Can you clicker train a kitten?

Yes you can :)

I used clicker training with Auggie, also … for teaching him to come and for not going out:

Clicker training is based on B.F. Skinner’s “Operant Conditioning” but turned into Positive Reinforcement by Karen Pryor when she was tasked with teaching sea animals to perform for the first “Sea World” kind of park.

Karen Pryor’s work is wonderfully documented in Reaching the Animal Mind. If you are interested in the development of clicker training as well as the science behind it, it is a great read! It is not dull at all. The last chapters are more scientific and maybe a bit dullish, but the first 2/3 of the book, the story of Karen Pryor’s development of method, her anecdotes and examples are easy reading. If you thought (as I did before I learned…. ) that clicker training was a gimmick … it is not and this book illustrates why.

I was introduced to clicker training by a young dog trainer that I contacted to help me help Bear, my last Karelian Bear Dog, be more comfortable around other animals. She did not pressure me to use the method, but left some reading material and asked if I would consider it. I read and agreed and we made great progress with Bear. I used some of the concepts to help Bear adjust to kitten Auggie.

And then, I studied more and clicker trained Emmett in addition to going to classes with a local “Karen Pryor Academy” person.

Bottomline, I love the method and how it fosters trust and respect between me and my dog and cat. We have all learned and we all continue learning. And that is another of the key differences: teaching vs training. The idea is to teach … and it is so much less stressful than “training”.

So, Oscar knows “Ring the bell” and we are working on “In your place”. We didn’t use much clicker training, but he is doing well at “Oscar come”. Oscar watches Emmett and I playing and learning things as well as Emmett responding to my requests. It is interesting to see how Oscar learns from Emmett and me. When Auggie was a kitten, Bear was an elderly dog so there was not the same kind of opportunity.

I am ever hopeful that I can teach “off the counter” … a girl can dream!!

2 Responses to “Can you clicker train a kitten?”

  1. Margaret

    That’s very interesting. I never considered that you could teach cats in that way. I don’t think Chico would learn anything….he has a stubborn mind of his own and is too old now, but for a younger cat like Oscar. I’m interested to hear how far you get with it. ‘Off the counter’ would be very useful (and also ‘off the table’).

    • Liz

      It is certainly different with cats! Cats tend to not be as food oriented as well as more of the mindset: “what’s in it for me?” :) AND, not really willing to work for “good cat”, i.e. praise. BUT, with Auggie, he liked cheese so I could do short sessions with cheese. And he, like Oscar, enjoyed playing games. Oscar really loves playing games with me and/or Emmett. And he loves the ball with fleece worm which he will fetch. He loves the crunch treats. So… I am using all of those things for rewards.

      For the counter … it is just in the last week that he has started making that leap. I am letting him explore, but if I can safely leave and ignore and then in a little bit shake a toy or the treat can … the counter becomes not as interesting as whatever else is going on. I’ll try that and eventually add the words. I have never successfully trained “off the counter”, so we’ll see how this approach works!

      I feel like now is a great time to try to teach things.

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