We offer regular Canine Good Citizen Tests. Check our schedule to find our
next testing date.
The Canine Good Citizen (CGC)
program, established in 1989, is an American Kennel Club program to promote responsible dog ownership and to encourage
the training of well-mannered dogs. A dog and handler team must take a short behavioral evaluation of less than half an hour;
dogs who pass the evaluation earn the Canine Good Citizen title, which is represented after the dog's name, abbreviating it
as CGC; for example, "Fido CGC".
The evaluation consists of ten objectives. All items must be
completed satisfactorily or the team fails. Test items include:
- Accepting a friendly stranger.
- Sitting politely for petting.
- Allowing
basic grooming procedures.
- Walking on a loose lead.
- Walking through a crowd.
- Sitting and lying down on command and staying in place.
- Coming when called.
- Reacting appropriately
to another dog.
- Reacting appropriately to distractions.
- Calmly enduring supervised separation from the owner.
Dogs do not have to be registered with the AKC to earn a CGC, nor do
they have to be purebred or, in fact, registered with any canine organization. The goal is to promote good citizenship
for all dogs.
Since its inception, the CGC program has become the model for similar
programs around the world, is the backbone of other exams, such as those given for therapy dogs, and is a good starting
point for more advanced dog training.