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Price: $16.95 - $8.22
(as of Feb 21, 2025 16:24:04 UTC – Details)
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What’s new? Dr. McConnell added new information about the benefits of positive reinforcement AND the importance of realistic expectations. For instance, “sit” while waiting for the food bowl is NOT equivalent to “sit” when company comes to the door! While it s almost twice the size of the original, the book is still easy to read, user-friendly and priced right for trainers and dog owners especially important in today’s economy. It’s the perfect guide for positive-based training classes or for new dog owners flying solo!
Expanded sections/special topics include: – Socialization – Positive Reinforcement – House Training – Crate Training – Handling/Collar Touch – How to Stop Unwanted Behavior – Helping Puppies Conquer Their Fears – How Play Teaches Obedience and Emotional Control – How Not to Play! – Lots of New Tricks and Games – Adolescence
Exercises include: – Sit – Down – Stand – Come – No Jumping Up – Walking Side by Side – Games like Fetch, Find the Toy, etc. – Take It/Drop It – Puppy Pause (Precursor to Stay)
NOTE TO DOG TRAINERS: The Puppy Primer is designed as a guide for puppy classes based on positive training methods. Join hundreds of professional dog trainers across the country who rely on this book to help set the standard for excellence in puppy training
Publisher : McConnell Publishing Limited; 2nd ed. edition (March 16, 2010)
Language : English
Paperback : 117 pages
ISBN-10 : 1891767135
ISBN-13 : 978-1891767135
Item Weight : 10.4 ounces
Dimensions : 6.9 x 0.31 x 10.6 inches
Customers say
Customers find the book provides helpful information and advice for training puppies. They find the writing clear and easy to follow. The book is straightforward and manageable, making it enjoyable and interesting to read. Readers describe the methods as effective and useful. The humor is appreciated.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
gi –
Got a pup? Buy this! A life-changer. (No kidding)
This book changed my life-with-pup immediately and my understanding of dog training forever. It is the best-written concise manual to basic training I’ve ever encountered. I recommend it to anyone, even an experienced owner, who has a dog and wants to understand him better.It is divided into a set of progressive exercises and reviews, one major lesson per week. The authors briefly explain in the simplest, clearest manner possible both how to bring about a behavior—e.g., the sit or down or get-away-from-that-bottle-of-pills-that-just-spilled-onto-the-floor-and-will-kill-you-if-you-ingest-them—and why that particular method works. They explain precisely—step-by-step– how to conduct the little exercise that will create the new behavior. The week is spent in short, repeated drills and practice of former lessons.I felt confident, once again at ease with myself and pup, by the end of page one.The basic message of the book? IT’S NOT MAGIC: dogs act from genetic, canine-specific behavioral patterns, just as human beings act from human-specific patterns. Learn those behavioral canine patterns and adapt your training to them. Then training will be easy, even fun for both owner and pup. It will be simple.I was ready for simple. I’ve owned rat terriers all my life. I like their zip and feistiness and sharp features. I love their spirit and admire their sharp minds. I have taken all my dogs through their basic training without instruction or classes, and I’ve had few problems, none that did not resolve themselves pretty quickly. And I’d just had fourteen wonderful years with the gentlest ratty I’ve ever known.So when The New Guy arrived, he was a mild surprise. I’d forgotten the all-teeth, all-chewing, all-running stage. The bounce. Nor was the New Guy was not the gentlest rat terrier I’d known. But we got along. He house trained quickly, learned the sit and the come and followed through on both about half the time. Not bad for a three-month-old. But soon, he began the “jump-on-her-and-lick-her-face” and the “mouth and snap at her hands and legs.” One look at those little bared teeth and I called around for help, while I awaited an obedience class. Every trainer spoke of Alpha Animals and the occasional need kick or slap in order not “spoil” the dog. I’m a lifetime teacher and I’d never seen the equivalents of those recommendations work in my classrooms, but I was willing to try anything because daily The New Guy grew more defiant. I ordered recommended books and read them, marking key passages. I did things that ran against my instincts and tried some I simply could not pull off (the heel, for instance). Then finally, late on a day filled with frustration and punctuated by tiny canine teeth marks on my arm, I went to Amazon, seeking something simpler, maybe a set of progressive lessons. Something practical and simple. I wanted easy solutions, for I knew from past experience, they existed.That’s how I discovered “The Puppy Primer.” It is exactly what it says—-a primer, a set of basic training exercises that will take a dog through his first year and teach him to become a good companion and family member, while retaining his individuality. The author is an animal behaviorist who is an active researcher, and she is also an experienced hand-on trainer, and that combination separates her approach from a lot of well-known advice givers. She understands the mind of the creature at the end of the leash and her training techniques are designed to meet the needs of the canine mind. The training exercises work exactly the way she says they will work. Exactly. They are so simple, I marvel still. They use small treats as rewards because eating is the greatest pleasure pups know and hence best reward. Couple it with lavish praise, and the pup will gradually transfer the pleasure of the treat to the praise and chest and belly rubs and link all with the behavior being taught—sit, stay, come, or other. In time, the pup comes to see the behavior itself as pleasurable and seek out that pleasure.My pup and I are not to the heel command yet, but I think that lesson illustrates the superiority of this book’s method of training. The other books I’ve read start this exercise with the dog on leash. The authors do not start with leash. They begin with a set of preliminary exercises that reward the dog for following closely the feet of trainer. Ingenious and simple. Then they move to the leash, recommend chest “halter” at first because it is less likely to harm the head or neck. Then they build on the already-present skills taught in the preliminary exercises to teach the dog to heel. Such an approach just makes sense.As a teacher and student I learned two important things: one will never (possibly can never) learn from someone who he believes does not like him and a teacher cannot teach a student whose motivations and being she does not understand. We cannot beat or frighten or harry any student into learning. This understanding lies at the heart of “The Puppy Primer and accounts for its successful teaching.In fact, were I teaching pedagogy in an education school, I would assign this book as required reading. It would teach the importance of addressing human needs, the value of exercises that prepare students for mastering a skill, the value of rewards besides grades, and the great pleasure of teaching and learning that can bind student and teacher.This little book is witty, clear, engaging, and right. I will give it to the dog owners I know. And I shall always be grateful to it for helping me reach my pup before bad behaviors had become confirmed. Usually the best of anything is simple. This book is no exception. Thanks!
