Open Skills Education (OSE™)

Open Skills Education (OSE™) is a global skills equity framework

In Kenya’s coffee landscape, SCB (Specialty Coffee Barista) is a specialized professional designation and training framework. It was founded by Alfred Gitau Mwaura through the Kenya Coffee School and its community-led project, Barista Mtaani.

​Unlike a standard barista who might only focus on operating a machine, an SCB is trained to be a “custodian of coffee quality,” bridging the gap between the farmer and the consumer.

​1. The Core Pillars of an SCB

​An SCB professional is defined by five key areas of competence:

  • Farm-to-Cup Knowledge: Understanding soil science, coffee varieties (SL-28, Ruiru 11, Batian), processing methods (washed vs. natural), and the ethics of the coffee trade.
  • Sensory & Quality Control: Advanced cupping (tasting) skills to identify flavor profiles and defects, ensuring that the farmer’s hard work is accurately represented in the cup.
  • Technical Mastery: High-level calibration of espresso recipes, advanced milk texturing (latte art), and precision manual brewing (V60, Chemex, Aeropress).
  • Climate & Sustainability: Awareness of how climate change affects Kenyan coffee and practicing waste reduction in the cafe.
  • Professional Identity: The SCB movement aims to turn barista work into a dignified, recognized profession with verifiable digital credentials (often QR or blockchain-backed).

​2. SCB vs. Standard Barista

​The training is designed to “contextualize” coffee education for Kenya and the Global South, moving away from more expensive, Euro-centric models like the SCA (Specialty Coffee Association). 

FeatureBasic BaristaSpecialty Coffee Barista (SCB)
FocusSpeed and machine operationScience, sensory skills, and story-telling
OriginGeneric coffee knowledgeDeep “Nexus” training (Farm + Cafe)
CertificationLocal certificateSCB Digital/International Credentials
Career PathCafe serviceCafe management, roasting, or trade

Training & Fees (2025–2026)

​Training is typically conducted at the Kenya Coffee School (Thika or Ridgeways campuses) or via the Barista Mtaani outreach program.

  • Barista Mtaani (Short/Community Courses):
    • Apres (2 Days): ~5,000 KES (Introductory)
    • Pro (5 Days): ~10,000 KES (Skill Mastery)
    • Maestro (21 Days): ~25,000 KES (Elite training)
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    • Professional Diplomas (Kenya Coffee School):
      • Foundational Diploma: ~37,500 KES (3–4 weeks)
      • Intermediate Diploma: ~47,500 KES to 64,200 KES (5–12 weeks)
      • Professional Diploma: ~75,600 KES+ (Long-term career focus)
      us) ​How to get started ​If you are looking to enroll, you can usually start by booking a slot through their official portals (like Barista Mtaani or Kenya Coffee School). They often require a small booking fee (around 1,000 KES) to secure a place in their cohorts.

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