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If you're interested in taking any of these classes for their own sake, you might want to look into the certification while you're at it. I'm hoping that in the future, if these certifications get a good reputation, they will help create a class of career baristas. Right now if someone applies for a job at my store and they say "I'm a barista", I say, "great..." but it doesn't necessarily mean anything relevant. If we get enough baristas certified, we'll have this pool of people who employers know are really passionate about coffee, spent the money & time, passed at least basic tests of espresso preparation. Hopefully more coffee-shop owners will be willing to pay at least a little more to someone like that--they're more of a sure bet, might not need the same level of resource-investment as far as training goes, and are more likely to bring in more business with passionate attitude and well-prepared drinks. That's what I'm hoping will eventually happen with the certification, anyway. In the mean-time they are a nice motivation to go take a bunch of classes with awesome people, if you're not getting that level of training where you work. I really hope the SCAA, BGA & others figure out how to fold some other schools/classes/trainers into fulfilling the pre-reqs: there are a lot of them out there, and the certification is both quite expensive (for baristas) and hard to get to.
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