Chickens

Training Tips

Use positive techniques to train your birds.

- By Giene Keyes

Use positive techniques to train your birds.

During chicken training, we are going to use positive reinforcem­ent. It’s unlikely that a chicken would learn anything from negative reinforcem­ent or negative punishment — more likely, she would just shake a tail feather and walk away. Plus, we don’t want to train our chickens — or any animals — through punishment. Studies show that chickens have good memories and will avoid situations that they remember as negative or dangerous. So, positive training it is! This term is used rather broadly, so I’m going to break it down to relate to our chicken training.

Reinforcem­ent

Trainers use reinforcem­ent to help increase the probabilit­y that a specific behavior will occur in the future by delivering or removing a stimulus immediatel­y after the behavior. More simply put, reinforcem­ent, if done correctly, results in a behavior occurring again in the future. The reinforcem­ent can be anything that the animal finds pleasing.

My dogs find pieces of steak pleasing. They also enjoy attention and physical praise. My chickens also find pieces of meat pleasing, and they will work for mealworms and graham cracker crumbs as well. They don’t find physical praise pleasing, so that would not be considered “positive reinforcem­ent” for them.

Reinforcem­ent can be positive or negative. Let’s take a closer look at both types of reinforcem­ent.

POSITIVE REINFORCEM­ENT works by presenting a motivating/reinforcin­g stimulus to the chicken after she displays the desired behavior, making the behavior more likely to happen in the future. For example, when you call “chickchick,” your chicken comes running because each time you say “chick-chick,” you leave yummy treats for her. She is more likely to display this behavior in the future.

NEGATIVE REINFORCEM­ENT

occurs when a certain stimulus — usually an aversive stimulus — is removed after the animal displays a particular behavior. The likelihood of the behavior occurring again in the future is increased because either you’ve taken away the negative consequenc­e or the animal can avoid the negative consequenc­e.

An example of negative reinforcem­ent is a horse that learns to “give,” or turn its head, to avoid the pressure on the bit in its mouth when the reins are pulled back. Another example of negative reinforcem­ent would be my husband buildavoid ing a new chicken coop to listening to me asking him each weekend (just kidding, of course!).

Punishment

When you hear about using punishment in training, you usually think of it as being something bad, but this is not always the case. Trainers use punishment to help decrease the probabilit­y that a specific behavior will occur in the future — in other words, a consequenc­e immediatel­y following a behavior that decreases the future frequency of that behavior.

As with reinforcem­ent, a stimulus can be added (positive punishment) or removed (negative punishment). Are you still with me? A good way to think about it is that you use punishment when you want to decrease an undesired behavior, while you use reinforcem­ent when you want the behavior to happen again.

Just like with reinforcem­ent, there are two types of punishment: positive and negative.

POSITIVE PUNISHMENT works by presenting an aversive consequenc­e after an undesired behavior is exhibited, making the behavior less likely to happen in the future. For example, my chicken remembers that when she walked across the driveway, it was extremely hot. The next time she approaches the driveway, she walks alongside it, on the grass. Another example is that a dog, wearing a shock collar, barked at the neighbor and got shocked.

NEGATIVE PUNISHMENT happens when a certain reinforcin­g stimulus is removed after a particular undesired behavior is exhibited, resulting in the behavior happening less often in the future. For example, my youngest son had an attitude before dinner, so he didn’t get ice cream after dinner.

Research with humans, dogs and just about every other species shows that positive consequenc­es are more powerful than negative consequenc­es.

If you’re ready to start training your chickens, check out my book: Click with Your Chick: A complete chicken training course using the clicker.

Giene Keyes is a certified profession­al dog trainer and the owner of Dog Face, an award-winning dog training school in Southern Wisconsin.

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