Ethical and force-free • Science-based expertise • Fully accredited behaviourist

I have dedicated my life to being able to help owners with dogs that are otherwise considered write offs using only force free training. At College4Canines, we wholeheartedly believe that every dog is an individual, deserving of a training experience that caters to their specific needs.
Specialised behavioural training for reactive dogs designed to make a real difference by dealing with the root cause, emotion, or motivation. Accredited Dog Behaviourist serving clients across Morpeth, Blyth & Northumberland
Our Lifeskills classes are held at Acklington Village Hall, Morpeth and open to adolescent and adult dogs. Available in Bronze, Silver & Gold we are the ONLY place in Northumberland that include group social walks in classes!
Giving your new addition the best start with force-free training at our Perfect Puppy training classes in Acklington Village Hall, Morpeth, Northumberland providing professional training to pups under 6 months
Thrilling Scentwork classes and workshops open to all breeds at Acklington Village Hall, Morpeth, Northumberland with a UK College of Scent Dogs accredited Scentwork Instructor.
And be the first to know when new class dates are available for our Puppy, Lifeskills, or Scentwork sessions. I also use this list to share updates on new services and force-free training opportunities across Northumberland.

College 4 Canines is led by Denise Devereux Bsc (Hons) Canine Behaviour, a fully qualified dog behaviourist supporting dogs across Blyth and Northumberland for 10+ years.
I got into dog behaviour when I rescued my first dog, Bear. We were turned down for classes because of his behaviour, which made me determined to prove them wrong. We managed to accomplish Kennel Club Good Citizen Gold.
College 4 Canines was set up to allow people who cannot attend classes because their dog isn't "suitable" for a class environment to still have access to professional force free training.
If I could change the world, I want to be the one that proves to owners and other trainers that force free dog training works. It worked for my boy, and can work for you too!
Member of Pet Professional Guild
Member of The Pet Professional Network
Student member of APBC working towards Clinical Animal Behaviourist
Accredited Detection Dog Handler and Scentwork Instructor through
the UK College of Scent Dogs
Assessor for PAWS Therapy Dog Training
Assistance Dog Trainer for Pawsability (Owner Trained Assistance Dogs)

Who it’s for
Owners of reactive dogs wanting to use force free training or those with dogs considered "write offs" by others.
What we help with
At College 4 Canines, we provide professional force-free dog behaviour and training support for dogs and owners in Northumberland. Whether your dog is reactive around other dogs, nervous in public, overexcited, or difficult to manage at home, we use science-based positive reinforcement methods to help create long-term behaviour change without fear, punishment, or intimidation.
Our approach focuses on understanding why behaviours happen — not simply suppressing them.
Every plan is tailored to the individual, using effective, force-free training methods that prioritise ethical treatment regardless of the intensity of the behaviour.

Perfect Puppy: Giving your new Puppy the best start with force-free Puppy training classes in Morpeth, Northumberland.
Lifeskills (Bronze, Silver & Gold): For adolescent and adult dogs, or rescue dogs with little training history. Our Lifeskills classes in Morpeth work on obedience up to advanced levels, and the only classes that include group social walks at Amble Links Beach & Amble Market.
Scentwork: Thrilling Scentwork classes in Morpeth, Northumberland from an accredited UK College of Scent Dogs Scentwork Instructor. Open to all breeds to enrich your dog's life for fun.
Reactive Dog Classes: The only place in Northumberland offering specific group classes for reactive dogs.

We’re proud to be recommended by families across Northumberland.
Our reviews reflect our calm approach, clear support, and commitment to dog welfare.
Helpful articles covering puppy training, behaviour insights, and practical tips to support life with your dog. Written by Denise Devereux Bsc (Hons

Many dog owners are told that their dog simply needs “more exposure” to the things they fear. Unfortunately, this advice often leads to overwhelmed dogs, frustrated owners, and behaviour that becomes worse rather than better.
Whether your dog barks at other dogs, lunges at people, fears loud noises, struggles with traffic, or becomes anxious in unfamiliar environments, effective behaviour change requires much more than simply exposing them to the trigger repeatedly.
