Apprenticeship

Last Updated: 03/31/2024

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Overview

Apprenticeship is an industry-driven, high-quality career pathway that combines classroom instruction with on-the-job experience. Through apprenticeships, employers can prepare their future workforce, and individuals can obtain paid work experience while earning a nationally recognized, portable credential. Employers can choose to register their programs with the U.S. Department of Labor to show prospective job seekers that their apprenticeship program meets national quality standards.

Five key components typically differentiate apprenticeships from other types of workplace-based learning  programs: 

  • Paid job: While training in a trade or technical school costs money, an apprenticeship is a full-time paid job. Apprentices’ pay scales are established in contracts negotiated by the union's bargaining unit, and they increase over time. A first-year apprentice's wages are typically 40-50 percent of a journeyperson's wages. When each year of the apprenticeship is completed, the apprentice's pay increases by a fixed percentage. After completing the apprenticeship and any necessary testing, the newly trained journeyperson earns a full union wage. In addition, apprentices are usually covered by the union's group benefits. 
  • Mentorships: Apprentices receive on-the-job learning under the instruction of an experienced mentor. 
  • Credentials: Apprentices earn a portable, nationally recognized credential within their industry.
  • Work-based learning: Programs provide structured, on-the-job learning to prepare for a successful career.
  • Classroom learning: Apprentices receive classroom instruction in the critical aspects of their careers.

The National Apprenticeship Act authorizes the federal government, in cooperation with the states, to oversee the nation's apprenticeship system. To administer the program, the Labor Department’s Office of Apprenticeship works with the Bureau of Apprenticeship and Training, states that report directly to the federal government, and independent state apprenticeship agencies. These agencies are responsible for registering apprenticeship programs that meet federal and state standards; protecting the safety and welfare of apprentices; issuing nationally recognized and portable certificates of completion; promoting the development of new programs through marketing and technical assistance; assuring that all programs provide high-quality training and produce skilled, competent workers.

Apprenticeship programs are operated by sponsors who supervise the training and match apprentices to workplaces. Some sponsor programs are operated by industry or employers' organizations, some by individual large employers, and many by trade unions in specific trades. For example, an ironworkers' union administers union apprenticeships in ironworking, a roofers' union trains new roofers, and a plumbers' union trains plumbers. There are a growing number of apprenticeship intermediaries, especially for youth apprenticeships. 

Apprenticeships vary in length, depending on the complexity of the trade. Some are as short as two years, but most last for four or even five years. Apprentices must work full-time in their trade, usually 2,000 hours for every calendar year of the apprenticeship. They must also complete a set number of hours of classroom training each year, varying from 100 hours per year for laborers to 200 or more for some skilled trades. At the end of the apprenticeship period, apprentices are eligible to become journeypeople, usually by passing both a written exam and a practical, hands-on exam. Journeypeople are licensed to work in the trade without supervision.

Common occupational areas that sponsor apprenticeships include information technology (IT), health care, hospitality, cybersecurity, construction, energy, advanced manufacturing, engineering, transportation, and financial services.

Registered apprenticeships are the nation’s predominant type of apprenticeship program. Industry Recognized Apprenticeships are a newer type of apprenticeship program.

  • The United States Congress passed the National Apprenticeship Act (known as the "Fitzgerald Act") in 1937, establishing federal registered apprenticeship. Initially, registered apprenticeship programs mainly served the manufacturing, construction, and utilities industries. After World War II, registered apprenticeship programs expanded to help train health and safety workers, including firefighters, police, and emergency medical technicians. Program guidelines were revised in late 2008 to increase flexibility in serving apprentices and program sponsors in prevailing economic conditions. According to Wikipedia, in 2010 there were 29,000 registered apprenticeship programs involving 250,000 employers and approximately 450,000 apprentices (National apprenticeship act, 2022). 
  • Industry-Recognized Apprenticeship Programs are high-quality apprenticeship programs recognized as such by a Standards Recognition Entity (SRE) pursuant to Labor Department standards. These programs offer individuals opportunities to obtain workplace-relevant knowledge and progressively advancing skills. Industry-recognized programs include a paid work component and an educational component and lead to an industry-recognized credential. They are developed or delivered by entities such as trade and industry groups, corporations, nonprofit organizations, educational institutions, unions, and joint labor-management organizations. The sponsor of such a program is the entity responsible for administering it, much like the sponsor of a registered apprenticeship program. Likely sponsors are trade and industry groups, corporations, nonprofit organizations, educational institutions, unions, and joint labor-management organizations.

