
Fact vs. Fiction: The Biggest Dog Training Myths Debunked
Barking Up the Wrong Tree: Busting the Biggest Myths in Dog Training.

Here at Rovers Return Dog Training, Leicestershire, we hear a lot of conflicting advice. I hear this a lot from my clients. From well-meaning advice at the local park to outdated television shows, and of course social media. TikTok is the worst! The world of dog behaviour is packed with myths.
Unfortunately, relying on outdated information doesn’t just slow down your training—it can actively damage the relationship you share with your dog. Today, we are putting on our behaviourist hats and using modern canine science to bust some of the biggest dog training myths once and for all.
What Are Some Myths In Dog Training

Myth 1: Your dog is just being bad, dominant, or spiteful.
When a dog chews a shoe, barks at the window, or urinates on the rug while you're out, it’s easy to feel like they are doing it to spite you.
The Reality: Behaviour is Communication
Dogs lack the cognitive capacity for malice or spite. They don't lie awake plotting how to ruin your day. In the canine world, all behaviour is communication.
Your dog isn't being a problem; they are having a problem.
Barking at the window isn’t "defiance"—it’s a plea for space or an expression of hypervigilance. It may not make sense to us, they have space, they can come away from the window, except, they can’t, their brain is stuck in the behaviour.
Chewing furniture isn't "revenge" for being left alone—it is a physiological coping mechanism to self-soothe anxiety.
When we stop viewing behaviour as a personal attack and start viewing it as a cry for help, and understanding what they are saying to us, the environment and the triggers, our approach shifts from punishment to empathy.
Myth 2: Aversive tools (prong collars, slip leads, e-collars) don't cause harm if used correctly.
I constantly hear this! And it is rubbish. This is perhaps the most pervasive and dangerous myth in the modern dog industry. Proponents of these tools often argue that a "tap" or a "pinch" is harmless if the timing is right.
The Reality: Tools Suppress Behaviour—They Don't Fix It
Aversive tools work on a psychological principle called positive punishment (adding something unpleasant to stop a behaviour). While they might stop a dog from pulling or barking instantly, they do it by triggering a fear response to reduce the risk of the behaviour that you want to reduce from happening.
Think of a growling or lunging dog. A growl is a warning siren, the lunge occurs when the growl hasn’t achieved the desired result. If you use a prong collar or a slip lead to punish the growl, the dog will stop growling out of pain or fear.
However, you haven't fixed the fear; you have just turned off the alarm system.
This creates a behaviourally suppressed dog that appears "cured" but is actually a ticking time bomb, highly likely to bite "out of nowhere" because their communication tools were stripped away.
Furthermore, dogs are contextual learners. If a dog looks at a stranger and experiences a pinch on a prong collar, they don't think, "I shouldn't pull." They may associate, "Strangers cause pain." You have actively worsened their underlying emotional state.
Myth 3: You have to show the dog who is boss, be a leader, and be dominant to change their behaviour.
People often think changing a behaviour requires a battle of wills. If a dog is reactive to bikes, the old-school thought was to correct them until they submit.
The Reality: Counter-Conditioning Rewires the Mind
True behavioural rehabilitation doesn't look like a battlefield; it looks like therapy. We change long-term behaviour through counter-conditioning and desensitization.
Counter-conditioning changes a dog’s underlying emotional response to a trigger. If your dog fears bikes, we don't punish them for barking. Instead, we find a safe distance where they can see a bike without panicking, and we flood them with high-value treats (like chicken or liver sausage). Over time, the brain rewires its associations: Bike = Good things happen.
By changing the emotion, the behavioural symptom (barking/lunging) naturally disappears.
It takes a trainer who knows how to effectively use rewards to change behaviour. It involves more than feeding when your dog is near a trigger.
The dominance theory has been debunked
Myth 4: Dogs think exactly like humans do.
We love our dogs like family, and it is incredibly easy to anthropomorphize (putting human thinking/ behaviour to explain animal behaviour) them—assuming they understand our words, our social rules, and our logic. Animals only understand their own!
The Reality: The Canine Brain is Structured Differently
Neurologically, there is still an immense amount that we do not know about the canine brain. Neuroimaging and canine cognitive research are evolving every year, continuously unlocking how dogs process memory and emotion. However, what we do know is how drastically their brain structure differs from ours:
The Olfactory Powerhouse: A dog’s brain is built around scent. Their olfactory bulb (the part of the brain that processes smell) is roughly 40 times larger than a human's relative to total brain size. They literally "see" the world through their nose.
The Prefrontal Cortex Gap: Humans have a highly developed prefrontal cortex, which governs abstract thought, long-term planning, morality, and complex language. A dog’s prefrontal cortex is significantly smaller. They live entirely in the immediate present. They react to what is happening right now based on safety, comfort, and survival instincts.
Dogs experience rich, deep emotions like joy, fear, frustration, and affection, but they process them without the baggage of human logic.
Myth 5, If I Play Tug, My Dog Will Become Aggressive.
In reality, tug-of-war is a fantastic game to play with your dog that offers immense physical and mental benefits. Far from causing aggression, tug serves as a safe, highly controlled channel for their natural instinctual prey drive—especially if you incorporate a chasing element into the activity before they grab the toy.
When played with clear, force-free rules (such as teaching a reliable "drop" and pausing the game if teeth accidentally touch human skin, or they become too over aroused), tug-of-war actually improves a dog's impulse control, builds confidence, and strengthens the bond between you and your companion.
The Rovers Return Approach
If you are struggling with your dog's behaviour, remember that true training isn’t about forcing submission or finding a quick fix with a harsh tool. It is about learning to speak "Dog," understanding their unique neurological blueprint, and working with them as a partner.
Let's ditch the myths and focus on science, kindness, and clear communication.
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Professional Force-Free dog trainer & behaviourist in Leicestershire. Providing 121 puppy development plans and bespoke 121 dog training, specialising in behaviour and reactive rehabilitation programs.
