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L

LukeS3

Hey guys,

I'm nearly 21, did a 3 day induction before I left school at my local construction college, loved it. Left school at 16, got pretty crappy grades, and so it all went to pot and I didn't return to college.

Only recently have I decided, yet again, that I really want to peruse this career.

3 weeks ago I started a 10-12 week course at a local training centre (Maths Level 1 & English Level 2) to try and get them up. I'm really not that great at either, but English is certainly the stronger out of the two.

If I get my certificates for both of these, would it be of any good use to me? or would I maybe need to get my Maths to Level 2 also?

The idea thus far is to eventually get an Apprenticeship, and do one day college, or as said many times on here, night college.

Just to mention: My dad is a chippy, owns his own business with his brother and they have a self employed sparky working for them, and has been for quite a few years. I'm hoping this could be a bit of an advantage too. My Dad and Unlce have already mentioned the opportunities there for me should I become qualified.

Any advice would be great!
 
Keep asking yourself them questions mate - because every electrician is asking the same. How?

Trust me, the information you learn on the college courses cannot be taught in weeks no matter how clever you are. It is not possible. You'll also find they charge you an even bigger amount than the college. It's all about money, they don't care about you as a person, nor do they care about your future prospects in the trade.

Go down the proper route, because one day (hopefully) the trade will get properly sorted out, and all these short courses will be a thing of the past.

This must have a huge impact on the industry. Course durations being that different and having the same outcome is ridiculous - all about money if you ask me.

It has actually been confirmed to me today by my local college that I will be fully funded for the C&G 2365 course, but would have to pay my way for Level 3.
 
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Go for it mate stay away from training providers they are scum. See if you can do college in evenings and work as a mate as well do cscs and ecs i'm not sure if the DWP will pay for ECS card.

The ideal route is a apprenticship but you will be very lucky to get one, so the next best route is to work in the trade as a electricians mate go to college and ask lots of questions with the tradesmen you work with and expect to get crap jobs everyone starts at the bottom.

And as my dad says 50+ years as a industrial eletrician retired now '' Watch And Learn''

What is Skill

''Skill is the ability to perform a task to a predefined standard of competence, but to many the word also connotes a dimension of increasing ability (i.e. a hierarchy of skill). Thus while skill is synonymous with competence, it also evokes images of expertise, mastery and excellence. Skill is by definition acquired through formal and/or informal learning and through practice.''
 
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I'm getting there. Learned allot just in this topic.

I'm currently contacting electricians/companies/literally everything and anything I can within my area to get some experience.

Many thanks to all that have contributed in this topic!
 
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Today my teacher offered me a Construction Level 1 course and a CSCS course combined in, which will take about 13-15 weeks - All of which would be completed before September.

I asked him if that would be of any credit to my electrician course, and he said the college will like that fact that I've done a Level 1 in construction.

Do you guys agree? Sounds good to me.
 
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Today my teacher offered me a Construction Level 1 course and a CSCS course combined in, which will take about 13-15 weeks - All of which would be completed before September.

I asked him if that would be of any credit to my electrician course, and he said the college will like that fact that I've done a Level 1 in construction.

Do you guys agree? Sounds good to me.

This is through your own admission buddy that you're qualifications in maths/english wern't up to scratch...and it's probably the reason you've been put on the level 1 course to start with - but there is no shame in that. Does it cost you anything?

13/15week sounds about right for it.

I can also see where they're coming from as regards to the fact that the college will like it - course they will, shows you are enthusiastic. But because it's a level 1 course, you may get some kids just out of school who are on it because they've got nothing else better to do and don't give a flying F about the trade - just don't let them distract you. Crack on with the level 1 untill september, and then hopefully get put on to the 2357 electrical course.

Best of luck.
 
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This is through your own admission buddy that you're qualifications in maths/english wern't up to scratch...and it's probably the reason you've been put on the level 1 course to start with - but there is no shame in that. Does it cost you anything?

13/15week sounds about right for it.

I can also see where they're coming from as regards to the fact that the college will like it - course they will, shows you are enthusiastic. But because it's a level 1 course, you may get some kids just out of school who are on it because they've got nothing else better to do and don't give a flying F about the trade - just don't let them distract you. Crack on with the level 1 untill september, and then hopefully get put on to the 2357 electrical course.

Best of luck.

2357 Course? 2365 is what I'm going for mate.

Also, no, I don't have to pay for it, they just offered it to me alongside a CSCS course to get the certificate and have something on record and to show for.

Remember, the courses I'm talking about here is nothing to do with college. I'm getting my Maths & English up with a training centre called InTraining which also offer other little courses too, which include Construction Level 1 & CSCS.

