- Jul 26, 2010
- 2,969
- 4
- 171
I think group classes are extremely valuable. The student gets to see what mistakes people make and how they affect the dog.
It's really like getting 10 or 12 sessions (or how many students/dogs there are in the class) out of one.
The student gets to see how the training 'volume' is turned up or down for a very wide variety of dogs, without really having to deviate from the basic method at all.
He gets to see what to do if the command isn't understood, if it's ignored, etc.
His dog may not react the way another student's dog does in the classroom, but in another situation, when his dog reacts differently, he'll know what to do.
The student learns in a group, sooooooo much more quickly than if he's taught on his own. Instead of one example each time, he sees 12 or 15.
The trick is, that the instructor is teaching something that works.
That always IS the trick, LOL.
It's really like getting 10 or 12 sessions (or how many students/dogs there are in the class) out of one.
The student gets to see how the training 'volume' is turned up or down for a very wide variety of dogs, without really having to deviate from the basic method at all.
He gets to see what to do if the command isn't understood, if it's ignored, etc.
His dog may not react the way another student's dog does in the classroom, but in another situation, when his dog reacts differently, he'll know what to do.
The student learns in a group, sooooooo much more quickly than if he's taught on his own. Instead of one example each time, he sees 12 or 15.
The trick is, that the instructor is teaching something that works.
That always IS the trick, LOL.
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