At College 4 Canines, we use science-based, force-free behaviour modification techniques including desensitisation and classical conditioning to help dogs develop positive emotional responses to previously challenging situations. Understanding how these methods work can make the difference between successful behaviour change and unintentionally making a problem worse.
Exposure training simply means allowing a dog to experience a trigger or situation that causes an emotional response.
The trigger may be:
Other dogs
Strangers
Vehicles
Loud noises
Veterinary handling
Being left alone
Novel environments
Exposure itself is neither good nor bad. The outcome depends entirely on how that exposure is managed.
Many owners assume that if a dog is repeatedly exposed to something they fear, they will eventually “get used to it.” While this occasionally happens, more often the opposite occurs. Repeated exposure above the dog’s coping threshold can increase fear, anxiety, frustration, and reactivity over time. Behaviour professionals often refer to this as flooding.
Instead of learning that the trigger is safe, the dog may simply learn that they have no control over the situation while continuing to experience fear.
For successful behaviour change, exposure must be carefully structured and paired with positive experiences.
Most reactive behaviour is driven by emotion rather than disobedience.
A dog that barks and lunges at another dog is often experiencing:
Fear
Anxiety
Frustration
Over-arousal
Uncertainty
Likewise, a dog that panics during fireworks is not choosing to misbehave. They are responding emotionally to something they perceive as threatening.
This is why punishment rarely solves behavioural problems. It may suppress outward behaviour temporarily, but it does not address the underlying emotional state. College 4 Canines focuses on identifying and changing the emotion driving the behaviour rather than simply suppressing symptoms.
Desensitisation is a behavioural technique that gradually reduces a dog’s sensitivity to a trigger by exposing them to it at a level they can comfortably cope with before slowly increasing intensity over time.
The key word is gradually.
For example, if a dog reacts to other dogs at a distance of 20 metres, asking them to walk through a crowded park is unlikely to be successful.
Instead, we might begin working at 50 metres where the dog can notice another dog without becoming stressed.
Once the dog is consistently comfortable at that distance, we can gradually reduce the gap over multiple sessions.
This approach allows the dog to remain under threshold and capable of learning.
Threshold refers to the point at which a dog becomes emotionally overwhelmed and unable to process information effectively.
Signs a dog may be approaching or exceeding threshold include:
Barking
Lunging
Growling
Freezing
Excessive panting
Refusing food
Hypervigilance
Inability to respond to cues
Effective desensitisation occurs below this threshold.
If your dog cannot take food, engage with you, or relax in the presence of a trigger, they are likely too close and learning becomes significantly more difficult. Many experienced behaviour professionals emphasise that successful exposure work should occur while the dog remains under threshold and able to notice the trigger without reacting.
Classical conditioning involves creating an association between two events.
One of the most famous examples is Pavlov’s dogs, who learned that a bell predicted food.
The same principle applies in behaviour modification.
If every appearance of a trigger predicts something wonderful, the dog’s emotional response can gradually change.
For example:
Dog appears → Chicken arrives
Person appears → Cheese arrives
Traffic passes → High-value treats arrive
Over time, the trigger begins to predict good things.
The dog’s emotional response shifts from:
“That thing is scary.”
to
“That thing makes good things happen.”
This process is known as counter-conditioning and is one of the most effective force-free behaviour modification techniques available. Counter-conditioning aims to change the dog’s emotional response by pairing the trigger with positive outcomes such as food, praise, or play.
Many owners unknowingly use exposure without conditioning.
For example:
Walking a fearful dog through busy streets every day.
Taking a reactive dog repeatedly to crowded parks.
Forcing a nervous dog to interact with strangers.
Repeatedly exposing a noise-sensitive dog to loud sounds.
The dog experiences the trigger, but nothing changes emotionally.
In some cases, repeated exposure can actually strengthen the negative emotional response because the dog repeatedly rehearses fear, anxiety, or reactivity. Controlled exposure paired with positive experiences is far more effective than simply hoping the dog will “get over it.”
Imagine a dog that barks and lunges whenever they see another dog.
A traditional exposure approach might involve walking near dogs repeatedly and hoping the dog becomes accustomed to them.
A desensitisation and classical conditioning approach would look very different:
Determine how far away another dog needs to be for your dog to remain calm and able to take treats.
The moment your dog notices another dog, begin delivering high-value treats.
