Tuesday, 20 November 2012

Government Claims Misleading - An Unsatisfactory Apprentice Programme


The Government boasts that in 2011, around 457,000 people started an apprenticeship. This is a 63.5  per cent increase on the previous year. They claim the Government’s Apprenticeship Programme is now the "gold standard vocational qualification". However unemployment among 16 to 24-year-olds remains high at almost 21% .
To my mind, apprenticeships have been seriously devalued.  When I left school any young person who secured an apprenticeship knew that he or she would be given the opportunity to gain marketable skills that would stand them in good stead for the rest of their working lives. More importantly, the apprentice and the employer entered into an informal contract that bound them together for the five years it took to graduate as a ‘journeyman’ tradesman. There was an *unwritten agreement that in normal circumstances the apprentice’s position was guaranteed.  I know from experience that when times were lean and men were ‘layed off’, the apprentice’s job was secure. But times have changed.    


The Government recently reclassified the official definition of an apprenticeship to include training that extends as little as a year

During 2011, 51.8% of apprenticeships for 16 to 18- year-olds were completed in less than 12 months. The 12-month minimum change, introduced from August this year, is likely to result in 65,000 extra apprenticeships each year, or their reclassification as pre-apprenticeships.

 Morrisons Supermarkets, for example reclassified existing employees as apprentices.  It turns out that one in 10 of the apprenticeships created in England last year was at Morrisons' supermarkets. Also most of the 52,000 apprentices at the supermarket were existing employees who were over 25. These apprenticeships last an average of 28 weeks. 


* At one time, of course, apprenticeships involved a written contract. 

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