Diagram of Apprenticeship Progression

 

Apprenticeships are available in hundreds of positions ranging from Accounting Clerk to Machinist, Firefighter to Graphic Arts Technician, Boat Builder to Sheet Metal Worker. See Become an Apprentice and browse the hundreds of occupations in our state with the Find an Apprenticeship tool. Many apprenticeships lead to well-paying, high-demand jobs. Our buildings will always need maintenance; our airplanes and ferries and boats will always need to be put together; our children will always need to be taken care of; our offices will always need workers.

Most apprenticeships require a high school diploma or GED and have minimum ages of 17 or 18.

Washington State Labor and Industries Department functions as Apprenticeship central for the state, listing both preparation programs and full apprenticeship programs. See links and files below.


Apprenticeship Resources

Programs

The Western Washington definitive guidebook on Pre-Apprenticeship programs and Apprenticeship options. Start with this!

L & I publication with everything you need to know about apprenticeships, including links and descriptions for Pre-Apprenticeship Programs in the area.

An excellent summary of how apprenticeships work, how parents can help their young people find opportunities, and an outline of major industries that offer apprenticeships. A publication of Washington State Labor & Industries.

The Bellevue School District acknowledges that we learn, work, live and gather on the Indigenous Land of the Coast Salish peoples, specifically the Duwamish and Snoqualmie Tribes. We thank these caretakers of this land, who have lived and continue to live here, since time immemorial.