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Why Fenzi Dog Sports Academy?

FE130: Toys - Developing Cooperation and Play

Course Details

Do you have a dog that chases the ball, yet won’t bring it back? Plays keep away with toys? Tugs but won’t let go? Bites you instead of the tug? Obsesses over toys, yet won’t listen to a single thing you say? Is your dog so high in drive for toys that they can’t think? Or do you just want to channel that prey drive right from the beginning and add the attitude your dog has for tugging or chasing toys to the obedience or agility ring?

Are you curious about toy marker cues and how they apply to toys and teaching behavior cues? I mean, why all the fuss?

If so, this class is for you! Join me as we explore how to play games that channel that prey drive. Playing with toys with OUR rules creates a dog that plays with us instead of against us! Adding specific marker cues for how we deliver the toy helps the dog to listen and keep their arousal/excitement down, yet explode into focused action when we want them to. We are specifically intending the toy play to be used as a reinforcement for sport behaviors, which makes this class a wonderful foundation for most sports. 

This class is most appropriate for dogs that are attracted to toys but need fine tuning in how to play with them. We include ways to build drive for toys but generally, dogs with little or no interest in chasing and biting toys will have limited success in this class. The tug part of this class can be quite physical on the handler, so wear gloves and expect to gain some bicep muscles!

You need room to play, and a non slippery surface that is safe for both you and your dog to run and turn quickly on. Teaching chase is often an integral part of teaching a dog to bring toys back, and I often recommend starting with that game even if you only want tugging. Chasing toys that don't go very far, get caught up in furniture, bang into walls, etc.. often is not reinforcing for our dogs and gets in the way of them discovering the joy of snatching a toy out of mid air on the bounce after a long run after. Ideally you will also be able to teach in an area that also doesn't have competing motivators, like agility equipment, other animals, cars or dog beds, mats. 

Please be realistic about progress during class! Even though it is 6 weeks long, in reality, many students take this class over and over, as it takes most dogs/handlers a year or two to attain good toy skills. 

Here a video showing a little of what we work on:

Teaching Approach

 This class can be overwhelming! I release the basic steps of the chase and the fetch game all in the beginning of the class, and then as the question comes up in a gold or silver thread, I release the discussion lectures one at a time. Subjects are presented in steps, and are meant to go in order. For instance, the chase game has X amount of steps and each step is a separate lecture. Written bullet points, along with short videos showing each bullet point is the main format. Feedback wise, I give short concise written instructions, aiming at changing one or two things in the session. I absolutely love giving instruction once a day instead of twice a week (shorter videos versus long videos) and the class subjects support that.

This class will have a Teacher's Assistant (TA) available in the Facebook study group to help the Bronze and Silver students! Directions for joining will be 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

View Full Syllabus

2 toy game:

Trade

chase

prompted return

marker cue

eye contact

offered return

offered drop

add behaviors

listen to your dog's feedback

 

Tug

joy in tugging

pulling

pushing

bringing tug back

physical hand signals

adding another toy

adding chase and drop

adding behaviors

listen to your dog's feedback

Prerequisites & Supplies

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Toys, balls, and variety of tugs, treats. Depending on your dog's preferences, you may start with soft fuzzy type toys to build drive and then end up with really hard type toys to encourage dropping and letting go. Flirt poles and toys on ropes can also be great in the beginning stages.

Sample Lecture

More

2 toy chase Step 10: Listening to your dog

Listening to your dog: dropping, outing and returning with the toy-the "reset"

Also known as dog's "tell". 

I'd like trainers to look at things a bit differently when we are teaching our dogs and see if they can develop a training "language" that considers the dog's opinion during the training session. In the toy game, when you have 2 toys, the piece I want you to look at is the "reset", that part of the behavior loop after the dog has collected the toy into their mouth, and is on their way back to you. What does that look like at it's ideal, and where in that behavior of returning does your dog deviate when you add too many or too hard of behavior skills.

To summarize: 

Reset/loop: the piece of behavior from the time the dog strikes the toy on the chase to the time the dog drops the toy at the correct distance and orientates to the handler (eye contact for our purposes here). With food training, this is the piece of behavior from the time the dog swallows the food and orientates back to the handler. With toys, it is Unique and Harder because the dog has to give something up, where as with food, the dog has swallowed and there is nothing to have or return. 

Ideal behavior (dog dependent, for instance Ones takes a couple chomps to drop the toy, where another dog might drop cleanly.)

  • straight return
  • stops at handler
  • drops toy at feet cleanly
  • looks at handler quickly 

Where it starts to go wrong:

  • arcs on return
  • drops toy early
  • smashes into handler
  • circles around behind handler
  • chompity, chomp, chomp on the toy 

Really far gone:

  • runs to far corner of arena
  • never drops toy
  • takes toy to ground and proceeds to tear it up
  • endless circling
  • etc....

Look and sound familiar? These are likely the same issues/behaviors that you trained through when you were teaching the game skills in the first place. Dogs may show only one of the examples, or many.

 

Basically: you give reinforcement (chases) until the reset is clean, whatever your baseline is. Then, you ask for a behavior, look at the rep immediately after and if it is clean, baseline, then ask for another behavior. If it is not clean, then reinforce until it is. 

