train impulse control through calm skills like “place, fitness exercises etc.” attention exercises, and controlled release. When the dog learns how to pause, process, and make choices with intention ... even in low-pressure environments ... those skills begin transferring to higher arousal situations. We start seeing not just fast work, but fast and organized work, which is the hallmark of a balanced performance dog.

With impulse control, something shifts:

Testimonials & Reviews

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New class for the December 2025 session.

Registration

Next session starts: December 1, 2025
Registration starts: November 22, 2025
Registration ends: December 15, 2025

Registration opens at 10:30am Pacific Time.

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Tuition $ 260.00 $ 130.00 $ 65.00
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