I. Norms
If Teddy is raised by yourself, it may even rise to the standardization principle. But remember, when dealing with anything, you must have principles. You can't even treat things without principles. In this case, it will not be Teddy's role model.
If your Teddy is fed by the same family, it needs to be taken seriously here. Dogs, like children, look for pets. If you are strict with it and the rest of the family are lax about it, it is certain that it will always stick to the lax owner, so Teddy's training will not have a good effect. Therefore, a shovel officer who keeps Teddy at home must be standardized and unified.
Second, the password is unified.
Password unification is the same for training any pet. A password corresponds to an action, and the pet has clear instructions in his mind. If you and your family disagree about the password to train Teddy, Teddy won't know who to listen to, and he won't have a clear memory of the actions corresponding to the password. Often, not only Teddy, but any pet will have a rebellious attitude towards training, resist training and do whatever he wants.
Third, make a phone call
From the day the dog is brought home, the owner will give it a name and use its name every time he calls it. When dogs get familiar with it, they will react when they hear the name. What Bian Xiao is telling you here is that when Teddy gets along with people, it is inevitable that he will do something that is not allowed, or something that we think is a prank. At this time, he must be punished for training. When punishing or reprimanding Teddy, it's best not to call him by his name again, because you still call him by his name when punishing him, and he will have a conditioned reflex to ask him to punish him in the future. Once he hears this name, he will become afraid, but he will ignore or avoid it. Therefore, it is suggested to avoid calling Teddy by his first name when punishing him.
When rewarding it, you can call it more names, so the advantage of training is that it can respond in time when it hears the name. When it responds to the name, it is much easier to train it later.
No matter what kind of pets you train, not just Teddy, you should clearly reward and punish them. Dogs have a memory. If you train them and practice them repeatedly, they will form a conditioned reflex. The purpose of distinguishing rewards and punishments is to let it know what it can and cannot do.
Finally, even if Teddy is smart and receptive, we shouldn't rush into it. It is more important to train pets step by step and slowly. It is more important to master the correct method.