 

Here is Ones and I working on a very difficult retrieve skill. In this video, this is one of the first times I have combined hold with moving into front. I am not rewarding him enough and he tells me that. Here's part of that training session, warts and all! Look at my mistakes! But also look at the quality of his drops when I finally got a clue that what I was doing wasn't working.

If I were to ask him to heel (something we are good at and he finds relatively easy) he would drop the ball right away. I listened to him and the next couple sessions when we worked on the hold, I gave him about 3 ball throws in between each holding attempt. It worked! Here he is about a week later doing a new skill, generalizing different objects.

For the purposes of this lecture (and my current thinking!), we're talking about a 2 toy game, where you always have the other toy in your possession. One toy games complicate it further! And tugging on the toys includes some different "tells" from the dog.

 

Homework:

Evaluate your dog’s performance and game skills when it comes time to add in some behaviors. Does their game skills stay the same, with no hestation? Do certain behaviors deteriorate, where? 

Remember to play and reinforce until the game skills are "clean" again before asking for another behavior skill. Start thinking of play reinforcement as "chunks" of play, rather than one behavior equals one throw.

 

Testimonials & Reviews

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

This course has been the key to improving so much about my relationship with my dog! Over the past few months, I finally started suspecting that my dog's so called "possession issues" could be a result of how I played with her. The six-week course format gave us time to develop our play skills all the while getting Shade's regular feedback and advice as we worked through the course information. I love how each of us worked at our own pace, and how Shade directed us to focus on the most important aspects according to our individual needs. So, apart from us now having a good play foundation that we can build on, Shade's comments and advice helped me to better read and respond to my dog's body language during play, and allowed me to develop a clear play framework so she could feel comfortable and have fun with me. I also learned so much from my fellow students as they worked through their own challenges. I now see that how we play is absolutely key to meeting my training goals and having the best possible relationship with my dog. I'm well on my way to both, and Dama and I cannot thank you enough Shade! I look forward to more courses. Diane L & Dama


Here are Ten Reasons to Take Shade Whitesel’s Toys Class through FDSA. Let me start by saying I completely believe in and have benefitted over and over again by this Five Star class.  I am now on my third puppy and fourth dog I have personally worked through it. The first was a Bull Terrier I rescued at 8 months who didn’t have any interest in Toys. Then came my Malinois (bitey/grabby), then my super possessive GSD and now again my 14 week old Malinois puppy I have taken through the course. Every one of these dogs has mad toy skills now thanks to Shade and my newest puppy is even doing lovely pieces of heeling and Mondioring beginning skills with incorporating toys for rewards. 

1. I guarantee Toys Class will significantly build and improve the relationship between you and your dog.
2. You will learn how to use toys for rewards that will bring a whole new level to your behaviors. 
3. You will see your dog WANT to push you to work (will drive in for heeling for example) because of the toy rewards. 
4. Your dog will begin to work longer and longer to earn their play which is significant for trialing.
5. Shade will teach you how to expertly mark and present the toys in ways that strengthen your behaviors.
6. If you have a dog who doesn’t really play with toys, Shade will teach you how!
7. If you take the class at Gold or Silver you have access to Shade and she meets you right where you are. I felt when I first started working with her, she knew my dogs better than I did!
8. The amount of curriculum you get is insane. On the surface it looks overwhelming but when you begin to work through it you keep finding gold nugget and gold nugget. It is the Holy Grail of working with Toys in all aspects with your dog in any given sport or just for fun at home.
9. It is a class that just keeps on giving. And you can join the Facebook Group and have access to other experienced members who can help you when you start or in the in between times when class isn’t going on.
10. Whether its Chase, Tug, Bitework, Agility, Obedience, you can also receive help through Private Sessions with Shade that are an incredible deal and so easy to do. . 


Prior to the course, my highly possessive German Shepherd wouldn't out or outed very slowly with dirty biting. By the end of the course, I no longer even thought about outing; Bosco's outs are consistently clean and fast on command. I highly recommend Shade Whitesel's toy class if you are interested in learning to develop conflict free toy interaction skills with your dog. Martin T.


I thoroughly enjoyed this class! I had a very focused young dog, i.e. all the toys are MINE, but now I have a dog that will work for me to get the toys, will switch from toy to toy, and is much less likely to bowl me over in search of toys. The feeling of being in sync with your dog is priceless and this class helped us tremendously tThis was an amazing class that was fun and relationship building in one package. I highly recommend it! Ginger Mo reach a place of understanding and cooperation. Love it! Nell Wirtes


Yes! I am thrilled at the progress of my young girl!!! We are working together instead of her seeking her own rewards with the toys.


Shade gave incredibly fast feedback on my videos. More importantly, her feedback was always quantifiable and actionable so that I could apply it.


At first I wasn't sure as I'd never heard of Shade, but I'm SO HAPPY that I took this class! It's already fixed all the problems I was having in playing with my Dutch Shepherd. He's now a tugging fool and no longer running off with the toy!


I loved this class. Our play style improved and I felt our progress with using toys while working


This was an amazing class that was fun and relationship building in one package. I highly recommend it! Ginger M

Registration

Next session starts: June 1, 2025
Registration starts: May 22, 2025
Registration ends: June 15, 2025

Registration opens at 11:00am Pacific Time.

 

FE130 Subscriptions


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Tuition $ 260.00 $ 130.00 $ 65.00
Enrollment Limits 10 25 Unlimited
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