Apprenticeships
An apprenticeship is a real job that helps people to earn while they learn, gaining valuable knowledge, skills and behaviours tailored to a specific job role. Apprentices, like any other employees, have a contract with you.
An apprenticeship must last at least 8 months. Some apprenticeship courses can be up to 6 years long, but the average is 2 years.
Apprentices will be trained by a training provider so they become competent in their role. They'll have to complete a certain number of hours of training. How many hours depends on the apprenticeship they're doing. Training is done during working hours - usually about a day a week or regular blocks of a week.
Apprentices will have an assessment at the end of their apprenticeship to prove they’re occupationally competent. They’ll get a recognised qualification.
Who can do an apprenticeship
Existing employees can do an apprenticeship, or you can hire someone new. They must be:
- 16 or over
- living in England
- not in full-time education
Benefits for your organisation
Apprenticeships can:
- build the skills your business needs
- create a pipeline of talent for your organisation
- improve productivity and staff morale
Qualification levels
Apprenticeships are available between level 2 and level 7. The qualification and experience requirements get higher with each level.
Level 2
No previous experience needed, equivalent to GCSE. Foundation apprenticeships are also set at level 2.
Level 3
Might need some qualifications or experience, equivalent to A level.
Levels 4 to 5
Relevant qualifications and experience expected, equivalent to higher national certificate (HNC) or higher national diploma (HND).
Levels 6 to 7
Expert-level study in an industry, equivalent to university.