Updating Results

Certificate II in Building and Construction (Carpentry) (Pre-apprenticeship)

  • Certificate

Designed to provide a head start on finding employment or an apprenticeship in carpentry, our Certificate II in Building and Construction Pre-apprenticeship (Carpentry) help you build on your basic skills in construction.

Key details

Degree Type
Certificate
Duration
19 weeks full-time

About this course

Designed to provide a head start on finding employment or an apprenticeship in carpentry, our Certificate II in Building and Construction Pre-apprenticeship (Carpentry) help you build on your basic skills in construction.
Covering health and safety and the safe use of hand and power tools, this course involves practical tasks including the construction of a sawhorse and step ladder and builds up to more skilled tasks including the construction of a cubby house. Take part in communication, teamwork, planning and organisational tasks and self-management in preparation for your future employment.

If you are seeking a career in the building trades but you are not sure where to start, then this is the perfect first step. Designed to provide a head start on finding employment or an apprenticeship in the building trades industry, you'll partake in communication, teamwork, planning and organisational skills and self-management in preparation for employment.
This pre-apprenticeship course aims to provide you with basic industry specific skills and knowledge to enable transition into an apprenticeship within the building and construction industries at the Certificate III level, with three specialist streams to choose from:
1. Carpentry
2. Painting and Decorating
3. Bricklaying
Each of these options have common cores but have specialist subject choices that best prepare you for the career pathway of your choice within the building trades.




Did you know: The Victorian Government has now made Free TAFE courses even more accessible for new students enrolling for study in 2023. All Free TAFE courses at TAFE Gippsland are now available to people with higher-level qualifications and those who have completed a previous Free TAFE course and are looking to continue in their selected training pathway. Conditions and eligibility rules apply. Check out our Free TAFE information page for further details.

Evidence has shown that pre-apprenticeship programs continue to play an important role in improving labour market outcomes in the vocational education and training sector. It has been found that pre-apprenticeships programs are a valuable mechanism to increase apprentice completion rates as it addresses one of the main reasons of non-completion, that is, the disparity between the expectations of a new apprentice and the reality of life in the trade. It appears that there is a better chance of completing an apprenticeship among those who have undertaken a pre-apprenticeship as it allows graduates to gain an insight into the experience of a trades career.
It is for this reason that there is also a strong employment demand for graduates of pre-apprenticeship programs within the Victorian building and construction industry. Many employers actively recruit graduates as they believe them to be more aware of workplace safety, better prepared for the realities of the industry, more confident and have better hand skills. Many employers generally recruit apprentices through registered training organisations and work experience.

CPC30620 - Certificate III in Painting and Decorating
CPC33020 - Certificate III in Bricklaying and Blocklaying
CPC30220 - Certificate III in Carpentry

The course outcomes of the 22614VIC Certificate II in Building and Construction Pre-apprenticeship (Carpentry, Painting and Decorating & Bricklaying) are consistent with the distinguishing features of the learning outcomes specified in the Australian Qualifications Framework.
Graduates of the Certificate II in Building and Construction Pre-apprenticeship (Carpentry, Painting and Decorating & Bricklaying) will have:
* Knowledge and skills for work in a defined context and/or further learning.
* Basic factual, technical and procedural knowledge of a defined area of work and learning within the building and construction industry. For example:
* Safety requirements on a work site
* Sustainability principles on a work site
* Awareness of building codes and standards.
* Basic cognitive, technical and communication skills to apply appropriate methods, tools, materials and readily available information to undertake a defined range of skills.
For example:
* Safe handling of selected hand and power tools
* Interpreting workplace documents and plans
* Performing building related calculations
* Communicating effectively in the workplace
* Provide solutions to a limited range of predictable problems that may arise in a building and construction environment. For example:
* Reporting incidences and faults
* Recognising and responding to life threatening emergencies using basic life support measures
* Apply knowledge and skills to demonstrate autonomy and limited judgement in structured and stable contexts and within narrow parameters. For example,
* Identifying and obtaining the appropriate materials, tools and equipment for the task
* Planning and completing tasks in appropriate sequence.

















Are there specified requirements for entry into the course/qualification?: No

Career pathways

Evidence has shown that pre-apprenticeship programs continue to play an important role in improving labour market outcomes in the vocational education and training sector. It has been found that pre-apprenticeships programs are a valuable mechanism to increase apprentice completion rates as it addresses one of the main reasons of non-completion, that is, the disparity between the expectations of a new apprentice and the reality of life in the trade. It appears that there is a better chance of completing an apprenticeship among those who have undertaken a pre-apprenticeship as it allows graduates to gain an insight into the experience of a trades career.
It is for this reason that there is also a strong employment demand for graduates of pre-apprenticeship programs within the Victorian building and construction industry. Many employers actively recruit graduates as they believe them to be more aware of workplace safety, better prepared for the realities of the industry, more confident and have better hand skills. Many employers generally recruit apprentices through registered training organisations and work experience.