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Volhard's Puppy Aptitude Test
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| TEST |
PURPOSE |
SCORE |
Social Attraction:
Place the puppy in test area. From a few feet away the
testor coaxes the pup to her/him by clapping hands gently
and kneeling down.Testor must coax in a direction away
from the point where it entered the testing area. |
Degree of social attraction, confidence
or dependence.Degree of social attraction, confidence
or dependence. |
1. Came readily, tail up, jumped, bit at
hands
2. Came readily, tail up, pawed, liked at hands.
3. Came readily, tail up.
4. Came readily, tail down.
5. Came hesitantly, tail down.
6. Did not come at all. |
Following:
Stand up and walk away from the pup in a normal manner.
Make sure the pup sees you walk away. |
Degree of following attraction. Not
following indicates independence. |
1. Followed readily, tail up,
got underfoot, bit at feet.
2. Followed readily, tail up, got underfoot.
3. Followed readily, tail up.
4. Followed readily, tail down.
5. Followed hesitantly, tail down.
6. No following, or went away. |
Restraint:
Crouch down and gently roll the pup on his back and hold
it with one hand for a full 30 seconds. |
Degree of dominant or submissive tendency.
How it accepts stress when socially and/or physically
dominated. |
1. Struggled fiercely, flailed, bit.
2. Struggled fiercely, flailed.
3. Settled, struggled, settled with some eye contact.
4. Struggled, then settled.
5. No struggle.
6. No struggle, straining to avoid eye contact. |
Social Dominance:
Let pup stand up and gently stroke him from the head to
back while you crouch beside him. Continue stroking until
a recognizable behavior is established. |
Degree of acceptance of social dominance
pup may try to dominate by jumping and nipping or it is
independent and walks away. |
1. Jumped, pawed, bit growled.
2. Jumped, pawed.
3. Cuddles up to testor and tries to lick face.
4. Squirmed, licked at hands.
5. Rolled over, licked at hands.
6. Went away and stayed away. |
Elevation Dominance:
Bend over and cradle the pup under its belly, fingers
interlaced, palms up and elevate just off the ground.
Hold it there for 30 seconds. |
Degree of accepting dominance while in
position of no control. |
1. Struggled fiercely, bit growled.
2. Struggled fiercely.
3. No struggle, relaxed.
4. Struggled, settled, licked.
5. No struggled, licked at hands.
6. No struggle, froze. |
|
TEST
|
PURPOSE
|
SCORE
|
Retrieving:
Crouch beside pup and attract its attention with crumpled
up paper ball. When the pup shows interest and is watching,
toss the object 1 to 2 meters in front of pup. |
Degree of willingness to work with a human. High correlation
between ability to retrieve and successful guide dogs,
obedience dogs, field trial dogs. |
1. Chases object, picks up object and runs away.
2. Chases object, stands over object, does not return.
3. Chases object and returns with object to testor.
4. Chases object and returns without object to testor.
5. Starts to chase object, loses interest.
6. Does not chase object. |
Touch Sensitivity:
Take puppy’s webbing of one front foot and press between
finger and thumb lightly, then more firmly till you
get a response, while you count slowly to 10. Stop as
soon as puppy pulls away or shows discomfort. |
Degree of sensitivity to touch. |
1. 8 - 10 seconds before response.
2. 6 - 7 seconds before response.
3. 5 - 6 seconds before response.
4. 3- 4 seconds before response.
5. 1 - 2 seconds before response. |
Sound Sensitivity:
Place pup in centre of area. Testor of assistant makes
a sharp noise a few feet from the puppy. A large metal
spoon struck sharply on a metal pan twice works well. |
Degree of sensitivity to sound (also a rudimentary
test for deafness). |
1. Listens, locates sound, walks towards it barking.
2. Listens, locates sound, barks.
3. Listens, locates sound, and walks there curiously.
4. Listens, locates sound.
5. Cringes, backs off, hides.
6. Ignores sound, shows no curiosity. |
Sight Sensitivity:
Place pup in centre of room. Tie a string around a large
towel and jerk it across the floor a few feet away from
the puppy. |
Degree of intelligent response to strange object. |
1. Looks, attacks and bites.
2. Looks, barks and tail up.
3. Looks curiously, attempts to investigate.
4. Looks, barks, tail-tuck.
5. Runs away, hides. |
Structure:
The puppy is gently set in a natural stance and evaluated
for structure in the following categories: |
Degree of structural soundness. Good structure is
necessary. |
Good: The puppy is correct in structure.
