Card Dealer School Las Vegas

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Dealer Instruction: Focused on What Employers and Players Expect

  1. Card Dealer School Las Vegas Las Vegas

Crescent's Casino Dealer Training programs provide up-to-the-minute, relevant instruction on all the latest gaming trends and techniques. What you learn is based on the primary skills employers want to see in the dealers they hire AND what players like to see in the dealers they interact with and tip on the casino floor.

With our “hands on” teaching methods, Crescent School graduates learn a complete understanding of the gaming business. In addition, they will be thoroughly conversant with the rules, techniques, systems, procedures, equipment, and theory in their choice of one (or all) of the following casino games: Blackjack, Roulette, Poker, Mini-Baccarat/Carnival Games, and Craps. The student’s skills and abilities will be developed to a point that qualifies them for employment, at an entry level position (or higher) in the exciting casino industry.

  1. Crescent School of Gaming and Bartending is the only bartending and casino dealing school of its kind in the U.S. That is nationally-accredited by ACCET! That means, by law, Crescent is required to maintain a high placement level for the bartenders and casino dealers who graduate from any of our five locations - which include Las Vegas, New Orleans, Tunica Resorts / Memphis, and Gulfport.
  2. Sacramento Casino School. Hours: 10am to 10pm. Address: Sacramento Casino School 1445 Fulton Ave. Sacramento CA, 95825 Phone No: 916-995-6518.
School

Being professional poker dealers in Las Vegas ourselves, we will most definitely be able to instruct you to deal all of the games in all structures and formats the right way, the first time. We offer this non-certification package to those who would like to learn how to deal cash poker, or just like to get up to speed with the latest games.

'On the Job' Training in our Simulated Casino

'On the job' training in our simulated casino will help you to increase your speed, coordination and confidence on the floor.

As an accredited school, Crescent's gaming reputation is securely established. When you graduate and become a table games dealer, you'll join an exciting, high-growth industry which offers the opportunity for rapid advancement and excellent benefits. And with more and more cities, states, and countries legalizing gaming, your job security is better than ever before.

Classes start every Monday. Upon completion of your chosen course, you'll become a lifelong member of our Crescent School family. Come back any time free of charge to practice in our facilities, utilize our placement services, or attend a refresher course.

Languages

We offer courses in Filipino, Spanish, Vietnamese, and Mandarin languages.

Choose One of Our Casino Dealer Programs

► 350-hour Two-Game Dealing Program (Choose to be trained in two of the following games): Blackjack, Roulette, Poker, Mini-Baccarat/Carnival Games, or Craps.

► 750-hour Comprehensive Dealing Program: With this option, you'll be trained in all of the most popular games available at casinos and on cruise ships worldwide, including, Blackjack, Roulette, Poker, Mini-Baccarat/Carnival Games, and Craps.

Learn more about our Teaching Philosophy.

Find out how to Fund Your New Career.

Call us today or get in touch with us online:


Croupier in Las Vegas (2011)

A croupier or dealer is someone appointed at a gambling table to assist in the conduct of the game, especially in the distribution of bets and payouts. Croupiers are typically employed by casinos.

Origin of the word[edit]

Originally a 'croupier' meant one who stood behind a gambler, with extra reserves of cash to back him up during a gambling session. The word derived from croupe (the rump of a horse) and was by way of analogy to one who rode behind on horseback. It later came to refer to one who was employed to collect the money from a gaming-table.[1]

Originally a 'dealer' meant one who was responsible for distributing cards or the player in the dealer position, regardless of whether or not that player was responsible for distributing the cards.[2]

Training[edit]

A blackjack dealer at Harrah's Las Vegas (2011)

Training methods to become a casino croupier vary from country to country. In North America, blackjack is almost always the game that dealers learn first, as it is simple and popular, and when the dealer makes errors, they tend not to cost the casino much money. In Europe, croupiers tend to learn roulette first. Complex, busy games such as craps, with complicated payout systems, etc., are usually reserved for the most competent and/or ambitious dealers.[3]

Select colleges and non-collegiate third-level educational institutions now offer croupier training courses, formally dubbed Casino Operations Training, which when put it in an historical context is a milestone achievement for the legitimization of poker in the mainstream. Besides courses, there's a host of private lessons available on social media, poker forums and classifieds sections worldwide, which could serve even better than attending an official course, giving one-on-one apprentice–master attention.

Casinos may also offer an in-house training program. However, sometimes it serves better to get a 'general qualification' than to be trained exclusively into one company's way of operating. Prospective employers often prefer candidates without fully relevant experience over a candidate highly experienced in the idiosyncrasies of another operation.[4]

Licensing[edit]

American, Australian, Canadian and British croupiers are required to apply for a gambling license. This license includes police background checks and credit rating checks, to help determine if they are eligible to commence employment. Croupiers are not permitted to deal at a casino until being issued this license.

Tipping[edit]

As is common with customer service staff in the United States, croupiers there depend on tips to make their wage worthwhile. While a croupier should theoretically have no personal interest in the outcome of the game, a successful player customarily tips the croupier, especially in American casinos. Tips are often pooled and divided amongst all the staff. Fraternising with customers is frowned upon, and most casinos prevent their gambling staff from being seen smoking or even being seen in uniform outside the casino. Some gambling strategies include suggestions to tip the casino dealer in order to create a good atmosphere and improve dealer's mood. According to these strategies, tipping might even make the dealer shuffle the cards less frequently and thereby allow easier tracking of particular cards.[5] Australian casinos forbid dealers from taking tips.[6]

Secondhand smoke exposure[edit]

Because casinos tend to allow smoking on the gambling floor, American croupiers are exposed to secondhand smoke. A health hazard evaluation of several Las Vegas casinos showed that nonsmoker croupiers suffered from more respiratory ailments than their administrative counterparts at the casinos and had cotinine and NNAL (both components of secondhand smoke) in their urine samples.[7]Britain banned smoking in all public places, including casinos, in 2007.[8]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^Oxford English Dictionary, Croupier
  2. ^'Definition of Dealer - PokerZone'. dictionary.pokerzone.com.
  3. ^'Career advice - Job tips for workers and job seekers - Jobboom -'. Career advice - Job tips for workers and job seekers - Jobboom.
  4. ^'How to become a Croupier'. GGPoker. 2019-07-03. Retrieved 2019-11-20.[permanent dead link]
  5. ^'Land Casino rules'. casinoobserver.com. Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2010-09-25.
  6. ^'Casino'. Retrieved 2011-07-25.
  7. ^West, Christine. Secondhand Smoke and Casino Dealers. National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. June 16, 2009.
  8. ^'Smoke ban bill details released'. 27 October 2005 – via news.bbc.co.uk.

External links[edit]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Croupiers.

Card Dealer School Las Vegas Las Vegas

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