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I agree with Melissa and Franklin!!
Sounds like he needs:
1) More exercise and
2) Less freedom.
He shouldn't be chewing up stuff he finds on the floor because he shouldn't be loose in areas that aren't puppy-proof. :-) Just to give you an idea, Jack was not out of the kitchen very often until he was around 6 or 7 months old. He had a puppy play-pen set up in the breakfast nook for when we were busy (cooking meals, paying bills). And we had the kitchen baby-gated for when we could sorta-kinda pay attention to him (keeping an eye on him but not interacting with him).
Now, what that meant is we gave up almost everything for that first six months or so. We paid bills, cleaned the house, cut the grass, and played with the puppy! I couldn't even watch a half-hour sitcom. A puppy will be moving the entire time he is awake, so as he gets older and naps less his behavior will seem to worsen.
I agree you might want to enroll him in an upbeat puppy training class. Go and watch one and make sure that everything is kept very short and very happy with lots of time for puppies to relax and no puppy "play-times" that look like uncontrolled chaos, with bossy puppies terrorizing submissive puppies.
Personally I think the single biggest mistake people make with puppies is giving them too much freedom too soon. Too much freedom, and not enough play. We used to give Jack cardboard boxes to shred (the plain brown ones). That would keep him busy for a good half hour or so. Tug games also help IF you also teach "leave it" and pup learns no teeth on the people, and drop the toy when the people say so. I agree with Bev about giving a short "time out" if the biting escalates. I used baby gates and would sit down with Jack in the kitchen. If he would bite me, I would say "ah-ah" and if he did not stop, I would get up and step over the baby gate (while prying him off my pant leg) and go out of sight and ignore him for a minute, maybe two. Lather, rinse, repeat. Eventually he got the message, though it took awhile (think weeks, not days).
If it makes you feel better, one day when Jack was about four months old, I went into the living room to see my husband sitting on the sofa, looking sad. I said "Honey, what's wrong?" and he said "He's AWFUL. We give him a good home. You'd think he'd be more grateful."
I laughed and laughed. When I stopped laughing, I said "He's not awful. He's a puppy."
The puppy stage is not fun for a lot of people. Personally I enjoy it, but it's a tremendous amount of work. You usually end up with at least two pairs of favorite pants and several pairs of shoes ruined, and usually some woodwork or furniture. You lose sleep and friends don't understand when you mumble "We'd love to go, but the puppy....." because they don't get that if you don't spend time with the puppy after work, he will proceed to terrorize your entire family for the next three days.
This too shall pass.
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