Fair: The puppy has a slight fault or deviation.
Poor: The puppy has an extreme fault of deviation. |
Puppy Apptitude Test Test Chart
| |
Social Attraction
|
Following |
Restraint |
Social Dominance
|
Elevation |
| 1 |
. |
. |
. |
. |
. |
| 2 |
. |
. |
. |
. |
. |
| 3 |
. |
. |
. |
. |
. |
| 4 |
. |
. |
. |
. |
. |
| 5 |
. |
. |
. |
. |
. |
| 6 |
. |
. |
. |
. |
. |
| |
Retrieving |
Touch Sensitivity |
Sound Sensitivity |
Stability |
| 1 |
. |
. |
. |
. |
| 2 |
. |
. |
. |
. |
| 3 |
. |
. |
. |
. |
| 4 |
. |
. |
. |
. |
| 5 |
. |
. |
. |
. |
| |
Straight Front |
Shoulder Angulation |
Shoulder Layback |
Croup Angulation |
Straight Rear |
Rear Angulation |
| Good |
. |
. |
. |
. |
. |
. |
| Fair |
. |
. |
. |
. |
. |
. |
| Poor |
. |
. |
. |
. |
. |
. |
Dog’s name:
____________________________
Breed:
____________________________
Age:
____________________________
Sex:
____________________________
Markings:
____________________________
____________________________
Testing Date:
____________________________
Further Comments:
__________________________________
__________________________________
__________________________________
__________________________________
INTERPRETATION OF SCORES
Mostly 1’s:
This dog is extremely dominant and has aggressive
tendencies. It is quick to bite and is generally considered
not good with children or the elderly. When combined
with a 1 or 2 in touch sensitivity, will be a difficult
dog to train. Not a dog for the in experienced handler;
takes a competent trainer to establish leadership.
Mostly 2’s:
This dog is dominant and can be provoked to bite.
Responds well to firm, consistent, fair handling in
an adult household, and is likely to be a loyal pet
once it respects its human leader. Often has bouncy,
outgoing temperament: may be too active for elderly,
and too dominant for small children.
Mostly 3’s:
This dog accepts human leaders easily. Is best prospect
for the average owner, adapts well to new situations
and generally good with children and elderly, although
it may be inclined to be active. Makes a good obedience
prospect and usually has a common sense approach to
life.
Mostly 4’s:
This dog is submissive and will adapt to most households.
May be slightly less outgoing and active than a dog
scoring mostly 3’s. Gets along well with children
in general and trains well.
Mostly 5’s:
This dog is extremely submissive and needs special
handling to build confidence and bring him out of
his shell. Does not adapt well to change and confusion
and needs a very regular, structured environment.
Usually safe around children and bites only when severely
stressed. Not a good choice for a beginner since it
frightens easily, and takes a long time to get used
to new experiences.
Mostly 6’s:
This dog is independent. He is not affectionate and
may dislike petting and cuddling. It is difficult
to establish a relationship with him for working or
as a pet. Not recommended for children who may force
attention on him; he is not a beginner’s dog.
a) When combined with 1’s (especially in restraint);
the independent dog is likely to bite under stress.
b) When combined with 5’s the independent dog is likely
to hide from people, or freeze when approached by
a stranger.
No clear patterns (several 1’s, 2’s and 5’s):
This dog may not be feeling well. Perhaps just ate
or was recently wormed. Wait two days and re-test.
If the test still shows wide variations (lots of 1’s
and 5’s), it is probably unpredictable and unlikely
to be a good pet or obedience dog.
SCORING TIPS
3 in Social Attraction and Social Dominance:
The socially attracted dog is more easily taught to
come and is more cuddly and friendly. Its interest
in people can be a useful tool in training, despite
other scores.
1 in Restraint and 1 in Touch Sensitivity:
The dominant aggressive dog, insensitive to touch,
will be a handful to train and extremely difficult
for anyone other than an exceptionally competent handler.
5 in Stability:
This is likely to be a “spooky” dog which is never
desirable. It requires a great deal of extra work
to get a spooky dog adapted to new situations and
they generally cannot be depended upon in a crisis.
5 in Touch and Sound Sensitivity:
May also be very “spooky” and needs delicate handling
to prevent the dog from becoming frightened.
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©2/8/08
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