542. Starmer Loses His Defence Secretary: What Next?
11 June 2026
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7 June 2013
3 minute(s) read
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Well done Matt! Good luck with the rest of your apprenticeship
We are all individuals, and a life of academia does not suit us all. All learning is good, and we must provide a broad selection of environments and opportunities for people of all ages to live and learn in.
Ignite the spark of curiosity and watch the student flourish.
Apprenticeships, colleges and universities are all equally important and necessary to engage with individuals to provide the right environment and ignite the spark.
It’s important to know yourself and to know what environment will suit you best. It’s a very brave and positive step for any young person to recognise that an apprenticeship will provide them with a better start in life than a university education, and I take my hat off to him.
If I were employing an apprentice I would hire Mark Steel over any wannabe fame-seeking pretend tv entrepreneur.
A real life experience produces real jobs for real people.
The Apprenticeship
Great Blog Matt – well done. Burnley Council is a shining example of how to make an apprenticeship placement work for the business and for the employee and Matt is clearly someone who knows how to maximise his opportunities!!!!
Thanks also for your recent engagement with The Job Junctions at Marsden Heights and sir John Thursby, inspiring the next bunch of REAL Apprentices!!
This is a brilliant post and so inspiring! I wish my company was a bit bigger so I could take on an apprentice, but I do tell other companies about the scheme when I’m out and about networking. Well done that man!
Watched an interesting programme about Huddersfield the other day, in a series of four by Nicholas Crane. Very, very interesting. Interviewed young apprentices at a sharp end technology textile factory. Interesting town too.
And the classic apprenticeship path, before Thatcher came along, is when you joined a company, with apprentice grants from central government, and if you had enough sciences, English and maths O levels, was from sixteen day release three year leading to BTEC OND, then two year BTEC HNC day release, and at 21 you could knock spots off any 21 year old coming out of Uni with an engineering degree, due to so much practical work experience. Ah, those were the days.
Love your dig about ‘phone in front of mouth’ Matt, it must be a condition of their acceptance to the programme and certainly denotes a willingness to look just plain daft.
You can be sure you’ll receive truly structured training and organisational skills which will be useful everywhere.
Mark? You’re thinking of the comedian! 🙂