Employer‐led Realities: apprenticeship past and present
Open Access
- 1 January 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Vocational Education & Training
- Vol. 48 (1) , 57-68
- https://doi.org/10.1080/0305787960480104
Abstract
In 1993, the United Kingdom launched yet another new initiative to revitalise youth training, but this time, rather than choosing a title which conjures up the flexible workplace of the future, it chose to delve back into the industrial past and introduced Modern Apprenticeship. Piloted for a year in 15 occupational sectors, Modern Apprenticeship is to expand in 1995/1996 to cover some 50 sectors, many of which have little history of substantive or accredited workplace training. By examining the history of apprenticeship in the United Kingdom, including evidence from two industrial sectors (electricity supply and chemicals), this paper suggests that whilst the concept of apprenticeship may still be very attractive to young people, their parents and some employers, the history of its decline over the past 30 years should be treated seriously by policymakers attempting to re‐create apprenticeship in the 1990sKeywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Reconstructing the Work‐based Route: lessons from the Modern ApprenticeshipThe Vocational Aspect of Education, 1995
- THE ASSESSMENT: EDUCATION, TRAINING AND ECONOMIC PERFORMANCEOxford Review of Economic Policy, 1988
- Quality Control in the Dual System of West GermanyOxford Review of Education, 1988
- Employment Patterns and the Goals of EducationBritish Journal of Education & Work, 1987