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No.
An apprentice electrician should put "I am an apprentice electrician, which means I have not completed the minimum training required to be recognized as a qualified electrician. According to the National Electrical Code book, since I am not qualified I must not do electrical work unsupervised by a qualified electrician." on a business card for it to be legal.
A local term is an Apprentice. An Apprentice learns the electrical trade by assisting Journeymen or Master Electricians in the performance of their duties. It may be learning conduit bends, to pulling conductors and general duties on the jobsite. The Journeymen or Master Electrician will often delegate more responsibility to an apprentice as they demonstrate the ability to perform the work, so that as they progress they are learning the safe and proper way to perform electrical work. Apprentices are challenged to be well versed in the National Electrical Code and Local Codes and Ordinances in order to earn a Journeyman card or certificate. Many of the electrical workers in the industry are members of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, an organization that has an excellent apprentice training program.
If you are not licenced or qualified to do electrical work then you should not be doing electrical work let alone charging someone for it. If something goes wrong with your installation and your work starts a fire you will be held responsible
You must first finish a trade school program. After tradeschool you must work as an apprentice.
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apprentice
An apprentice is a person who is trained for job. People are still doing apprentice type training today. The significance of it is they can get work.
They had to work out to get strong.
An apprentice often started around 7 or 8 years old to train for a job in skills like a blacksmith, baker, glass making, as a cooper. Today there are people who still apprentice for jobs in plumbing and electrical work. You learn from a working person in that field. The contract for an apprentice was 7 years, but I am not sure if that still applies today.
That would be an apprentice.
No.