Construction & Building Trades
The Electrical Installer programme is a structured professional vocational training programme designed in alignment with professional standards, workplace procedures, and real industry practice. The programme develops practical professional competence in electrical installation, safe working methods, technical judgement, and quality-oriented task execution through progressive training blocks. It combines classroom theory, supervised workshop practice, guided technical exercises, and formal assessment, and is documented in a form suitable for institutional use, verification, and external or international review through published programme information.
Individuals seeking formal vocational qualification and documented competence in electrical installation.
Practitioners with practical experience who want to systematise skills, close competence gaps, and validate professional capability through structured training and assessment.
Employees of companies and service providers who require documented proof of competence for career development, tendering, compliance, or professional progression.
Apply occupational safety requirements, electrical safety procedures, and risk control measures during installation work.
Read and interpret electrical plans, circuit diagrams, technical specifications, and work instructions.
Select and use hand tools, power tools, measuring instruments, and installation equipment correctly and safely.
Install cables, conduits, distribution components, protective devices, sockets, switches, and lighting circuits according to technical requirements.
Carry out connection, termination, and circuit assembly tasks in accordance with quality standards and workplace procedures.
Inspect installed systems, conduct basic testing, identify defects or non-conformities, and apply corrective actions.
Complete installation records, testing notes, material documentation, and task reporting accurately.
Communicate effectively with supervisors, colleagues, and clients regarding technical tasks, safety issues, and work progress.
Instructional time
Total: 480 academic hours (Theory 180, Practice 240, Independent study 40, Final assessment 20).
Issued documents
Assessment
Assessment includes continuous assessment through tests and practical tasks, evaluation of workshop performance, and a final practical examination demonstrating competence against programme requirements.
Prerequisites
Basic literacy and numeracy, readiness for practical training, and the ability to follow occupational safety requirements. Prior professional experience is not mandatory.
Training format
Competence-based vocational training including classroom theory, supervised practical workshops, guided exercises, technical tasks, and formal assessment.