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Start with the basics, a good grip on the gun, trigger squeeze, sight alignment, breathing, all that good stuff. Once you get your basics down, start going for failure to stop drills (2 body 1 head) and the like. Slow is smooth and smooth is fast.
Classes by a well recognized institution are always a good way to go, start with a basic level handgun class, if you lay a solid foundation, all the stuff you pile on top of it is more likely to work.
Also don't overshoot on your range session, I'd say definately under 200 rounds, with 50-100 probably being more practical.
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