This very good boy fetched himself a diploma.

A loyal upstate service dog named Griffin was with his owner every step of the way as she worked towards her master’s in occupational therapy — and donned a doggy cap and gown to receive his own honorary degree at her graduation ceremony over the weekend.

“I pushed for him to graduate from Day One,” Griffin’s owner, Brittany Hawley, said Monday. “He did everything I did.”

Hawley, 25, uses a wheelchair and has chronic pain, and the golden retriever helps her with opening doors, turning on lights and fetching items she indicates with a laser pointer. Most importantly, the pup provides solace amid Hawley’s relentless pain, which causes depression and anxiety.

Griffin accompanied Hawley to classes at Clarkson University in Potsdam — as well as to her internship in Fort Bragg, North Carolina, where she helped soldiers with disabilities.

“My patients would say, ‘My therapist today is Brittany and Griffin,'” Hawley said.

On Saturday, the board of trustees at Clarkson honored the 4-year-old pooch with an honorary degree, saying he demonstrated “extraordinary effort, steadfast commitment and diligent dedication to the well-being and student success” of Hawley.

The pair met through a program called paws4prison, in which inmates at West Virginia jails train assistance dogs.

“The inmates allow many dogs to come up to you and let the dog choose you,” Hawley said. “Some dogs were scared of the wheelchair. Griffin jumped right into my lap and licked me across the face.”

When Hawley applies for jobs, she says, Griffin will remain by her side.

“I couldn’t participate in anything without him,” she said. “I’m so used to him being there.”

With Post wires