Seventy percent of Swiss ninth graders choose apprenticeship over traditional school.
In Germany, roughly half of all school-leavers enter the dual vocational training system, known as the duale Ausbildung. Apprentices split their time between a workplace, where they train under a skilled practitioner, and a vocational school, where they study theory. Programs last two to three and a half years depending on the occupation.1
The model is called "dual" because it combines practical training at a company with classroom education at a public institution. Both the federal government and individual firms share the cost. The company pays the apprentice a wage; the state funds the school.2
Germany currently recognizes over 320 officially regulated training occupations, from industrial mechanics to banking clerks to opticians. Each occupation has a national training framework specifying what apprentices must learn and how they will be assessed.3
The system is not limited to Germany. Switzerland operates a similar model, and roughly seventy percent of Swiss ninth graders choose vocational apprenticeship over the academic track. Switzerland consistently reports one of the lowest youth unemployment rates in Europe.4
The origins of the system trace to medieval guild traditions of master-apprentice training, but the modern structure was formalized by the Vocational Training Act (Berufsbildungsgesetz) of 1969, updated in 2005. The act established the legal framework for training contracts, examination standards, and the rights and obligations of both employers and apprentices.5
The dual system produces a credential that carries labor market value on its own, independent of university education. Completers can enter skilled employment directly. In countries where the only recognized path to professional credibility runs through a four-year degree, this alternative does not exist.6