The treats stop when the other dog disappears.
Over multiple sessions, your dog learns:
“Other dogs predict chicken.”
rather than:
“Other dogs are scary.”
Only once your dog consistently remains relaxed do you decrease distance slightly.
Progress should always be based on your dog’s emotional state rather than a fixed timeline.
The most common mistake is reducing distance too soon.
Behaviour change takes time. Rushing often leads to setbacks.
If your dog is barking, lunging, trembling, or refusing food, the training setup is likely too difficult.
The trigger must predict something genuinely valuable.
For many dogs this means:
Chicken
Cheese
Sausage
Liver treats
Occasional training sessions produce slower results than frequent, controlled exposures.
One of the most common questions we hear is:
“How long before my dog is fixed?”
The answer depends on:
The severity of the behaviour
How long it has been occurring
The dog’s genetics
Previous learning history
Consistency of training
Some dogs show improvement within weeks.
Others require months of structured behaviour modification.
Success should not be measured solely by whether the dog stops reacting. Improvements in body language, recovery time, confidence, and ability to remain under threshold are all signs of progress.
Behaviour modification can be challenging because every dog is different.
Determining threshold distances, selecting appropriate rewards, reading body language, and progressing at the correct pace requires experience and careful observation.
At College 4 Canines, our behaviour consultations focus on understanding the underlying emotions driving your dog’s behaviour before creating a tailored force-free behaviour plan. We combine management strategies, desensitisation, classical conditioning, and positive reinforcement training to help dogs feel safer, more confident, and better able to cope with the world around them.
If you are struggling with a reactive, fearful, or anxious dog, professional support can make the process clearer, safer, and more effective.
If your dog struggles with reactivity, fear, anxiety, aggression, noise sensitivities, or other behavioural challenges, you don’t have to navigate it alone.
College 4 Canines provides professional force-free behavioural support throughout Northumberland, helping owners understand why behaviour occurs and how to create lasting positive change.
Book your FREE assessment call today at https://www.college4canines.co.uk/behaviour-northumberland and discover how a personalised behaviour plan can help your dog feel calmer, more confident, and more successful in everyday life.

Many dog owners are told that their dog simply needs “more exposure” to the things they fear. Unfortunately, this advice often leads to overwhelmed dogs, frustrated owners, and behaviour that becomes worse rather than better.
Whether your dog barks at other dogs, lunges at people, fears loud noises, struggles with traffic, or becomes anxious in unfamiliar environments, effective behaviour change requires much more than simply exposing them to the trigger repeatedly.
At College 4 Canines, we use science-based, force-free behaviour modification techniques including desensitisation and classical conditioning to help dogs develop positive emotional responses to previously challenging situations. Understanding how these methods work can make the difference between successful behaviour change and unintentionally making a problem worse.
Exposure training simply means allowing a dog to experience a trigger or situation that causes an emotional response.
The trigger may be:
Other dogs
Strangers
Vehicles
Loud noises
Veterinary handling
Being left alone
Novel environments
Exposure itself is neither good nor bad. The outcome depends entirely on how that exposure is managed.
Many owners assume that if a dog is repeatedly exposed to something they fear, they will eventually “get used to it.” While this occasionally happens, more often the opposite occurs. Repeated exposure above the dog’s coping threshold can increase fear, anxiety, frustration, and reactivity over time. Behaviour professionals often refer to this as flooding.
Instead of learning that the trigger is safe, the dog may simply learn that they have no control over the situation while continuing to experience fear.
For successful behaviour change, exposure must be carefully structured and paired with positive experiences.
Most reactive behaviour is driven by emotion rather than disobedience.
A dog that barks and lunges at another dog is often experiencing:
Fear
Anxiety
Frustration
Over-arousal
Uncertainty
Likewise, a dog that panics during fireworks is not choosing to misbehave. They are responding emotionally to something they perceive as threatening.
This is why punishment rarely solves behavioural problems. It may suppress outward behaviour temporarily, but it does not address the underlying emotional state. College 4 Canines focuses on identifying and changing the emotion driving the behaviour rather than simply suppressing symptoms.
Desensitisation is a behavioural technique that gradually reduces a dog’s sensitivity to a trigger by exposing them to it at a level they can comfortably cope with before slowly increasing intensity over time.
