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OB340: Strike a Pose: Fabulous Positions!

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OB340: Strike a Pose: Fabulous Positions!

Course Details

You enter your sport ring/field, dog heeling by your side. When the exercise comes, you leave them on a specific position and walk away. You cue each position change, and your dog executes them perfectly with paws steady. Full points!

Recall: You leave the dog on their stay, walk away, turn around and on the judge’s signal, call your dog. They leap into a run and slow down just enough to slide into a perfect front position, head up, perfect steady sit. More Full points!

Other versions of your trial-nightmare anyone?

Your dog stares at you the whole time, frozen in one position. Ever had that happen?  

Or you need 3 cues for each new position change- a DQ in many sports.

Or your dog does the position changes, but leaps forward or take steps forward with each change-another DQ in many sports depending on how much forward.

Or, on the recall, your dog walks to you from across the ring. Or doesn’t come at all. Or blows past you!

I can help!

Let’s teach each position as a movement, choosing either back or front feet anchored. Let’s use luring/shaping/offering/platforms to get each change, and add the distractions of distance, handler movement and environment little by little.

And because that’s a lot of preciseness, let’s add an exploding recall in there to spice things up. (sliding into a perfect tuck sit in front of course-more preciseness!)

I’m structuring this class so that it can be a foundation skill for many different sports. AKC open and utility, FCI obedience, French and Mondio ring and IGP all have position changes in some form. I’m expecting students to know the rules of their own sports, and to come in with an idea of what is expected, sports specific, as judging varies.

So, a couple reality checks. Realistically it takes more than 6 weeks to get good position changes, and a good front position from the recall. I’m expecting students to come in with a variety of experience, from brand new to wanting to polish up what they already have. The dogs also have to have the conditioning, the strength and the fitness level to do what the student wants them to do. Dogs should be over 6 months old at bare minimum, and handlers should have an idea of luring and shaping training methods. It is strongly recommened that you have taken Crucial Concepts of Competition to get a sense of my teaching style and what I expect you to already know, training wise.  

Teaching Approach

Lectures are released daily one at a time, about 3-5 a week. They consist of written instructions, bullet points, a series of steps, and then more explicit written instruction if needed, and video examples of the steps. Videos are short, show the step, and there is no voice over or explanation in the video itself. In the beginning of the lecture, I list the Goal, and then Homework at the end. This class requires minimal space for the first steps (until you add distance to your positions and recall) and requires minimal movement on the handler's part, (feeding the dog in various ways). If you have any questions about teaching style or whether you and your dog would be appropriate, please feel free to contact me!

 This class will have a Teaching Assistant (TA) available in the Facebook discussion group to help the Bronze and Silver students! Directions for joining can be found in the classroom after you register.

 

Shade WhiteselInstructor: Shade Whitesel

Shade Whitesel (she/her) has been training and competing in dog sports since she was a kid. Always interested in how dogs learn, she has successfully competed in IPO/schutzhund, AKC obedience and French Ring. Her retired dog, Reiki vom Aegis, IPO 3, FH 1, French Ring 1, CDX, was 5th at the...(Click here for full bio and to view Shade's upcoming courses)

Syllabus

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Reinforcement procedures

Methods/adding a cue

Verbal cues/Physical Cues

Trial body position

Sit

Stand

Down

Transition: Stand/Down

Transition: Stand/Sit

Transition: Sit/Down

Props

Teaching Props

Front Reinforcement Procedures

Fly around a cone

Recall from fly

Focal point-positions

Focal point-recall

Duration of Position

Distance

Pressure

Distraction

Position changes from movement

Recall to Front

Maintenance of Recall speed

Maintenance of Positions

Prerequisites & Supplies

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 Platforms of your choice, most likely a big enough platform that your dog can comfortably stand, sit and down on it, as well as a flat platform for either front or rear feet. (I use a 2x4 piece of wood because that is what I have lying around the house.)

Strongly recommend that students have taken Crucial Concepts of Competition!

 

Sample Lecture

More

 Transitions-Stand/Down

Our goal:

Dog moves from one position to the other with no/limited foot movement

Methods:

Lure

Hand target

Offered

At any point when you are getting what you want, add a cue for the position. Offered is obviously not cued at first. If you and your dog are unfamiliar with the training language of “offered behaviors”, skip that part.  

Handler needs to be right in front of dog, as close to trial body language as possible.

Cue-verbal or physical?

I teach both, but I concentrate on verbal only in the beginning, mostly because my sport is only verbal, with no hand signals allowed. For AKC, at the utility level, only physical signals are allowed, and at Open level positions, both verbal and Physical signals are allowed at the same time. I will leave it up to you as to what cues you are using. (refer to the “methods of training and adding a cue” lecture for more information on cues.

Luring:

Hand targeting

Offered down and then offered stand

On verbal cue

Homework: Getting these skills and all the other position skills will likely take you the whole 6 weeks, depending on how picky you want to be.

Show me all the steps as you work through them! Remember you can skip the offered part if you are unfamiliar or uncomfortable with that process.

Testimonials & Reviews

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A sampling of what prior students have said about this course ...

Shade’s feedback and directions are very detailed and clear. It’s not a class limited to Positions...it’s MUCH MORE! Foundation skills, handler mechanics, learning how to provide clarity in communicating with our learner dog for a more successful outcome, clean training...and of course FABULOUS POSITIONS.


 

All of Shade’s classes have been filled with training gems that I refer to regularly. This class is no less. Highly recommended!  


This was such a great course. I have taken many courses with Shade but this was my favorite.                        


Shade is a wonderful trainer and instructor. This course had so much great information it could easily be broken into two separate classes!

Registration

Next session starts: August 1, 2025
Registration starts: July 22, 2025
Registration ends: August 15, 2025

Registration opens at 11:30am Pacific Time.

OB340 Subscriptions


Gold

Silver

Bronze
Tuition $ 260.00 $ 130.00 $ 65.00
Enrollment Limits 12 25 Unlimited
Access all course lectures and materials ✔ ✔ ✔
Access to discussion and homework forums ✔ ✔ ✔
Read all posted questions and answers ✔ ✔ ✔
Watch all posted videos ✔ ✔ ✔
Post general questions to Discussion forum ✔ ✔ ✖
Submit written assignments ✔ ✖ ✖
Post dog specific questions ✔ With video only ✖
Post videos ✔ Up to 2 ✖
Receive instructor feedback on
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