Relationship to Ecosystem

Apprenticeships are a high-quality pathway to acquire the learning required for entry to a variety of specific occupations within the learn-and-work ecosystem. Apprenticeships involve close partnership between employers and postsecondary education and have a strong foundation in both federal and state policy.

Examples

The CyberDefenses Apprenticeship Program offers a nine-month paid training program, including salary, benefits, hands-on experience, certification, and job placement (Apprentice program 2019).

The Hartford's Claims Apprenticeship Program includes a paid position, the opportunity to earn an associate's degree, and a full-time job in the claims department after you complete the program (Claims apprentice program, n.d.).

The IBM Apprenticeship Program is a 12-month program designed for candidates without an advanced degree.

Juilliard's Professional Apprentice Program in Technical Theater and Arts Administration is a paid academic year (August-May) program in New York City.

LaunchCode offers full-time paid apprenticeships with hiring companies for job seekers interested in tech careers. 

The Mercedes-Benz DRIVE Technician Training and Development Program is a 16-week automotive service technician training and development program delivered in state-of-the-art training facilities.

The Microsoft Leap Apprenticeship Program is an immersive 16-week apprenticeship program that combines in-classroom learning with hands-on engineering projects.

Military Apprenticeships for Service Members and Veterans: Active-duty service members, transitioning service members, and veterans have a variety of options for pursuing apprenticeships that will enhance their workplace and technical skills.

The AFL-CIO has information on construction, building trades, and manufacturing union apprenticeship programs. These apprenticeships are paid and involve on-the-job and classroom instruction.

The Walgreens Pharmacy Technician Training Program provides an entry point to a career in health care by guiding participants to become Certified Pharmacy Technicians.

Woz Enterprise has one of the nation’s largest technology apprenticeship programs. Apprentices receive nine weeks of in-depth training, work on real-world projects, and receive a salary.

References

Apprenticeship_Fact_Sheet.pdf

Apprenticeship Intermediary | Learn & Work Ecosystem Library (learnworkecosystemlibrary.com)

Apprentice program. CyberDefenses Inc. (2019, July 12). Retrieved September 11, 2022, from https://cyberdefenses.com/apprentice-program/

Apprenticeship - Wikipedia

Ashburn, E. (2022, August 4). "Chips and science" act is big on jobs, slim on training. Work Shift. Retrieved September 11, 2022, from https://workshift.opencampusmedia.org/chips-and-science-act-is-big-on-jobs-slim-on-training/?utm_campaign=The+Job&utm_medium=email&utm_source=Revue+newsletter

FY 2021 data and Statistics. United States Department of Labor. (2021). Retrieved September 10, 2022, from https://www.dol.gov/agencies/eta/apprenticeship/about/statistics/2021

How Does a Union Apprenticeship Work? (chron.com) 

Industry-Recognized Apprenticeship Program | Apprenticeship.gov

Labor & Workforce Development Agency, Advancing Apprenticeship in California: A Five-Point Action Plan (2022). Retrieved September 11, 2022, from https://www.dir.ca.gov/DAS/e-News/2022/Five-Point-Action-Plan.pdf.

The Hartford. (n.d.). Claims apprentice program. The Hartford. Retrieved September 11, 2022, from https://www.thehartford.com/careers/claims-apprentice

The United States Government. (2021, October 8). American Rescue Plan. The White House. Retrieved September 11, 2022, from https://www.whitehouse.gov/american-rescue-plan/?utm_campaign=The+Job&utm_medium=email&utm_source=Revue+newsletter

The United States Government. (2021, December 2). President Biden's Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. The White House. Retrieved September 11, 2022, from https://www.whitehouse.gov/bipartisan-infrastructure-law/?utm_campaign=The+Job&utm_medium=email&utm_source=Revue+newsletter

US Department of Labor. (n.d.). Apprenticeship ambassador initiative. Apprenticeship.gov. Retrieved September 11, 2022, from https://www.apprenticeship.gov/apprenticeship-ambassador-initiative

Wikipedia Foundation. (2022, July 14). National apprenticeship act. Wikipedia. Retrieved September 11, 2022, from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National Apprenticeship Act

 

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