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Why train your rats?
What can you train rats to do?
Can you train any rat? However, before training, there are some prerequisites. First and foremost, your rats must be completely comfortable with you. This article isn�t about training your rats to be used to handling and presumes they are already comfortable being handled and out of their cage with you. It also presumes that you have a safe area to free-range your rats. You must also be calm, patient and creative. Don�t get frustrated when things don�t go according to plan and don�t focus on the end result - training your rats isn�t about the end result, but about enriching their lives and building your bond. The activities you can share with others are just a bonus.
Things to remember Another factor when training your rats is that their physical capabilities will change over time - as rats age they may no longer be able to do the activities they used to, but might still be desperate to please you, so do be prepared to adapt activities as they get older. Their attention span and stamina will also change with age - very young rats shouldn't be expected to concentrate for too long. Never, ever force your rats to do anything.
Positive reinforcement
What�s my motivation? I also say �Good Jemima!�, �Good Lily!� really enthusiastically when rewarding my rats (substitute your own rats� names of course) - I use clicker training but I feel that rats are very motivated by making you happy, so tell them how clever they are. Really make a massive thing about rewarding your rats verbally -one of my former rats used to get very excited when she got a round of applause - she knew it meant she�d done something very clever and made me happy and she would go pinging around in circles. I always use a verbal reward AND a physical treat or rub or kiss, I never leave out the verbal reward. Some clicker trainers advocate using the clicker only, but I find that my rats respond to my voice.
Clicker Training I begin by training my rats that �click� is good. First I click well away from the rat so that they aren�t scared of the sound. I�ve not yet had a rat act scared of the click but if I did, I�d start by clicking in a neighbouring room and then running through and rewarding my rats in the cage together so they could build up their confidence of the noise. I start with one rat outside at a time - I click then say �Good boy/girl so-and-so� and immediately give a reward. ALWAYS give a reward whenever you click. �Click� means �Yes! That is good and I am going to reward you� I keep doing this regularly for a few sessions until my rats are happy with this. I then run through the same procedure with each rat one at a time. You are establishing what the clicker means. I�ve found that my rats very quickly learn that not every click is for them and once I�ve established what the clicker means, I start using it during group playtime. I click and verbally reward at the same time for this reason - I am using the rats name so they know who the click was for. I am sure my rats have learned this very quickly as the rat who earned the click will bounce up to me to get their reward while the others carry on playing. You don�t need to point the clicker at the rat - I keep mine hidden in my pocket when it�s being used. One of the first things I train my rats to do is what I call target training. I made a special target by fastening a ball to the end of an old feather toy (that had long since lost its feathers!). I lay this on the floor in the rat room and sit by it. Whenever my rats came near it, I clicked and rewarded, saying �Good so-and-so!�, giving a HUGE verbal reward when one of the rats touched it. Rats are so curious, this took less than a minute (a new object in the room is always worth investigating!). Pick the target up once the rats have sniffed it. If a rat comes straight back before you get chance to remove the target - click and reward them again, differently. They are learning that �If I touch the target, I get a reward�. Then I held the target up so that to reach it, the rats had to stand up. My rats very quickly came back to sniff it some more. If your rats hold their heads up to sniff it, but don�t actually touch it, click and reward. They are offering a behaviour towards the one you desire so tell them they are good. Whenever they get closer to touching it, click and reward them. Once they actually reach up to touch it, click and reward very enthusiastically. Do this a few times and then add the instruction �So-and-so touch!� (I am putting an exclamation mark on the end to indicate that you should say this with a cheerful, happy voice) whenever they are near the target then click and reward. Soon you will find them running to touch the target - climbing up your arms to reach it, standing on your head, shoving each other out of the way... once they have learned to touch it on command, don�t reward them if they touch it without the command. Once they have learned to touch the target reliably, you can start to command them �follow� to follow the moving target in a similar way. Click and reward them as they follow the target closely and allow them to touch the target at the end of the �follow�. Start with quite a short �follow� and allow them to touch it quite soon. You can build this up gradually. Once your rats can follow the target for a short distance, you can start to add obstacles that they must climb up, over, under or through. You might find other ways of training your rats though so if it works for you and your rats, enjoy it!
An example of training an activity
Who is the trainer? One of my rats learned quickly that the clicker was great fun and will bring it to me. She then figured out that it was a great game to steal the clicker from my pocket while I was talking to another rat and run off with it. She loves being chased! If your rats offer you behaviours, reward them (unless they are undesirable because they�re unsociable, destructive or dangerous) and think how you could develop the activity. The golden rule of training is that your rats must enjoy it. The whole object of training is to stimulate your rats and develop your bond. Keep this goal in mind and you will not go far wrong. | ||||||||||