AFPA Level 5 Training
Solved
trxz
Posted messages
1
Status
Membre
-
Raymond PENTIER Posted messages 58546 Registration date Status Contributeur Last intervention -
Raymond PENTIER Posted messages 58546 Registration date Status Contributeur Last intervention -
Hello, I’m getting ready to take the Level 5 tests to enter the training program, and I would like to ask you for some information. Are the tests that you find on Google really the same type of exercises we have on the test day, such as math problems and calculations in square and cubic meters? If it's really exercises like that, I might as well give up. I have a CAP level, but the thing is, I haven't opened a book in 5 years; I left school without looking back and left everything behind me. Now I'm thinking, WHY!!!!!!!! If someone could give me some information, it would really be a good deed on your part. THANK YOU.
3 réponses
Hello.
I'll try to explain: When you are in a level V training at AFPA, you have a lot of workshop hours and some hours of health and safety, technology, and professional calculation; but to understand this professional calculation, you must, of course, master the basics of arithmetic-geometry at the middle school level.
If you do not pass the French or calculation tests, AFPA will offer you to first follow a Preparatory course to get you back up to speed; at the end of this course, you will retake the tests.
General knowledge (spelling, grammar, math, history-geography, languages ...) is essential to exercise a profession, and before that to follow a professional training, where it is assumed that you already have the desired background.
Haven't opened a book since you graduated from school? That's really a shame, and I encourage you to start again immediately and to do only that until the day of the tests (and even after) ... You will not regret it!
Think that when you work in a profession, you will deal with plans, quotes, purchase orders, invoices, pay slips, Social Security and Mutual declarations, and you will need to keep track of your bank account, your loan repayments, your taxes ...
--
Retirement is great! Especially in the Caribbean... :-)
Raymond (former AFPA center director)
I'll try to explain: When you are in a level V training at AFPA, you have a lot of workshop hours and some hours of health and safety, technology, and professional calculation; but to understand this professional calculation, you must, of course, master the basics of arithmetic-geometry at the middle school level.
If you do not pass the French or calculation tests, AFPA will offer you to first follow a Preparatory course to get you back up to speed; at the end of this course, you will retake the tests.
General knowledge (spelling, grammar, math, history-geography, languages ...) is essential to exercise a profession, and before that to follow a professional training, where it is assumed that you already have the desired background.
Haven't opened a book since you graduated from school? That's really a shame, and I encourage you to start again immediately and to do only that until the day of the tests (and even after) ... You will not regret it!
Think that when you work in a profession, you will deal with plans, quotes, purchase orders, invoices, pay slips, Social Security and Mutual declarations, and you will need to keep track of your bank account, your loan repayments, your taxes ...
--
Retirement is great! Especially in the Caribbean... :-)
Raymond (former AFPA center director)
thank you very much for your help, your sentences really motivated me for what's next
thanks again
have a nice day