Traditionally, with a Hauptschulabschluss you go into the trades, sales, office clerking or (broadly) the service industry, like hairdressing. ALL of these require a three-year apprenticeship with additional, concurrent attendance at vocational school -- where you'll learn the tricks of the trade, like bookkeeping, typing, techniques, about the materials you're working with and so on
( ... )
Thank you. I want to be sure that I have that understood in a basic way, so please excuse me as I spit things back out to ensure it's correct. It probably won't be, but I wanted to try
( ... )
Broadly and basically correct summary, except that mandatory vocational schooling goes with EVERY apprenticeship. If a job/career is accredited as an "Ausbildungsberuf" with proper training by a master or journeyman certified to train others, you get on-the-job training with only a basic wage as well as vocational training both in generalities like bookkeeping, customer relations, sales techniques and whatnot, plus additional schooling in German and Maths, possibly English. Used to be it was one day of vocational school each week, with regular school holidays (which would be spent at the workplace), but I think it's block schooling nowadays, something like 3 months continuously
( ... )
Ah, thank you. So once you have an apprenticeship secured (regardless of whether you're in a Hauptschule or Realschule), you're going to school and also attending an apprenticeship at the same time? I'm also unfamiliar with "Ausbildungberuf" and Google's giving me all German pages about it.
I was unaware of that; my parents were gas station attendants throughout my childhood, and here the best you may get is a week's worth of 'here's how you use the pump, don't annoy the customer,' and that's about it. It depends on where you go here, but attendants will also pump the gas for you--they don't allow you to pump your own (I guess too many people messed with the pumps). Is that the same as in Germany, or would you pump it yourself?
The name for that would be "Tankwart" and pumping gas is just one tiny point. They also do small car repairs, service, book keeping... they basically learn everything to run a gas station on their own. And as far as I'm aware, most people here pump their gas themselves
An "Ausbildungsberuf" is a job/career/vocation that is accredited in the so-called "dual system" -- ie, on-the-job training going hand in hand with vocational school. That's the only option if you want to train non-adults. This is a pretty comprehensive list of all these careers in Germany -- for example, I had no idea that diamond cutter, gem polisher and gem engraver are three SEPARATE careers, each with its own exams and stuff!
And being a gas station attendant here involves not only pumping gas, but selling all kinds of things, basic car maintenance, ability to do simple repairs, knowledge of fuel types ... and actually, pumping gas went by the wayside in the late 70s. :) Lately, a few of the bigger gas stations will have someone do the pumping for you IF WANTED/NEEDED, but strictly as a courtesy or extra service for the elderly, say.
Good God, that's a lot of career types. I just want to be sure I have it totally clear--if you wanted to be a nurse in the 70s, your path would have been Realschule + apprenticeship+ mandatory vocational school for the last 3 years (or possibly Hauptschule/Gymnasium as long as you did up to year 10 and got the proper certificate at the end)?
Yes, with the caveat that nurses, like some other careers, have special nursing schools that they go to, as opposed to the standard vocational schools.
In the 1970s? Definitely Realschule/Gymnasium year 10 for nursing, and they were veering to making Abitur a prerequisite. NO Hauptschüler, sorry -- at least not for the full 3-year apprenticeship/training course. (I can't say exactly when the Hauptschule year 10 qualification was introduced; it was around the 1970s, though, that's all I remember.)
Possibly a Hauptschulabschluss (year 9) might've been enough for the 2-year track, making you a Nurse's Aide -- trained to do most aspects of actual nursing, but not qualified to give intravenous injections or assist during operations, for example. (This career may have been phased out since then in favor of the full course, I dunno.)
The thing is, even if you don't have an apprenticeship secured, you're obliged to attend school until the end of the school-year in which you turned 18, so when you finish year ten, you're looking at another 2-3 years in school in any case.
They have special classes at vocational schools for those students who need to be schooled but don't have any apprenticeship or internship or anything lined up, or those who dropped out of training or were kicked out. These days, they try to do in-school training programmes in, say, the school kitchens, to give these students at least a little of a leg-up in trying to find any position or new apprenticeship, but they can't always start these programmes or get all of them into it, so there's always classes that basically just have to sit around in school every day without any perspective.
Thank you. I'm not sure if the length someone needs/needed to attend school has gone up over time or not; so, regardless of what type of secondary school you attend, you need to stay until you're 18? I think someone told me in the past that you could have also repeated a grade, but you can still drop as long as you're old enough to do so.
If you have 1 to 2 days vocational school a week or block schooling depends mostly on the specific Ausbildungsberuf and how many students and schools for that actually exist. There are some Berufe who have only a few vocational schools, so every student has to go for a few weeks and they have people with considerable driving distances that would make the other system to hard.
Oh, okay ... I have very few friends who didn't get their Abi (and it's been a long time since school to boot), so I was only peripherally aware of the changes in that area. Plus, I live in the Ruhrgebiet, so long distances etc were never an issue. Thanks!
So block schooling would be where you go for a few days out of the week to vocational school while attending a 'normal' school, or would you just be going to vocational school exclusively and then returning to 'normal' school afterwards?
Block schooling is still a vocational school, it's just different that you have school for a few weeks (possibly even as a boarding school variation) instead of the 1 to 2 days a week of other careers. During the apprenticeship you only go to your vocational school, no other "normal" school. There you learn everything specific to your chosen career as well as the basics independent if career
Reply
Reply
Reply
I was unaware of that; my parents were gas station attendants throughout my childhood, and here the best you may get is a week's worth of 'here's how you use the pump, don't annoy the customer,' and that's about it. It depends on where you go here, but attendants will also pump the gas for you--they don't allow you to pump your own (I guess too many people messed with the pumps). Is that the same as in Germany, or would you pump it yourself?
Reply
And as far as I'm aware, most people here pump their gas themselves
Reply
And being a gas station attendant here involves not only pumping gas, but selling all kinds of things, basic car maintenance, ability to do simple repairs, knowledge of fuel types ... and actually, pumping gas went by the wayside in the late 70s. :) Lately, a few of the bigger gas stations will have someone do the pumping for you IF WANTED/NEEDED, but strictly as a courtesy or extra service for the elderly, say.
Reply
Reply
Reply
Possibly a Hauptschulabschluss (year 9) might've been enough for the 2-year track, making you a Nurse's Aide -- trained to do most aspects of actual nursing, but not qualified to give intravenous injections or assist during operations, for example. (This career may have been phased out since then in favor of the full course, I dunno.)
Reply
Reply
They have special classes at vocational schools for those students who need to be schooled but don't have any apprenticeship or internship or anything lined up, or those who dropped out of training or were kicked out. These days, they try to do in-school training programmes in, say, the school kitchens, to give these students at least a little of a leg-up in trying to find any position or new apprenticeship, but they can't always start these programmes or get all of them into it, so there's always classes that basically just have to sit around in school every day without any perspective.
Reply
Reply
Reply
Reply
Reply
During the apprenticeship you only go to your vocational school, no other "normal" school. There you learn everything specific to your chosen career as well as the basics independent if career
Reply
Leave a comment