The key word is gradually.
For example, if a dog reacts to other dogs at a distance of 20 metres, asking them to walk through a crowded park is unlikely to be successful.
Instead, we might begin working at 50 metres where the dog can notice another dog without becoming stressed.
Once the dog is consistently comfortable at that distance, we can gradually reduce the gap over multiple sessions.
This approach allows the dog to remain under threshold and capable of learning.
Threshold refers to the point at which a dog becomes emotionally overwhelmed and unable to process information effectively.
Signs a dog may be approaching or exceeding threshold include:
Barking
Lunging
Growling
Freezing
Excessive panting
Refusing food
Hypervigilance
Inability to respond to cues
Effective desensitisation occurs below this threshold.
If your dog cannot take food, engage with you, or relax in the presence of a trigger, they are likely too close and learning becomes significantly more difficult. Many experienced behaviour professionals emphasise that successful exposure work should occur while the dog remains under threshold and able to notice the trigger without reacting.
Classical conditioning involves creating an association between two events.
One of the most famous examples is Pavlov’s dogs, who learned that a bell predicted food.
The same principle applies in behaviour modification.
If every appearance of a trigger predicts something wonderful, the dog’s emotional response can gradually change.
For example:
Dog appears → Chicken arrives
Person appears → Cheese arrives
Traffic passes → High-value treats arrive
Over time, the trigger begins to predict good things.
The dog’s emotional response shifts from:
“That thing is scary.”
to
“That thing makes good things happen.”
This process is known as counter-conditioning and is one of the most effective force-free behaviour modification techniques available. Counter-conditioning aims to change the dog’s emotional response by pairing the trigger with positive outcomes such as food, praise, or play.
Many owners unknowingly use exposure without conditioning.
For example:
Walking a fearful dog through busy streets every day.
Taking a reactive dog repeatedly to crowded parks.
Forcing a nervous dog to interact with strangers.
Repeatedly exposing a noise-sensitive dog to loud sounds.
The dog experiences the trigger, but nothing changes emotionally.
In some cases, repeated exposure can actually strengthen the negative emotional response because the dog repeatedly rehearses fear, anxiety, or reactivity. Controlled exposure paired with positive experiences is far more effective than simply hoping the dog will “get over it.”
Imagine a dog that barks and lunges whenever they see another dog.
A traditional exposure approach might involve walking near dogs repeatedly and hoping the dog becomes accustomed to them.
A desensitisation and classical conditioning approach would look very different:
Determine how far away another dog needs to be for your dog to remain calm and able to take treats.
The moment your dog notices another dog, begin delivering high-value treats.
The treats stop when the other dog disappears.
Over multiple sessions, your dog learns:
“Other dogs predict chicken.”
rather than:
“Other dogs are scary.”
Only once your dog consistently remains relaxed do you decrease distance slightly.
Progress should always be based on your dog’s emotional state rather than a fixed timeline.
The most common mistake is reducing distance too soon.
Behaviour change takes time. Rushing often leads to setbacks.
If your dog is barking, lunging, trembling, or refusing food, the training setup is likely too difficult.
The trigger must predict something genuinely valuable.
For many dogs this means:
Chicken
Cheese
Sausage
Liver treats
Occasional training sessions produce slower results than frequent, controlled exposures.
One of the most common questions we hear is:
“How long before my dog is fixed?”
The answer depends on:
The severity of the behaviour
How long it has been occurring
The dog’s genetics
Previous learning history
Consistency of training
Some dogs show improvement within weeks.
Others require months of structured behaviour modification.
Success should not be measured solely by whether the dog stops reacting. Improvements in body language, recovery time, confidence, and ability to remain under threshold are all signs of progress.
Behaviour modification can be challenging because every dog is different.
Determining threshold distances, selecting appropriate rewards, reading body language, and progressing at the correct pace requires experience and careful observation.
At College 4 Canines, our behaviour consultations focus on understanding the underlying emotions driving your dog’s behaviour before creating a tailored force-free behaviour plan. We combine management strategies, desensitisation, classical conditioning, and positive reinforcement training to help dogs feel safer, more confident, and better able to cope with the world around them.
