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Puppy School
 Puppy training is a valuable long-term investment. It serves many purposes: It teaches your puppy specific commands and also teaches him how to learn; it teaches you how to teach; and it teaches your puppy to be comfortable with other people and other dogs. All in all, it's one of the best investments you can make in your puppy's future behavior.
To choose a good dog trainer or training facility, check with your veterinarian and friends for recommendations and then visit to see for yourself. You should know the trainer or facility before you lay down any cash.
A simple checklist:
- Older puppies may benefit from puppy classes. However, generally speaking, 12 weeks is a very good time to start puppy classes (read more about Socialization ). Start looking for a dog trainer early so that you don’t miss this important learning opportunity.
- Whether choosing a private individual or a franchise, don't gauge quality by price. A competent, experienced trainer may be very reasonable in price.
- Trust your initial impression of the trainer. It is probably valid.
- Check out the training course and methodology. What and how do they teach? Do they cover everything you want your puppy to learn?
- Check experience and credentials. Is this a summer job for someone or a lifetime passion?
- Is the trainer patient? Different puppies learn at different rates. Some are shy while others are bold. They may need different methods to succeed.
- Observe a class. Both people and dogs should be relaxed and having a good time - smiles and wagging tails all-around.
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