NCCER SPARK
Millwright Communication Training
High-Stakes Communication Training · Industrial Edition
Talk It Out Before It
Breaks Down
Breaks Down
On a job site, what you say — and how you say it — is as critical as what you do. These simulations put you in real millwright conversations: with co-workers who cut corners, supervisors under pressure, and situations where the wrong words can stop a job or start an incident.
NCCER Millwright Standards
Workplace Readiness Skills
AI-Powered Practice
The Shortcut on the Rigging Check
Safety Communication · Speak Up FrameworkYou’re a Level 2 millwright trainee at a manufacturing plant. You and your co-worker Dale are rigging a 4,000-lb gearbox to move it across the shop floor. You notice Dale skipped the sling angle inspection and is about to signal the crane operator to lift. NCCER Module 38102 is clear: rigging inspections are non-negotiable. But Dale’s been doing this for nine years and doesn’t take well to being questioned.
👷 You: Level 2 Millwright Trainee
🔧 Dale: 9-year veteran, impatient, ready to lift
🏭 Setting: Industrial shop floor, crane overhead
Speak Up
S
State It
P
Pause
E
Explain
A
Ask
K
Keep
“Hold on Dale — I need to check the sling angles before we lift.”
“That looks fine, let’s go.”
“Hey, did you do the rigging inspection?”
Pushing Back on a Rushed Alignment
Precision Standards · Fact-Based PushbackYou’re a Level 3 millwright on a pump installation. You’ve completed rough alignment and are mid-way through your dial indicator reverse alignment procedure (NCCER Module 15314) when your supervisor, Marcus Webb, tells you to wrap it up — there’s schedule pressure and he says “close enough is fine for this one.” You know that misalignment causes premature bearing failure and could damage a $40,000 pump. The numbers aren’t where they need to be.
👷 You: Level 3 Millwright, mid-alignment
👔 Marcus: Supervisor, schedule-driven, dismissive
🏭 Setting: Pump installation, deadline pressure
Pushback
F
Facts
R
Risk
A
Ask
M
Middle Ground
E
Escalate
“Marcus, I understand the pressure. But I need five more minutes — my runout is at 8 mils and the tolerance is 3.”
“Okay, we can wrap it up.”
“You can’t just tell me to rush alignment — that’s not how this works.”
The Experienced Hand Who Won’t Listen
Mutual Respect · Knowledge TransferYou’re a second-year apprentice millwright. During a bearing installation (NCCER Module 15306), your journeyman partner Ray is about to press in a tapered roller bearing using a hammer and drift — a method NCCER training explicitly flags as a cause of bearing damage. You learned the correct procedure using a bearing press and proper installation sleeve. Ray has 18 years of experience and tends to dismiss apprentices. You need to say something without alienating him — because you’ll be working together all week.
👷 You: 2nd-year Apprentice Millwright
🔧 Ray: 18-year Journeyman, dismissive of apprentices
🏭 Setting: Bearing installation, Ray has hammer in hand
Earn Respect
A
Acknowledge
Q
Question
S
Share
B
Both Win
“Ray, quick question — would you mind if I grab the bearing press? I want to try the procedure we covered in Level 3.”
“That method can damage the races — you shouldn’t do it that way.”
“Okay, whatever you say.”