All of what I'm doing now is like pre college things/courses/and whatever else, so that when it comes to actually trying to get into the college course, I can show that I have done these short courses; (with InTraining)

English Level 2
Maths Level 2
Construction Level 1
CSCS training

I just don't want to apply for a college course with nothing to show... yeah, people still get on courses that way, but my idea of thinking is why not do the above things up until September whilst I'm not doing anything then publish them when it comes to the time. Maybe my chances of getting into college stay the same even after completing these courses? I dunno...
 
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Keep asking yourself them questions mate - because every electrician is asking the same. How?

Trust me, the information you learn on the college courses cannot be taught in weeks no matter how clever you are. It is not possible. You'll also find they charge you an even bigger amount than the college. It's all about money, they don't care about you as a person, nor do they care about your future prospects in the trade.

Go down the proper route, because one day (hopefully) the trade will get properly sorted out, and all these short courses will be a thing of the past.

Hi Markc123 - I wanted to answer your question "How?" as it's really just a case of simple maths. We can offer this course in a shorter space of time because it is full time training Monday to Friday each week rather than 1 day a week. We also don't go on holiday for 20 weeks of the year like many colleges. We offer the training for the 2365 2 weeks on 2 weeks off which also allows candidates enough time to complete any homework or projects they are tasked between lessons. What's key is that all City & Guilds Qualifications have guided learning hours and we have to stick to those as does a college. So the total time spent learning is exactly the same. In fact quite often you find with College courses there is a lot of time wasted re-capping from previous sessions which are further apart where as with us you don't really get that as much.

We are a specialist electrical trainer. It's pretty much all we do and as such we know these courses in side out and the best way to deliver them. Many employers simply don't want someone learning key subjects over a period of weeks which can be taught in days.

With regards to us not caring about our students I won't actually answer that but will leave you with a quote from one of our customers on a very similar course:

"We have recently had an apprentice at your Crawley site pass his 2357 accelerated course and he is currently developing his practical skills out in the real world under the guidance of John Avenell from JTL.

We have been so impressed with JTL and Tradeskills4U we felt it only apt to comment. I made my initial enquiries with Tradeskills4U, Crawley after coming across your company details following a Google search. From my initial contact to now we have been fully supported and guided through the apprenticeship process. The union between JTL and Tradeskills4U is seamless and it is a credit to both bodies that their accessibility, help and guidance provided surpassed our expectations. Donna Latimer should be commended for her ongoing support, advice and guidance provided to Will and ourselves. Mark Syrett and John Avenell from JTL have also been immeasurably helpful and supportive.

Most importantly Will has described his time at Tradeskills4U as the best learning experience of his life. His tutor was James Deans. Will credits James with being enthusiastic, motivational and positive. He, along with Donna, helped Will to feel positive about his abilities to succeed which, ultimately, he did.

We would, without hesitation, use your services again and have been actively recommending your company to other businesses.

Once again, thank you for a very positive experience and for providing Will an environment in which he achieved.

Kind Regards

Elaine Stanley"

Needless to say random comments about a training centre you have no experience of are almost libellous and we do take exception at anyone suggesting we do not care about our students. Yes there are some training companies out there that are unscrupulous, take peoples money and don't deliver but we are definitely not one of them. Read comments about us on this forum and you will see we have a pretty solid reputation and this has been built on a record of delivering for our students.
 
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As an apprentice my self (have been since September last year) with a company via JTL I would say go for it.

I enjoy the work and I go to college 1 day a week.
The days you do college may change over the course of the 4 year apprenticeship and it may be that for some of the time you are on block release meaning you go to college every day for a few weeks a year and work all week the rest of the year.


Be prepared to work what can be some long hours and be prepared to work hard.

In my company we a re-wire in a day every day so it is hard work most of the time. But the harder you work the earlier you finish when doing work like that.

Thanks.
 
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As people are saying:
How can you be qualified in short 16 week (or whatever time) courses when it takes 4 years via correct routes?

Answer: you can NOT.

The courses say you become qualified an yes you may get some qualification like some testing course or something but it is not the full qualifications needed. And the full qualifications is what you want.

Personally I hope that companies will (eventually) realise this and only employ those who did the full qualifications, the correct way.
That way those who worked for the qualifications will get good work and those who where stupid enough to think it can be done in a few weeks will not be working in the trade.

Thanks.
 
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Whatever is quick and easy will not pay off in the long run, 16 week courses are obviously going to cram the information in, you'll forget and by the time you are qualified you won't feel confident in doing the job. I hear so many negative people on this forum saying stuff like "blame the polish, don't become an electrician you won't get a job", ignore them, you'll only feel depressed listening to these kind of people.
 
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The polish manage ok :wink_smile:
Polish, not polish - and **** off from me ****ing racist. You can carry my screw driver at max if I will let you do it - before you will nick it and sell it for a pint. Vote ukip you racist ----- so we can ban your immigrants from spain seal our borders and tell you to **** off. We naturaly sell you our goods - after all of factories will be transferred to continent and of course you can afford to pay.
 
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