By law, an apprentice must spend 80% of the total working hours on a job and spend at least 20% of their time on off-the-job training. To attract government funding a 20% minimum threshold has been set. This is the minimum amount of time that should be spent on occupational off-the-job training during an apprenticeship. However, they may need more than this if, for example, they need training in English and maths. It is up to the employer and training provider to decide how the off-the-job training is delivered. It may include regular day release, block release and special training days or workshops. It must be directly relevant to the apprenticeship standard.
Example 1: Jennifer is undertaking an apprenticeship in digital marketer and has a contract of employment of working 30 hours a week. To meet statutory requirement her English Employer gives her 6 (20/30 X100) hours a week (20%) off to receive training relevant to digital marketer apprenticeship standard.
Example 2: Sarah is undertaking an apprenticeship in professional accounting. Her
training provider informs her of a lecture taking place on Wednesday evening; this will cover some of the knowledge that is fundamental to the apprenticeship standard that she is working towards. The lecture is taking place outside of Sarah’s core hours of Monday to Friday from 9 am to 5 pm. Sarah’s training provider contacts her employer, and they agree that if Sarah attends the two-hour lecture on Wednesday evening, she can leave two hours early on Friday to make up the time.