02/27/2026
Did you know? Positive reinforcement training has been around for over a century, and it’s as much about kindness as it is about learning! Back in the early 1900s, behavioral scientist Ivan Pavlov established that animals repeat behaviors that are followed by something good, and later B.F. Skinner showed that rewards can shape even tricky behaviors over time.
Animal trainers quickly started applying those ideas to everyday training and we’ve been improving ever since! Clickers came into play in the 1950s and 60s to mark the exact moment an animal does something right. By the 1970s, trainers were also using “shaping,” rewarding small steps toward a behavior so even tricky cues could be learned one step at a time. The goal isn’t just changing behavior; it’s helping dogs feel confident, respected, and understood.
When training is done this way, it becomes more than teaching tricks. It’s a way to communicate with your dog, celebrate their successes, and strengthen the bond you already share. Every “good boy” or “yes!” is a little building block in trust, and that trust lasts a lifetime.