Classroom electrician courses a 'waste of money'
Courses advertised as fast-track routes to becoming an electrician could be preventing budding professionals from progressing into the sector.
Experts from the Electrical Contractors’ Association (ECA) said that college-run, classroom-based courses for potential electricians were a “waste of money” and were being “mis-sold”.
Talking to Construction News, ECA chief Operating Officer Andrew Eldred and head of external affairs Jane Dawson said the government-funded courses could be pushing potential electricians away and deepening the skills gap. ECA has had meetings with the construction minister Sarah Jones to raise the issue and discuss how the money could better be used.
The college courses are meant to lead to apprenticeships. However, fewer than one in ten of the 23,000 people a year who enrol on the courses progress to apprenticeships, Eldred said.
“In every part of the country, pretty much, the numbers on the classroom-based courses far outweigh the numbers starting the apprenticeships,” he said. Nationally, the ratio of classroom-based enrolments to apprenticeship starts is about 3:1, but that rises to about 8:1 in London and 6:1 in Birmingham.
According to Eldred, around 8 per cent of the course graduates progress into apprenticeships nationally, Eldred put the low apprenticeship numbers down to the courses being “mis-sold” as a direct route into being an electrician.
“If you go on any college website, they will present it as: ‘This is your route to progressing into becoming an electrician’. So to a significant degree, I think there is scope to say this is being mis-sold,” he said.
He added that both the course funders and the students were being mis-sold.
Eldred estimated that taxpayers funded the classroom-based electrical courses to the tune of £70m in 2022/23.
“How is that spending justified?” he said.
Mis-selling the courses, he added, was also driving people away from doing an electrician apprenticeship as they do not want to spend more time studying.
“Quite a lot of people end up disappointed – they had a higher expectation of what’s going to happen next,” he added.
He called for the money spent on the college courses to instead go towards other parts of the training industry, such as the apprenticeship standard. The money could be used to pay tutors and assessors on the course closer to an electrician’s rate of pay, for example.
The money could also go towards other training routes such as Adult National Vocational Qualifications (NVQ) – most of which are self-funded.
In August, research by ECA revealed that the industry needs 12,000 newly qualified electricians every year to meet increasing demand in England.
This article appears on the ECA news and blog site as 'Classroom electrician courses ‘waste of money dated 4 February, 2025.
--ECA
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings
- At a Crossroads; Pathways to a Net Zero Future.
- Beware of rogue trainers warns the electrotechnical skills partnership
- Building engineering business survey highlights persistent skills gap
- ECA calls on London Mayor to prioritise green electrical skills in the capital.
- ECA learning zone and industry focus video series.
- Engineering services still struggle with labour shortages.
- Future of Green Skills in Sussex.
- New alliance will tackle skills shortage in greater Manchester.
- New electrical apprentice rates.
- SkillELECTRIC Top 8 Competitors Named.
- The ECA Recharging Electrical Skills Charter included in key report
- Westminster urged to focus on local skills improvement or face skilled electrician shortfall.
Featured articles and news
Call for greater recognition of professional standards
Chartered bodies representing more than 1.5 million individuals have written to the UK Government.
Cutting carbon, cost and risk in estate management
Lessons from Cardiff Met’s “Halve the Half” initiative.
Inspiring the next generation to fulfil an electrified future
Technical Manager at ECA on the importance of engagement between industry and education.
Repairing historic stone and slate roofs
The need for a code of practice and technical advice note.
Environmental compliance; a checklist for 2026
Legislative changes, policy shifts, phased rollouts, and compliance updates to be aware of.
UKCW London to tackle sector’s most pressing issues
AI and skills development, ecology and the environment, policy and planning and more.
Managing building safety risks
Across an existing residential portfolio; a client's perspective.
ECA support for Gate Safe’s Safe School Gates Campaign.
Core construction skills explained
Preparing for a career in construction.
Retrofitting for resilience with the Leicester Resilience Hub
Community-serving facilities, enhanced as support and essential services for climate-related disruptions.
Some of the articles relating to water, here to browse. Any missing?
Recognisable Gothic characters, designed to dramatically spout water away from buildings.
A case study and a warning to would-be developers
Creating four dwellings... after half a century of doing this job, why, oh why, is it so difficult?
Reform of the fire engineering profession
Fire Engineers Advisory Panel: Authoritative Statement, reactions and next steps.
Restoration and renewal of the Palace of Westminster
A complex project of cultural significance from full decant to EMI, opportunities and a potential a way forward.
Apprenticeships and the responsibility we share
Perspectives from the CIOB President as National Apprentice Week comes to a close.
The first line of defence against rain, wind and snow.
Building Safety recap January, 2026
What we missed at the end of last year, and at the start of this.
























