Sit. Study. Fetch a bachelor’s degree in dog training.

In this May 7, 2019 photo, Professor Stephen Mackenzie, head of the university’s canine training program does an obedience drill with his dog Kimo, at the State University of New York, Cobleskill, in Cobleskill, N.Y. Mackenzie, who has trained military and police dogs for 40 years and authored professional manuals on the subject, said he developed Cobleskill’s bachelor of technology degree partly in response to a heightened demand for working dogs in the aftermath of 9/11. (AP Photo/Mary Esch)

In this May 7, 2019 photo, border collie Finn alerts to a clove oil sample in a scent wall used to train dogs for drug detection and other nose work at the State University of New York, Cobleskill, in Cobleskill, N.Y. The four-year program in “canine training and management” officially launches in the fall of 2019 at the century-old agricultural college sprawled across 900 acres in central New York. (AP Photo/Mary Esch)

In this May 7, 2019 photo, student Jessie Show works with Luna, a springer spaniel whom she has trained to sniff out a fungus sample placed in a scent box at the State University of New York, Cobleskill, in Cobleskill, N.Y. Cobleskill’s canine program was a major deciding factor in choosing a college, said Show, who grew up near Scranton, Pennsylvania. She said she plans to train service dogs for people with physical handicaps. (AP Photo/Mary Esch)

COBLESKILL, N.Y. — Luna the springer spaniel is learning to sniff out a troublesome golf course fungus in return for a tennis ball while helping her handler fetch a new breed of bachelor’s degree.

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