Obedience tracker
An obedience tracker that keeps your training honest
CueProof helps obedience handlers track exercises, setups, and proofing progress without losing the bigger picture. Use it for recalls, stays, heeling, fronts, finishes, positions, ring skills, and the small foundation work that makes the bigger pieces hold together.
- Track obedience exercises one behavior at a time.
- Keep proofing notes across new locations and distractions.
- Review what is ring-ready and what still needs more reps.
Start with one exercise and keep the reps, proofing notes, and progress together.
If you train across several sports or want broader ring-prep planning, compare this with the sports page.
What people use this page for
People searching for a obedience tracker are usually trying to solve a very specific training-record problem. These are the kinds of examples and sticking points this page is built around.
Real examples
- Track fronts, finishes, stays, positions, heeling, and recalls as separate behaviors.
- Compare club-hall results with home practice before deciding a skill is trial-ready.
- Keep class homework, proofing sessions, and ring-prep notes tied to the same exercise.
Common sticking points
- A note like 'trained heeling' hides too much to be useful later.
- Obedience progress can look good at home and wobble badly in the ring picture.
- Small criteria changes are easy to forget when you are refining details week by week.
Why CueProof fits
- Each exercise can be tracked and reviewed on its own history page.
- Location breakdowns and trends make proofing gaps easier to see.
- Criteria changes sit next to the results they affected, not in a separate notebook.
How CueProof helps with this type of training record
Track the pieces, not just the title of the session
Obedience training often falls apart when you only record a vague note like 'trained heeling'. CueProof lets you track the actual exercise or behavior, the setup, and the outcome so you can see which parts of the work are steady and which parts still need attention.
Useful for class work, homework, and trial prep
Whether you are training at home, in a club hall, or preparing for a trial environment, CueProof helps you keep a cleaner record of what your dog can do and under which conditions it still holds together.
A better way to manage criteria changes
Obedience work often changes in small increments. Track when you asked for straighter fronts, longer stays, cleaner finishes, or harder setups so you can connect progress to the criteria you changed.
Related pages for obedience and rally handlers
These links are useful if your work is part of a wider sport plan, a general training planner, or a more all-purpose logbook.
Dog training planner for session plans, proofing goals, criteria changes, and progress notes. Plan what to train and log how it went in the same place.
Dog sports planner for agility, rally, obedience, and foundations. Plan sessions, log reps, and track progress across sport skills, ring prep, and homework.
Dog training logbook app for session notes, setups, criteria changes, and progress. Track what you trained, what helped, and what needs more proofing.
Frequently asked questions
Plain-English answers for people looking for a obedience tracker.
What obedience exercises can I track in CueProof?
You can track recalls, stays, heeling, fronts, finishes, positions, retrieve work, ring skills, and any other behavior you want to break out and review separately.
Does CueProof work for rally and competitive obedience?
Yes. It works well for rally, competitive obedience, and foundation work because you can track sessions by plan, behavior, and setup instead of keeping one long mixed list of notes.
Can I use CueProof for proofing obedience behaviors?
Yes. Many people use it to compare how a behavior holds up across locations, distractions, and different setups before moving on to harder practice.
Start with one exercise and keep the reps, proofing notes, and progress together.
Private by default · Built for owners and trainers · Works across multiple dogs