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Irezumi aka Reuben |
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 Irezumi aka Reuben Carrot Top
Joined: 28 Sep 2004 Karma :  
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NC30UK |
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 NC30UK Scooby Slapper
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Irezumi aka Reuben |
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 Irezumi aka Reuben Carrot Top
Joined: 28 Sep 2004 Karma :  
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msgander |
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 msgander Brolly Dolly

Joined: 31 Aug 2005 Karma :    
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 Posted: 17:41 - 06 Feb 2006 Post subject: |
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Contact companies directly and do a professional CV, half the time you may get lucky. The days of good old apprenticeships are few and far between.
Dont give up, show persistence and you may get  ____________________ Always believe that your guardian angel flies a bit faster than you............... |
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Misc |
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 Misc World Chat Champion
Joined: 15 Aug 2005 Karma :    
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Irezumi aka Reuben |
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 Irezumi aka Reuben Carrot Top
Joined: 28 Sep 2004 Karma :  
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 Posted: 18:34 - 06 Feb 2006 Post subject: |
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Doing an access course would be a waste of mine and their time, although no doubt will be required.
I have 11 GCSE's A-C and a C grade in Design Tech. My CV is also quite adequate, I updated it only today re-arranging the layout to improve it.
I really need to be in work for various reasons, that's why an apprenticeship appeals. Getting paid a reasonable wage whilst learning, I'm also not very academically minded, being much better at practical things.
The reason I have not contacted my local college's (Merton would probably be the nearest and most relevant) is that I am after specific courses to do with engineering apprenticeships. BMW offer their own in house one. Most college's offer apprenticeships to become mechanics or full time courses for engineering. ____________________ Pictorgraphicalfantastical |
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ace2004k |
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 ace2004k Nitrous Nuisance
Joined: 09 May 2004 Karma :     
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Nath |
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 Nath World Chat Champion
Joined: 28 Jul 2004 Karma :   
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 Posted: 21:18 - 06 Feb 2006 Post subject: |
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I'm in the same boat. Turn 20 next month, and am realising I've left it too late It's funny how when you're 16 it seems like you've got the world at your feet and a whole lifetime to waste, but in no time at all you've passed up all your opportunites and are left with no option to work your way up from the bottom...
I am going into the armed forces recruitment center this week to talk to a careers advisor and see if the army can offer anything. Perhaps to train as a fitter. I would rather not join the army, but if it's my only option then I will bite the bullet. I value my freedom and my long hair (I know that may sound daft), but I'd value a fat salary and a profession even more. ____________________ Hard livin', hard luck. |
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Noggin |
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 Noggin Traffic Copper

Joined: 27 Feb 2004 Karma :  
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 Posted: 21:36 - 06 Feb 2006 Post subject: |
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www.britishgasacademy.co.uk
They take apprentices up to the age of 23.
I'm training with them at the moment, 12,500 for the first year, 25k flat when full engineer plus plenty of overtime available (as service engineer)
You get van, tools, phone, loads of bits and pieces.
Full training, NVQ3, city and guilds, unvented hot water qualification, fully sorted really, with opportunities for further training (lpg etc.)
I'm enjoying it, I got a brand new van (12 miles on the clock).
Craig G(Noggin) ____________________ Current bike: kawasaki zx12r 2002
Track bike: yamaha r6 1998
Old Bike: honda NSR 125 1998 |
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mchaggis |
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 mchaggis World Chat Champion

Joined: 09 May 2004 Karma :    
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0ni |
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 0ni World Chat Champion

Joined: 01 Dec 2004 Karma :  
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WildGoose |
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 WildGoose White Van Man

Joined: 20 Mar 2002 Karma :  
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 Posted: 01:49 - 07 Feb 2006 Post subject: |
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Quote: | I am going into the armed forces recruitment center this week to talk to a careers advisor and see if the army can offer anything. Perhaps to train as a fitter. I would rather not join the army, but if it's my only option then I will bite the bullet. I value my freedom and my long hair (I know that may sound daft), but I'd value a fat salary and a profession even more.
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its not your only option and if you dont want to do it, you'll just waste another four years
thats certainly what ive felt like now with the navy, joined at 17 as i had no real clue what i wanted to do, finally concluded lately that i hate everything about it and it makes me very unhappy, and now looking to come out i'll be 21 in june and with only GCSE's i'll be at the bottom of the same pile i was at age 16
i dont regret my time, as i feel it has made me confident and determined, able to look after myself and now motivated to do what i really want to do, but unless you are willing to give yourself up to a decent length career in the armed forces you will ultimately gain nothing to help you get on in the outside world
they invent their own qualifications to qualify you for work with them and only them, at best you will gain an NVQ level 2 in whatever trade but that is ultimately worthless and they only put you through it because they gain extra money from the government for doing so.
it took me a while to realise but seems obvious now, they would never pay to qualify you to civilian standards so you could leave at the earliest opportunity and earn three times as much outside. they want something to show for their investment and will only reward you properly for serving in excess of 12/13 years by which time you are in the "comfort zone" and it would then seem silly to leave and throw away a full pension and an age 40 retirement for the sake of doing another 10 years
its a very cleverly designed system, and i would say think very carefully before entering into it. especially if joining at an age of 20+ where you could do without wasting any more years
 ____________________ So in other words, he stopped you for being flagrantly in posession of a motorcycle in direct contravention of the Hippies, Darkies and People Whose Face I Don't Like The Look of (Police Powers) Act. 1976 |
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Nath |
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 Nath World Chat Champion
Joined: 28 Jul 2004 Karma :   
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 Posted: 02:16 - 07 Feb 2006 Post subject: |
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mchaggis wrote: | If it gets that bad |
Well, I'm not 'desperate' as such, but it's about planning ahead. I have done my time in a few different menial jobs, and I know that it's not how I want to spend the rest of my life. I have enjoyed a few years of youthful abandon, but it is best that I end it now on favourable terms and accept that I must force a path through life. This summer will be the coup de grace in the form of a three month motorcycle tour of Europe, after which I will have to knuckle down one way or the other. A fit and healthy young man could do a lot worse than join the forces.
I haven't made any decisions about which service to join yet. I will see what the careers advisor has to say - Maybe it will be the case that 20 is too old to learn a trade even in the forces. But as long as this is not the case, I suspect I would be more suited to the army than the others. Discipline I can live with, and I think it would be more interesting than the other two (and that is the most important aspect).
Wildgoose wrote: | its a very cleverly designed system, and i would say think very carefully before entering into it. especially if joining at an age of 20+ where you could do without wasting any more years |
The problem is that I can't see any other path that doesn't involve wasted years. The one thing I've known all my life so far is that I don't want to be a 'slave to the wage', but working at the bottom of the pile doing a job that requires no commitment doesn't work either. In my more cynical moments I lean towards believing that life will be unfulfilling and empty no matter what course you take  ____________________ Hard livin', hard luck. |
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Irezumi aka Reuben |
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 Irezumi aka Reuben Carrot Top
Joined: 28 Sep 2004 Karma :  
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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 19 years, 101 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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