ADGA Judges Online Training Materials

The American Dairy Goat Association’s judges are licensed under a rigorous program of training and certification.
Here’s a breakdown of the basic program and the information needed:

GUIDE TO AN ADGA JUDGE’S LICENSE
There are several steps to becoming licensed to judge dairy goats at an officially sanctioned ADGA show. This involves achieving a basic knowledge by attending a Pre-Judge’s Training Conference and then attending a Judge’s Training Conference and passing a series of four basic tests of proficiency.
Pre-Judges Training Conference 
This program is for breeders, youth, and judge candidates. It consists of a full day of instruction. It has a prescribed content that includes the parts of the goat, scorecards, terminology, breed standards, defects, oral reasons, judging techniques, and ethics.
Training Conference 
The Training Conference is a more formalized program of training and testing of judge candidates. A specified fee is charged for the program, as set by the Judge’s Training Committee. There is one day of training and one day of testing, which includes a written test, the placement of eight classes of live animals, and the presentation of oral reasons to evaluate a candidate’s accuracy and presentation skills. These tests must be passed at specific standards of performance in order for a license to be granted. For lesser fees, the TC may also be taken as an auditor or as a spectator, though these two classifications will not result in licensure.
Licensing 
There are several levels of licensure. Successful new candidates start with a One-Year Apprentice License. This must be renewed the following year and if successfully passed at a higher standard, can become a Two-Year License. From this level, a Four-Year License can be achieved at renewal but ever higher levels of performance are required. After this, with continuous renewal and licensure of at least 13 years, an Advanced License may be achieved. Beyond this point, advanced judges must attend judging seminars every four years to maintain their status.
ADGA Judges Training Materials: 
Becoming an ADGA Judge
Judge Preparation Checklist
So You Are Going To Be a Judge
Eligibility, Certification & Obligations
Pre Judges Training Conference (Pre-TC)
Pre-TC Lesson Materials 
Training Conferences
What to expect at a TC

Dairy Goat Structure and Function
The Parts of the Goat
The Ideal Type
ADGA Unified Scorecard
Applications of the Unified Scorecard
General Defects – Summary
General Defects – Discussion
The breed standards
Breed Specific Defects-Summary
Breed specific defects – discussion
Disqualifications -Summary and Discussion

Judging Dairy Goats
Reasons
Terminology
Reasons Tutorial
Practice Class 6
Yearling LaMancha Milkers
Practice Class 7
3-Year Old Alpine Milkers
Practice Class 8
3-Year Old LaMancha Milkers
Practice Class 9
4-Year Old Nubian Milkers
Pictures for practice reasons
Maturation
Profiles
Judging Males
Judging Groups
Showmanship Scorecard

Resources in the ADGA Guidebook

A-Judging Dairy Goats Article XIII

1-Written Reasons Practice Sheet  – Section D

2-Guide for Judges of Dairy Goat Showmanship – Section H

3-Guide for Judging Grooming and Dairy Goat Showmanship -Section I

B-Show Rules Article IX

1-Rules Governing Show Officials and Judges – Section A

2-Definitions – Section N

3-Arrangement of Classes and Making Awards – Section E

4-Junior Division Classes and Championships – Section F

5-Senior Division Classes and Championships – Section G

6-Selecting the Grand Champion and the Reserve Grand Champion – Section I

7-Measuring the Nigerian Dwarf Breed – Appendix

8-Winning a Leg Toward Championship – Section J

9-Official Report of Awards -Section K

10-Reports – Section L

11-Complaints and Penalties – Section M

12-Code of Ethics for Exhibitors and Show Committees – Section O

13-Electronic Identification- pp.172-174

C-Rules for Judges Article XIV

1-Pledge of Eligibility and Ethics for Judges – Section E

2-Complaints, Hearings, and Enforcement Procedures – Section G

3-Standards of Attire and Appearance – Section H

4-Judge’s Recognition Program – Section F