Thanks for the insight Jessica.The first thing is to stress you shouldn’t be pressurised into making a decision unless the role is starting soon. Do speak to the employer to see if they can give you more time to consider the offer if you are feeling pressurised to make a decision (even if it’s just until Monday).
Balancing an apprenticeship while working is tricky. You are effectively working four days a week and studying one, but it will be challenging balancing both. Most apprentices I know end up studying more like 2 days per week, which means they are often studying in the evenings or weekends alongside their study day.
But the benefit is that you are working from day 1. You will have more experience than your traditional TC peers when you qualify (which should help with finding an NQ role). You’ll be earning money, which even if the salary is minimum wage, will be financially better than being on a maintenance grant of £20,000 (which is the maximum I have seen for firms that sponsor their future trainees through the SQE before starting the TC). Given you are also getting all employee benefits on top such as annual leave, pension and NI contributions, sick leave etc which you won’t get as a future trainees through being sponsored through an SQE course.
Where I have begun working, they offer part time hours. This means they’d be open to me staying and completing any studies necessary. Obviously this will have to pass with the firm if I end up joining.
It’s an option I seem to prefer as it means I can still do legal work before my TC but just in a different sector.
I’m worried it might come across that I have less interest in commercial law then I suggest, but as I have recently joined and still want to gain a diverse experience, I’d like to stay on if possible before I start a GSA in September. It would also help with the limited Maintenece funding which you highlighted.
Then again, perhaps the GSA just negates the complications of working elsewhere, even if it might be intense.
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