Welcome to The Click That Teaches Mini Courses

First in the series is: Lesson 1: Getting Started with the Clicker. Before I tell you what is in this lesson let me tell you about the original lesson and this new updated version.



I began producing these videos in 1999. At the time video cameras were huge.  There was no high definition video. Video was produced on VHS tapes.  There was no youtube, or facebook.  The entire clicker training community gathered together in a single group forum.  Over the past twenty-five plus years the world has changed and changed and then changed some more.  



I produced the first four lessons in the series as VHS tapes. It took me a while to admit that the world had shifted to DVDs.  I finally switched to DVDs for Lesson 5, and there I have remained – until now.

Mostly, I also stayed with DVDs because I just didn’t have time to make the switch.  There were always more pressing projects that needed to get done.

 But now, finally, I have turned my attention to getting the DVDs up on the internet.



Lesson 1: Getting Started with the Clicker was originally produced in 1999.  That was the first of what would become an eighteen part lesson series. It took me over ten years to finish the series. Always I felt as though I was in a foot race.  No matter how fast I got the videos out, there was always such a need for more.

 The whole “soup to nuts” training program was in my head. I knew the progression of lessons that would take someone from the first introductory steps to a solid understanding of clicker training; through basic husbandry behaviors to problem solving scenarios; from simple basics to performance superstar.  

I wanted the lessons to be as close to my actually being in your barn with you as I could manage via video.  So throughout the series I was often using video that was filmed at clinics.  I wanted you to see people and horses learning together – solving the puzzles that horses present. This sometimes created a compromise with sound quality.  You can see real time training, but you have to listen to the background noise of birds in the rafters or the wind taking our voices away.



I could remake these videos.  Modern cameras are so much better, and we have learned so much over the twenty-five plus years since that first video was produced.  But always when I go back to them, I see things that I don’t want to throw away.  These videos show you the birth of equine clicker training.  Yes, we have become much more sophisticated in the way we talk about the training.  We have a much deeper understanding of behavior analysis.  The horses have helped us to add so many more details to the handling.  But everything on these lessons is still valid.  They are a good beginning.  They will show you how to introduce your horse to clicker training.  And they will show you why I kept adding more details to these basic lessons.



When I switched from VHS tape to DVD, I added an extra hour to the original Lesson One.  I felt an update was needed. That was in 2006.  Now all these many years later not only do I have more to say, I have a better way to deliver the material.  

I’ve taken all the material that was in the DVD and added new video, updates, and more background information so the original DVD has essentially been transformed into a mini course.

The course breaks the material up into bite-sized pieces.  Watch a little, try it out with your horse, then come back for more. 

Lesson One focuses on clicker training basics: Introducing your horse to the clicker and the key foundation lessons that create safe, polite horses. 

If you are a beginner, you’ll find that this is an easy format to use. And if you’ve been clicker training for a while, I think you’ll enjoy this look back at the early development of clicker training for horses.

Visit theclickercenter.com to learn more.

Enjoy

The Original DVD Lessons Are Now Mini Courses

Some favorite images from the original lessons.

DVDs are a thing of the past. Netflix recognized that a while back when they stopped shipping out DVDS. I recognized it, as well, but I’ve been slower to do anything about it. It took me over ten years to complete all eighteen of the original DVD Lessons. The first four were made in the era of camcorders and VHS tapes. It took me a while to join the modern digital world and convert them to DVDs. And now technology has changed again, and I am still playing catch up.

But catching up is exactly what I am doing. I am converting the DVD Lessons to On-line Mini Courses. Lessons 1 through 5 are now available on-line. Go to my web site: theclickercenter.com to learn more. You’ll find the lessons in the DVD section, but now they are available as mini courses which you access on-line.

Why am I bothering to convert these DVDS? I could have let them go the way of the dinosaurs and become extinct. After all, I’ve continued to add new material. I’ve got the original on-line course, the on-line clinics, an updated version of my book, “The Click That Teaches: A step by Step Guide in Pictures“, and my newest book, “Modern Horse Training“. I can well understand someone thinking that enough is enough. “Why do we need these older lessons when there is all this new material?”

The answer sits in the training mantra: “It is always a study of one.”

Horses are complex. They are individuals. Every horse I work with teaches me something.

One lesson I haven’t learned is always have a camera running. You never know when a horse is going to show you something important that needs to be shared. Every time I fail to video an interesting session, I always think of the old fish stories about the “big one that got away”.

But every now and then I get lucky. I have the camera running. The battery doesn’t run out, and the horse teaches us something important. Those lessons don’t become outdated. They are as instructive now as they were when they first came out.

Does that mean nothing has changed over the twenty-five plus years since the first video lesson was made? Absolutely not. The horses have been showing me how to teach better. I’m not just transferring the original lessons onto a streaming platform. I’ve added new material. Each lesson includes updates to the handling and new video that helps you understand the concepts I’m discussing.

The streaming platform means I can break the original two hour DVD lessons into shorter, more digestible segments. Shorter clips fit into our busy lives, and they also make it easier to find segments you want to refer back to.

The streaming platform lets me combine video with text. When a clip needs some background information to make it clearer, I’ve added new material. I haven’t just converted the original lessons. These are fresh, updated mini courses.

Over the next couple of days I’ll share with you what each of the new mini courses covers. If you can’t wait, visit my web site: theclickercenter.com. You’ll find the new mini courses in the DVD section of the Shop.

Enjoy!

The first five DVD Lessons are now available on-line as mini courses.