Okay, so I've been home brewing for about a year now and have a great love of beer. I've decided that professional brewing is my dream job that I can realistically achieve with some time, money, and effort. Now I'm trying to figure out how best to go about it. I know there's at least one pro-brewer on here, and I'm sure other people who know about taking the plunge to reach for a new career.
The big thing I'm torn between is whether to try to get practical brewing experience or academic training first. Or just to jump for whichever I can get first.
Right now, I'm trying to pester local breweries to see if someone will take me on as an apprentice, or just to do the schlep work. I currently am a teacher at a private school, so I'll have the summer to really bug people regularly.
I'm also trying to figure out about good educational programs. Brewing schools are majorly expensive. Fortunately, it looks like my grandparents might be willing to bankroll me to study, if I can reasonably assure them that it will really lead me to a job, and not just be a lark. I'm fortunate to be right near two excellent U.S. programs: UC Davis Brewing and the American Brewers Guild
I'm really strongly thinking about studying in Europe though. Prices are comparable, and it would be pretty awesome to study brewing in Germany, especially since I never studied abroad in college. Looking at a couple programs in Germany or the UK:
VLB (Berlin) - Expensive but sounds really awesome
Institute of Brewing and Distilling (UK) - With a number of programs, including a Diploma in Brewing Modules program that looks like a great starting point, and less expensive than pretty much any other program I've looked at.