Looking for a 60-Day Program to Become an Electronics Technician

Thread Starter

yassir kabiri

Joined May 16, 2025
1
I already have some hands-on experience and a strong background in physics and math, but I want to make my work more structured and concrete. I'm looking for a 60-day training plan to become a professional electronics technician.

Please suggest a complete program with:

Courses to follow (from fundamentals to advanced topics),

Key skills and knowledge I should acquire by the end,

Practical projects or experiences to include,

A clear roadmap of what I should be able to do after the 60 days.


Thank you!
 

dl324

Joined Mar 30, 2015
18,288
Welcome to AAC.

As far as I know, the quickest program is 2 years.

If you think you can do it in less, enroll in a 2-year program and challenge courses. Still, I doubt that would work.
 

Papabravo

Joined Feb 24, 2006
22,066
I already have some hands-on experience and a strong background in physics and math, but I want to make my work more structured and concrete. I'm looking for a 60-day training plan to become a professional electronics technician.

Please suggest a complete program with:

Courses to follow (from fundamentals to advanced topics),

Key skills and knowledge I should acquire by the end,

Practical projects or experiences to include,

A clear roadmap of what I should be able to do after the 60 days.


Thank you!
This 60-day program is probably an unrealistic fantasy. I've never heard of such a thing.
 

nsaspook

Joined Aug 27, 2009
16,275
This 60-day program is probably an unrealistic fantasy. I've never heard of such a thing.
Basic electronics for a Navy boot with no prior experience was at least at year for really smart guys. Directed training for specialist was at least another year, with follow on training for several months after fleet experience of at least a year to see if you could hack it.

60 days is a wild fantasy.
 

Papabravo

Joined Feb 24, 2006
22,066
Let me put it another way. If you came to me with a 60-day certificate, I would be unlikely to hire you. A summer internship for minimum wage might be possible.
 

paulktreg

Joined Jun 2, 2008
851
My training back in the 1970's consisted of a 5 year apprenticeship with one day and one evening a week at college completing an IEEE HNC in Electrical and Electronic Engineering. Only after this was I classed as an Electronics Technician by my workplace.

My how things have changed!
 
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