hhpminis
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I truly think we may be getting stuck on words here. I am not disagreeing with anything you have said, I think we are similar in thinking, just term it differently.
Discipline is not bad physical treatment or something that brings pain mentally or physically, it can be but doesn't need to be and most of the time shouldn't be. Reward and reprimand are similar in this. I always set my animals up to succeed and follow through with an action as if I expect it from them. Usually you get it.
Reprimand comes in to play when they dont do as you ask or fail to follow through on an expected action. This may be for different reasons and that is the key to proper discipline (reinforcement, campatible, incompatible behavior, high, low reward, whatever we want to call it) and can only come when you know your animal. A reprimand because they are afraid is far different from a reprimand if they are acting out of disrespect or a challenge. A reprimand of a horse that is scared may be as little as some soft words and body language to show them they are OK and it is not going to hurt them, the lesson for the day may be that they approached the challenge with a good attitude and it ends there to be taken a step further the next lesson. As long as they put forth an effort to try.
A reprimand of a horse that is coming at you with a challenge or disrespect needs a stronger quicker reprimand to avoid harm to you and the animal. This also is done with a positive mental attitude, not one of anger or fear on your part, but authority and assuredness. This manner too, will depend on the horse that is doing the challenge.
I truly think we are thinking similar just stating things in different ways. I dont care for the term positive punishment as it denotes a negativity, but that is me.
I do not see how praise, pats and scratches can be called positive punishment. I keep a very positive mental state when working with each animal and I dont expect them to do things that they are not ready for or that they cannot physically or mentally do.
Whatever form of training you choose to use it still is simple, reward the good, reprimand the bad. Use whatever term or phrase you want. The action given for completing a task as asked is different than the action given for not performing as asked. Tomato tomaato LOL I guess I am just simple folk.
edited to add, and no sarcasm intended
If you do not ask your animal to do more than you think they are ready to do, the reprimands, (that is my word of choice) are kept to a minimum. The positive reinforcement (also my term of choice) will be the majority of the animals experience with learning new things.
As far as vices, I totally agree, find the reason and adjust the environment to discourage them from doing it whatever that will entail, it is often trial and error. The less opportunity you give them to do their bad habit the more seldom they do it therefore becoming less of a habit and perhaps eventually not exist anymore.
Discipline is not bad physical treatment or something that brings pain mentally or physically, it can be but doesn't need to be and most of the time shouldn't be. Reward and reprimand are similar in this. I always set my animals up to succeed and follow through with an action as if I expect it from them. Usually you get it.
Reprimand comes in to play when they dont do as you ask or fail to follow through on an expected action. This may be for different reasons and that is the key to proper discipline (reinforcement, campatible, incompatible behavior, high, low reward, whatever we want to call it) and can only come when you know your animal. A reprimand because they are afraid is far different from a reprimand if they are acting out of disrespect or a challenge. A reprimand of a horse that is scared may be as little as some soft words and body language to show them they are OK and it is not going to hurt them, the lesson for the day may be that they approached the challenge with a good attitude and it ends there to be taken a step further the next lesson. As long as they put forth an effort to try.
A reprimand of a horse that is coming at you with a challenge or disrespect needs a stronger quicker reprimand to avoid harm to you and the animal. This also is done with a positive mental attitude, not one of anger or fear on your part, but authority and assuredness. This manner too, will depend on the horse that is doing the challenge.
I truly think we are thinking similar just stating things in different ways. I dont care for the term positive punishment as it denotes a negativity, but that is me.
Whatever form of training you choose to use it still is simple, reward the good, reprimand the bad. Use whatever term or phrase you want. The action given for completing a task as asked is different than the action given for not performing as asked. Tomato tomaato LOL I guess I am just simple folk.
edited to add, and no sarcasm intended
If you do not ask your animal to do more than you think they are ready to do, the reprimands, (that is my word of choice) are kept to a minimum. The positive reinforcement (also my term of choice) will be the majority of the animals experience with learning new things.
As far as vices, I totally agree, find the reason and adjust the environment to discourage them from doing it whatever that will entail, it is often trial and error. The less opportunity you give them to do their bad habit the more seldom they do it therefore becoming less of a habit and perhaps eventually not exist anymore.
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