Instrumentation and Control Technician

As an instrumentation and control technician (formerly known as an industrial instrument mechanic) you’ll build, calibrate, commission, program and maintain industrial control systems. Positions are needed in virtually all industrial enterprises, where you’ll be responsible for installing instruments to monitor various process parameters like temperature, pressure and flow—used by a programmed controller to command final control elements, such as valves and motors, to meet process specifications.

Instrumentation and Control Technician Foundation Program

Our Foundation program includes level 1 apprenticeship training plus additional technical and hands-on experience that will provide the necessary skills to work as an apprentice in this trade.

VIDEO SOURCE: WORKBC’S CAREER TREK

What you'll learn

  • How to program Programmable Logic Controllers (industrial computers) using Ladder Logic and Instruction List programming languages.
  • How to develop and build industrial control circuits.
  • How to disassemble, repair and rebuild valves, regulators, actuators and other components; and calibrate various instruments.
Instrumentation room
Student working with instrumentation
Instrument panel

What makes TRU’s program unique

  • New facilities in TRU’s Industrial Training and Technology Centre including an electrical and electronics lab, calibration and valve lab, programming lab, and process control lab fitted with a full-class set of sophisticated Pignat process-control trainers.
  • Access to a unique collection of real and functional processes, including a multi-fuel power plant with DeltaV DCS, a pilot water treatment facility with SCADA and a waste water treatment facility.
  • Because facilities and equipment are new and state-of-the-art, students learn and train on equipment actually used in the field.

What you'll graduate with

  • Instrumentation and Control Technician Foundation Certificate of Completion
  • The in-school technical training for apprenticeship level 1
  • 325 hours of work-based training towards apprenticeship

Program requirements

  • High school graduation (or equivalent) or mature student status
  • English 12 with a minimum grade of C (or equivalent)
  • Math 11 with a minimum grade of C (any Math 11 or equivalent)
General requirements
  • Students are required to supply their own approved safety glasses and boots