Mobile Home Installer

What To Learn

High School

Suggested Steps to Prepare for a Mobile Home Installer Career (Grades 6-12)

Check out the recommended classes, activities and skills below for each grade level. These recommendations are very general -- discuss your specific course plan with your school counselors and teachers.

AI-assisted and curriculum-reviewed guidance. Talk with your counselor or teacher about your specific plan.
Grades 6-8

Helpful Classes

  • Math
  • Science
  • Technology
  • Design

Things to Try

  • Take apart and reassemble a simple device while tracking the order of parts and steps, Practice noticing unusual sounds, movement, or wear and explaining what might be wrong, Learn how diagrams, labels, and manuals help people fix equipment safely, Interview a mobile home installer about tools, troubleshooting, and repair planning

Focus Skills

  • Troubleshooting
  • Observation
  • Tool use
  • Precision
  • Safety awareness

Helpful Classes

  • Industrial Technology
  • Algebra I
  • Physical Science
  • Safety
  • Computer Applications

Recommended Learning Areas

  • tools
  • systems basics
  • measurement
  • safety
  • simple repairs

Things to Try

  • Join an industrial, automotive, or repair project and practice basic diagnostics and tool safety, Read wiring diagrams, parts lists, or service instructions and explain what they show, Observe how technicians inspect equipment, replace parts, and complete work orders, Shadow a mobile home installer or maintenance worker to see how problems are documented

Focus Skills

  • Troubleshooting
  • Observation
  • Tool use
  • Precision
  • Safety awareness

Helpful Classes

  • Industrial Technology
  • Geometry
  • Electrical or Mechanical Basics
  • Blueprint Reading
  • Technical Writing

Recommended Learning Areas

  • electrical and mechanical systems
  • diagrams
  • maintenance logs
  • testing
  • troubleshooting

Things to Try

  • Troubleshoot a simple electrical or mechanical problem and explain the cause and fix, Practice preventive maintenance tasks such as inspection, cleaning, testing, or adjustment, Compare how different systems use motors, controls, belts, gears, or circuits, Write a repair log that records symptoms, steps taken, and results

Focus Skills

  • Troubleshooting
  • Observation
  • Tool use
  • Precision
  • Safety awareness

Helpful Classes

  • Maintenance Technology
  • Technical Math
  • Electricity or Mechanics
  • Safety
  • Blueprint Reading

Recommended Learning Areas

  • preventive maintenance
  • diagnostics
  • work orders
  • parts identification
  • safe repair practices

Things to Try

  • Complete a maintenance project tied to diagnostics, preventive work, controls, or equipment repair, Use meters, manuals, diagrams, or work orders to identify faults and verify repairs, Observe how teams plan downtime, parts, and safety before starting service work, Interview technicians about reliability, root causes, and documentation

Focus Skills

  • Troubleshooting
  • Observation
  • Tool use
  • Precision
  • Safety awareness

Helpful Classes

  • Industrial Maintenance
  • Technical Math
  • Electricity
  • Mechanics
  • Technical Writing

Recommended Learning Areas

  • system troubleshooting
  • repair planning
  • controls and components
  • documentation
  • reliability

Things to Try

  • Build a portfolio with troubleshooting notes, diagrams, work orders, and maintenance plans, Complete a capstone tied to electrical, mechanical, Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning, automotive, or industrial repair, Compare pathways in field service, industrial maintenance, fleet repair, and equipment support, Practice planning repairs, documenting results, and preventing repeat failures

Focus Skills

  • Troubleshooting
  • Observation
  • Tool use
  • Precision
  • Safety awareness

Beyond High School

Here's a list of programs that you should consider if you're interested in this career:

Education Level

Education training and experience are required at different levels for success in different occupations.

High school preferred, plus short term, on-the-job training

Mobile home installers generally have a high school diploma or equivalent and receive some form of on-the-job training.

Insider Info

Additional Information

In some areas, mobile home installers must be licensed and bonded. In order to be licensed, you need on-the-job experience combined with a short training program, says industry consultant George Porter. Experience could include working on a crew for six months or setting up 50 homes.

Porter develops and teaches installation programs in 11 states. "The courses cover how to check it out, safety precautions, the basic principles of what you have to do to get the job done," he says.

If you want to get started in the industry, walk up to somebody doing it and ask if they need help, says Porter. Call the state associations. Go to a dealer and ask for a job.

"Be prepared to start on the bottom. How you apply yourself will determine your future," says Porter.

In high school, take industrial arts, math, English and machine shop.