Mac –
Wonderful resource
Love this book! Should be required reading for all new puppy parents. I am a retired dog trainer. Used to provide a copy of this book to everyone in my puppy classes so they could have the resource available to refer to between classes.It is brimming with valuable information beyond teaching basic commands. It teaches the pet parent about development, common mistakes in teaching commands and how to see the world through the dogâs eyes (and nose). Dr. McConnell writes with humor in an easy to understand manner. It is divided into weekly segments for ease of use. Also includes information about what to expect in behavior changes as the puppy becomes an adolescent. It exclusively uses positive reinforcement techniques and is an invaluable resource the owner will refer to throughout their dogâs life.
glycerin10 –
Veterinarian that read the book – and highly recommends it!
I am a veterinarian, and was searching for a book I could recommend to my clients with puppies. There are a LOT of books out there, and there is a lot of downright crap (AKA Cesar, sorry dude) so how does one choose?This book is an enjoyable read, and does not just read like a manual. It focuses on positive reinforcement (telling the puppy what TO do). The instructions are clear, and they explain the logic behind it. The whole book is written in a down-to-earth manner. I will recommend it to my clients, and will even buy multiple copies to give to many of them as part of our “new puppy” visits.My only complaint, and why I didn’t give it 5 stars, is they didn’t go into much detail on the signs that a dog is nervous, overwhelmed, or fearful. They are mentioned a couple times throughout the book, which is great, but I find this is a topic that many people THINK they understand and truly don’t have a clue. A small section (just a few pages), ideally even with photos, spelling out what to look for to know that the puppy is nervous, rather than mentioning in a paragraph, might be the more obvious and clear point that many people seem to need.This is a great book and I highly recommend it! I may provide to my more novice puppy owners an additional book on canine body language to make the information more complete.
bluehenks –
My go-to puppy training book; McConnell is awesome; love the breakdown
This book is excellent–super easy read, broken down very easily, very easy to go back and revisit topics–using both the table of contents and also the layout of the chapters is very easy for browsing to find topic. McConnell breaks down training into week by week (or stage by stage), which is very helpful for novice trainers. She breaks it down for me and my pup so we don’t skip steps and get ahead of ourselves and ultimately fail. So, for instance, sitting, coming when called, heeling, etc. are broken down and revisited several times throughout the book. By doing this, she paces out the obedience training. Master stage one (or week one), and then move to the next stage. I highlighted as I read. I use it like notes/outlines–reread before doing the next stage for obedience training. Our pup 14 week old Australian Shepherd/ Border Collie mix is coming along nicely–and so am I for that matter. It’s very easy to skip around as well. Love info on house training, jumping up, play biting, as well as sitting, down, heeling, etc–love everything–very comprehensive. She also explains about the optimal windows for socializing and obedience training–it keeps me on task, focused, and optimistic about training my pup. Training my pup make me love my put that much more!! This is one of three books of McConnell’s that I have. I LOVE: The Other End of the Leash and have her Family Friendly Dog Training: A Six Week Program for You and Your Dog which we are using for our 3 yr old rescue.
Sandy –
Well organized and helpful.
lotta_z –
Versand usw. hat super geklappt. Tolles Buch. Wertvolle Tipps zur Erziehung von Welpen.
Nicole Strickland –
good tips
Kimberly G9 –
I’ve had a number of puppies in the past but this is the first for my husband. This puppy primer is the perfect refresher for me and learning text for him. He has become a training guru and is working wonders with our now 4 month old border terrier. I highly recommend this regardless of your skill or experience. It will work for anyone. Trust Dr. Pat! She rocks.
Linda –
Brilliant book, nice bite size pieces of training and explanations. Our puppy has loved the games (training) ð¥°ð¶ð¥°