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APPRENTICESHIP TRADES

Heat & Frost Insulating

Build your career one step at a time.

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Apprenticeship Length

4 YEARS

Heat & Frost Insulating Icon

State Skilled Wage Rate Range

$25.55 to $36.24

Per Hour, Plus Benefits*

SCHOOL LOCATION

In House Program

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heat & frost insulation application requirements

Completion of the Online Apprenticeship Application and include the following: 

  • High school verification:
    • Transcripts with graduation date listed, or
    • Copy of high school diploma, or
    • GED/HSED certificate, or
    • Graduating senior: current transcript with verification from your school that you are on track for graduation, or
    • Homeschool PI – 1206 form verification for each year completed
  • Copy of driver’s license or have another transportation plan to get to work and school
  • Test results
    • Next Generation Accuplacer Reading: 209
    • Next Generation Accuplacer Arithmetic: 237
      OR
    • ACT Reading: 12
    • ACT Math: 15

What You will Do

Assemble and repair insulation on industrial equipment, pipes, ductwork and other mechanical systems; design and fabricate insulation systems to control noise and maintain temperatures on heat exchangers, storage tanks and boilers; protect outside environments from exposure to hazardous liquids and gases.
*Apprentices earn minimum of 45% first year, 60% second year, 65% third year and 70% fourth year. Benefits, such has health care and retirement, are above and beyond this wage.

CAREERS IN CONSTRUCTION

Your Career
The word "Blueprint"

Most people don’t realize apprenticeship is a career area with lots of opportunities. Getting into employment earlier means there’s lots of potential for you to progress quickly in your career. After putting your skills into practice, you could become a master craftsperson and/or land a leadership role at your company, such as foreman, crew leader, jobsite superintendent or project manager. Some apprentices start their own businesses or go back to school for a two-year construction management degree at a technical college and then apply that to a four-year building construction management degree at a university. How far you want to go is all up to you.