WelTec launches new degree apprenticeship
WelTec launches new degree apprenticeship to plug skills gap as New Zealand embarks on ambitious infrastructure programme
WelTec has launched a brand new way of delivering a degree qualification for engineers.
WelTec’s Bachelor of Engineering Technology degree apprenticeship will enable students to remain employed while working towards their degree (Level 7) qualification.
This is the first time in New Zealand
that an engineering degree will be offered through an
apprenticeship delivery model.
“It is no secret
that New Zealand is facing a skills shortage of trained and
work-ready engineers to facilitate the tsunami of
infrastructure development the country so desperately
needs,” says Neil McDonald, Head of Construction and
Engineering at WelTec.
“We have directly responded
to industry’s cries for degree qualified but skills astute
and work ready employees by offering this exciting new
learning model,” he says.
WelTec has collaborated with industry on the curriculum. Partners who have endorsed this new degree are Beca, Downer, Higgins, WSP Opus, Wellington Water and Porirua City Council.
“It has been a great privilege for WelTec, and our partners Otago Polytechnic, to work directly with industry to develop this cutting edge curriculum for an engineering occupation, and we have no doubt that working closely with industry on getting this right will help develop the qualified and skilled workforce in New Zealand,” says Chris Gosling, Chief Executive of Wellington Institute of Technology and Whitireia Community Polytechnic.
The new degree model is aimed at school leavers who are aspiring engineers wanting to work with infrastructure assets. Students will be able to gain real life work experience on-site and work towards gaining a degree qualification while fully employed.
While
degree apprenticeships have gained increasing popularity in
countries like Germany and the United Kingdom, this will be
the first of its kind in New Zealand.
“We are
hopeful that this new way of delivering degree-level
education will transform the way in which vocationally
oriented degrees are taught,” says Chris Gosling.
Bringing the degree to life
Darrell Statham, Manager, Transportation, City Infrastructure at Porirua City Council strongly endorses the new approach and has hired a young WelTec student, Megan Turner, who will be doing the degree apprenticeship.
“There is huge mutual benefit in
this,” says Darrell. “It enables us to employ a student
who is genuinely interested in the area of work and there is
the potential to retain them at the end of it - which will
mean a work-ready, skilled, and degree qualified
employee.”
“Students will benefit by remaining
employed and avoiding running up huge debts, gaining
valuable experience and by fast tracking their path to
becoming a chartered engineer,” he says.
Megan
Turner, now employed at the Council to work on roading
projects, explains that for her the structure of the
programme is more viable because she can continue to pay for
expenses and accommodation, and yet still work toward a
degree.
“It is great to know I will still be
paid,” she says. “Also nowadays most employers look at
your CV and are searching for your work experience, that is
a big focus, and doing this means I will have both the
experience and the theory to show.”
Megan has
completed her diploma in Civil Engineering, and is now keen
to progress to a degree.
Degree apprenticeships
combine working with part-time study. Apprentices are
employed throughout the programme, and spend part of their
time at WelTec and the rest with their employer. This can be
on a day-to-day basis or in blocks of time, depending on the
programme and requirements of the employer.
“Traditionally, apprenticeships cater to lower level
qualifications that are more practical by nature, and where
the industry values the ability to do the job above any
theoretical knowledge,” says James Mackay, principal
academic staff member and project lead on the new degree at
WelTec. “In this case, the student will learn to do the
job of being an engineer and pick up the theoretical
knowledge as they are doing this. After they have completed
their apprenticeship, they would then gain a bachelor’s
degree in Engineering Technology.
“As the name
suggests, the apprenticeship relies on integrating the
theoretical knowledge usually delivered in the classroom
with hands on industrial experience,” says
James.
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