I have to say that TRAINING is the only way to go with this one. Yes it can take awhile, but it's really the only responsible solution. You need to crate train your baby, and you need to teach her the 'hush' command... and you don't need to wait until she is in the middle of a full on barking episode to do this, because she won't be calm enough to learn what you are trying to teach her.
Speak/Hush:
The best way to teach the 'hush' command is to first teach the 'speak' command. When she barks, say 'speak' and give her a treat (I know this sounds counterproductive, as it is reinforcing the unwanted behavior, but you have to teach her the
difference between unwanted and wanted behavior before she can learn to distinguish between the two). After you give her the treat, she will have to hush to eat it. Quickly say 'hush' and the give her a
high value treat to reinforce this command (such an bits of boiled chicken). This is the same concept of opposites that you would use if you were teaching the 'Take it/Leave it' commands. It is effective and, if you're consistent, it will go a long way towards solving your problem.
The second thing you need to do is ignore her. This is called 'extinguishing the behavior', and it is often times very difficult. When a behavior is not given any type of reinforcement (i.e. attention or an axious reaction from you) it will eventually become less appealing to the dog, and the dog will engage in this behavior less and less. Because you have essentially taught your baby that her barking gets her the attention she desires, it will take longer to undo this 'lesson' than it would have had you taken the time to train her from the begining. This is where a crate comes in handy.
Crate training:
Open the door to her crate with her in front of it. Toss a high value treat inside. She should go in after it. Allow her to go in and come back out if she wants to. Repeat this a few times until she shows no hesitancy in entering the crate. After the fifth or sixth time that she does this comfortably, start giving her treats while she is inside the crate, then, when she is comfortable, progress to closing the door on her before she comes out, giving her treats while she is in the crate. If you repeat this process enough, she will eventually come to associate her crate with good things and learn to love it. NEVER just force her in there without first letting her become accustomed to the space.
Extinguishing using the crate:
Put her in her crate when it is time for you to study (this is after you have taught her basic crate training). If she doesn't bark, treat her and pay her some attention, repeating every so often throughout your study session. If she
does bark, CALMLY ignore her until she stops barking for a minimum of 3 seconds (you might want to do this at the same
time you would normally study, but not during an
actual study session, so that you can listen for the break in barking). When you here that break, give her your full attention and treat her. If she starts barking again, turn immediately away. Repeat, working up to a progressively longer time limit.
Side Note:
You say you've tried everything, but here's a tip: you don't NEED to try everything. You need to find ONE effective training method (be it this or any other expertly recommended method) and CONSISTENTLY
stick with it! If you keep switching things up, you'll only confuse the dog more. Also, I know it's difficult, but STAY CALM! The person was correct when they agreed with Cesar. Dogs CAN sense our moods, and an already stressed dog isn't going to benefit from the added stress of her owner.
One Last Thing:
You said that you were going to wait until you moved to begin training... But your puppy is learning NOW whether you are ready to teach her or not. It is up to you to make sure that she is learning the things you WANT her to know... Or whether she is learning unwanted behaviors that will make formal training more difficult in the long run, because she's having to unlearn her bad habits. Training is not just teaching our dogs tricks. Training is more about teaching OURSELVES how to interact with our pups so they (and we) can learn to communicate in a way that is mutually beneficial.
Sorry this post was so long! And I hope the tone came across the right way, because I'm not judging you AT ALL! I'm just passionate about dogs
Good luck with your baby, and I hope I was able to help!