Maritime electrical fitter
Quality improvement and project control technician · Technical · Engineering, manufacturing, process and control
The official framework — 52 requirements.
Every Knowledge, Skill and Behaviour below is the verbatim regulatory text of the Maritime electrical fitter apprenticeship standard (v1.1). On EngTree, each one becomes a node — verified knowledge entries, training modules and End-Point Assessment evidence all map back to it.
Knowledge (26)
What the apprentice must understand
- K1
Awareness of health and safety regulations, relevance to the occupation and the electrical fitters responsibilities. Control of Substances Hazardous to Health (COSHH). Display Screen Equipment. Due diligence. Electrical safety and compliance. Electricity at work regulations. Emergency evacuation procedures. Health and Safety at Work Act – responsibilities. Isolation and emergency stop procedures. L8 Legionella. Lifting Operations and Lifting Equipment Regulations (LOLER). Lone working. Manual handling. Near miss reporting. Noise regulation. Provision and use of Work Equipment Regulations (PUWER). Reporting of Injuries, Diseases, and Dangerous Occurrences Regulations (RIDDOR). Risk assessments. Safe systems of work. Safety equipment: guards, signage, fire extinguishers. Situational awareness. Slips, trips and falls. Types of hazards. Personal Protective Equipment (PPE). Working at height. Working in confined spaces.
- K2
Engineering, mathematical and scientific principles, methods, techniques, graphical expressions, symbols, formulae and calculations used in a maritime electrical environment.
- K3
The structure, properties and characteristics of common materials used for electrical power activities in the maritime sector.
- K4
Problem solving techniques.
- K5
Testing, inspection and diagnostic methods and techniques for maritime electrical problems.
- K6
Approved processes and procedures for maritime electrical activities: how to access and follow.
- K7
Principles of interpreting engineering data and documentation in a maritime electrical environment.
- K8
The different roles and functions in the organisation and how they interact.
- K9
Maritime electrical engineering technology and principles applied in the design, build, manufacture, operation and maintenance of maritime vessels.
- K10
The practical and theoretical requirements of maritime electrical, electronic, electromechanical, fibre optics, and systems used on board vessels.
- K11
The function and operation of hand and power tools used in a maritime electrical environment.
- K12
Verbal communication techniques. Giving and receiving information. Matching style to audience. Barriers in communication and how to overcome them. Maritime engineering terminology.
- K13
Documentation: methods and requirements - electronic and paper.
- K14
Principles of sustainability and circular economy. Energy efficiency and reuse of materials. Environmental and sustainability procedures. Principles of control and management of emissions and waste. Efficient use of resources.
- K15
Equality Act. Equality, diversity, and inclusion in the workplace. Unconscious bias.
- K16
Escalation procedures.
- K17
Business operation considerations: efficiency, customer satisfaction, competitiveness, minimising risks to operation, and ethical issues.
- K18
Team working principles.
- K19
Continuous improvement techniques.
- K20
Planning techniques: resources, tools, equipment, access, time management.
- K21
Maritime electrical maintenance practices and techniques: planned, preventative, and corrective methods and their frequency.
- K22
Techniques for measuring and marking out maritime electrical components.
- K23
Maritime electrical assembly methods and techniques: inspection, terminations, connections, fastening, tightening, cleaning and calibration.
- K24
Principles of quality assurance in a maritime electrical environment.
- K25
Principles and practices of restoring the work area on completion of work.
- K26
Techniques for cutting, shaping and finishing maritime electrical components.
Skills (20)
What the apprentice must be able to do
- S1
Obtain, read, analyse and interpret engineering data, drawings or documentation used in the design, build, operation and repair of maritime vessels such as job instructions, circuit diagrams, drawings and quality control documentation.
- S2
Apply health and safety procedures and safe systems of work in compliance with regulations and standards.
- S3
Identify, organise and use resources to complete tasks, with consideration for cost, quality, safety, security and environmental impact.
- S4
Use approved processes and procedures for maritime electrical work.
- S5
Carry out maritime electrical quality assurance checks.
- S6
Resolve maritime electrical engineering problems within the limits of their responsibility. Escalate un-resolved fault issues or problems.
- S7
Restore the work area on completion of the activity. Return any resources and consumables.
- S8
Measure and mark out maritime electrical components.
- S9
Select and use hand and power tools to cut, shape and finish maritime electrical components.
- S10
Install and remove maritime electrical equipment or components, sub-assemblies or whole systems.
- S11
Apply maritime electrical assembly and use methods and techniques such as inspection, terminations, connections, fastening, tightening, cleaning and calibration. on maritime vessels.
- S12
Apply testing, inspection and diagnostic techniques used in the maritime electrical environment.
- S13
Apply planned, preventative and corrective maintenance techniques on mechanical electrical components, equipment and systems.
- S14
Apply continuous improvement techniques. Devise suggestions for improvement.
- S15
Communicate with others verbally for example, colleagues and stakeholders.
- S16
Apply team working principles.
- S17
Carry out and record planned and unplanned learning and development activities.
- S18
Record and enter information - paper based or electronic. For example, energy usage, job sheets, risk assessments, equipment service records, test results, handover documents and manufacturers' documentation, asset management records, work sheets, checklists, waste environmental records and any legal reporting requirements.
- S19
Apply environmental and sustainability procedures in compliance with regulations and standards for example, segregate resources for reuse, recycling and disposal.
- S20
Follow equality, diversity and inclusion procedures.
Behaviours (6)
How the apprentice must conduct themselves
- B1
Put health and safety first.
- B2
Committed to continued professional development (CPD) to maintain and enhance competence in their own area of practice.
- B3
Take personal responsibility for their own sustainable working practices.
- B4
Take account of diversity and inclusion requirements.
- B5
Respond and adapt to work demands and situations.
- B6
Take responsibility for completing work.
This framework is where Pathways
meets verified knowledge.
Scenarios practise these requirements. Verified entries teach them. The evidence portfolio proves them. One spine, three surfaces.