ApprenticeEdge

ApprenticeEdgeNHSCompetencies

NHSdegree apprenticeship

NHS Apprenticeship Competencies — What They Test and How to Prepare

Salary: £27,000–£30,000Length: 3–4 yearsAcceptance: 4–7%

NHStests school leavers against a specific set of competencies at every stage — from the online assessment through to the final interview. Here's exactly what they test and how to prepare for each one.

NHS's Core Competencies

1

Patient focus

Assessed at: online assessments, video interview, and assessment centre.

What strong looks like:

A STAR story with a clear individual contribution, a specific outcome, and a genuine reflection on what you learned or would do differently.

2

Leadership

Assessed at: online assessments, video interview, and assessment centre.

What strong looks like:

A STAR story with a clear individual contribution, a specific outcome, and a genuine reflection on what you learned or would do differently.

3

Decision making

Assessed at: online assessments, video interview, and assessment centre.

What strong looks like:

A STAR story with a clear individual contribution, a specific outcome, and a genuine reflection on what you learned or would do differently.

4

Team working

Assessed at: online assessments, video interview, and assessment centre.

What strong looks like:

A STAR story with a clear individual contribution, a specific outcome, and a genuine reflection on what you learned or would do differently.

5

Communication

Assessed at: online assessments, video interview, and assessment centre.

What strong looks like:

A STAR story with a clear individual contribution, a specific outcome, and a genuine reflection on what you learned or would do differently.

6

Commitment to NHS values (The NHS Constitution)

Assessed at: online assessments, video interview, and assessment centre.

What strong looks like:

A STAR story with a clear individual contribution, a specific outcome, and a genuine reflection on what you learned or would do differently.

The STAR Framework

S — Situation: Set the scene briefly (1–2 sentences). Enough context, no more.

T — Task: What was your specific responsibility? What was expected of you?

A — Action: What YOU did — not "we". Be specific. This is 60% of the answer.

R — Result: Quantify if possible. What changed? What did you learn?

Where to Find Your Examples

You don't need impressive examples — you need specific ones. Strong STAR stories come from:

  • Part-time jobs (customer complaints, covering a shift, managing a task alone)
  • School projects or coursework (disagreements, tight deadlines, leading a presentation)
  • Sport, volunteering, Duke of Edinburgh, clubs, or societies
  • Any situation where something went wrong and you fixed it or learned from it

Want the full prep pack?

NHS Apprenticeship Prep Pack

Application stages, competencies, real interview questions, commercial awareness, and a pre-submission checklist — in one complete pack.