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culopatin | 12 days ago

If there is a shortage, and engineers are trainable, are there apprenticeships available? I’d gladly move to this field.

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EdNutting|12 days ago

In the UK, yes there are apprenticeships available (generally at the bigger companies like Arm) but not a huge number of them.

The new UK Semiconductor Centre has recently been asking (among many other questions) why the industry hasn't taken up the govt apprenticeship schemes more given the lack of engineers. The answers as to why are ultimately "it's complicated".

Your view on the salary during an apprenticeship will depend a lot on where you're coming from and expectations. They're generally lower than UK Median Salary (for any type of job; April 2025 it was £39k) at around £30kpa, but you're being paid to learn (rather than university studies, where you spend to money to learn). Also, god knows why, but the apprenticeships aren't always in the most in-demand areas (though if I had to guess, it would be because there already aren't enough employees to do the in-demand work, let alone spend some of that time training new people... which in the long-term is a disaster but we're in a short-term-thinking kind of world).

culopatin|12 days ago

Im coming from an ok paid job in the us, but like you said, any pay is better than paying a school, and you get real on the job experience, not some textbook version of reality.

pxtail|12 days ago

Nah, we don't do that here, instead ideal entry level applicant should have 5y of experience when applying.

erxam|11 days ago

Our ideal apprenticeship applicant must have:

- 5 years of experience in the proprietary, unique-to-our-company tech stack

- a PhD in semiconductor physics (MSc with 10+ years of experience is also acceptable)

- Taiwanese and US citizenship

- a desire to work 16+ hours a day for 6 days a week