If you are struggling with a reactive, fearful, or anxious dog, professional support can make the process clearer, safer, and more effective.
If your dog struggles with reactivity, fear, anxiety, aggression, noise sensitivities, or other behavioural challenges, you don’t have to navigate it alone.
College 4 Canines provides professional force-free behavioural support throughout Northumberland, helping owners understand why behaviour occurs and how to create lasting positive change.
Book your FREE assessment call today at https://www.college4canines.co.uk/behaviour-northumberland and discover how a personalised behaviour plan can help your dog feel calmer, more confident, and more successful in everyday life.
College 4 Canines provides professional force-free dog training and dog behaviour services in Northumberland, including puppy classes, reactive dog training, behavioural consultations, scentwork classes, lifeskills training, recall training, loose lead walking support, and one-to-one dog behaviour sessions. We help dogs and owners across Morpeth, Alnwick, Amble, Ashington, Blyth, and surrounding areas using science-based positive reinforcement methods.
A force-free dog trainer uses positive reinforcement and reward-based training methods without punishment, fear, pain, or intimidation. At College 4 Canines, our force-free dog training approach focuses on improving behaviour by building confidence, trust, emotional wellbeing, and clear communication between dogs and owners.
A dog trainer focuses mainly on teaching skills and obedience behaviours such as recall, loose lead walking, and puppy training. A qualified dog behaviourist works with more complex emotional and behavioural issues including reactivity, fear, aggression, anxiety, and phobias. College 4 Canines offers both professional dog training and canine behaviour support in Northumberland.
Yes. College 4 Canines specialises in reactive dog training and behavioural support for dogs that bark, lunge, growl, or struggle around other dogs, people, traffic, or unfamiliar environments. Our reactive dog training programmes use ethical science-based methods to help dogs feel calmer, safer, and more confident.
We provide dog training and canine behaviour services across Northumberland, including:
Morpeth
Alnwick
Amble
Ashington
Blyth
Warkworth
Acklington
surrounding Northumberland areas.
Our puppy classes and dog training classes are held at Acklington Village Hall near Morpeth.
Puppies can usually begin puppy training classes from around 8 weeks old following veterinary guidance regarding vaccinations. Early puppy training and socialisation are important for developing confidence, focus, calm behaviour, and good social skills during critical developmental stages.
Yes. Our puppy classes in Northumberland are designed to support both confident and nervous puppies using calm, positive reinforcement training methods. We help puppies build confidence safely and at their own pace in a supportive training environment in our confidence building week.
College 4 Canines uses modern science-based dog training methods based on positive reinforcement and behavioural science. We do not use punishment-based techniques, fear, or aversive training tools. Our goal is to improve behaviour while protecting the dog’s emotional wellbeing and strengthening the relationship between dogs and owners.
Many dog behaviour problems can improve significantly with professional support, consistency, and appropriate training. College 4 Canines works with issues including:
Reactivity
Fearfulness
Lead pulling
Recall problems
Puppy biting
Barking
Anxiety
Confidence issues.
Behaviour plans are tailored to each individual dog and owner.
College 4 Canines provides qualified, accredited, force-free dog training and canine behaviour support in Northumberland. We specialise in helping puppies, adolescent dogs, and reactive dogs using ethical evidence-based training methods designed to achieve long-term results while supporting emotional wellbeing and confidence.
Yes. We provide one-to-one dog training and behavioural consultations for puppies, adolescent dogs, rescue dogs, and dogs with behavioural challenges across Northumberland. Individual sessions are tailored to the specific needs of the dog and owner.
Absolutely. Dogs of all ages can learn new behaviours and skills using positive reinforcement training methods. Whether you have a puppy, adolescent dog, rescue dog, or older dog, training can help improve behaviour, confidence, and communication.
Puppy socialisation classes help puppies learn how to feel calm and confident around:
People
Dogs
Sounds
New environments
Everyday experiences.
Proper puppy socialisation can help reduce the risk of future behaviour problems including fearfulness and reactivity.

.
Kind, professional support for dogs considered "unsuitable" elsewhere. Book your classes or an assessment call today.
College 4 Canines | Phone: +44 7795 199208 | Training Venue: Acklington Village Hall, Acklington, Northumberland, NE65 9BW.
© College4Canines 2026
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