The media center introduces itself
Training and internship
The media center provides training.
The Wiesbaden Media Center offers the opportunity to complete training in the following areas:
- IT IT specialist (next training start in 2026)
- Media designer for image and sound (next training start in 2028)
The apprenticeship usually lasts three years and starts after the summer vacation. The trainee is involved in ongoing projects. From the second year of training onwards, they will carry out their own projects. There is the opportunity to take part in further training.
Apply now for the IT IT specialist apprenticeship starting on 01.08.2026!
What you can expect from us
- Practical training with real responsibility – no filing of documents
- Insights into networks, servers, operating systems, and modern IT infrastructure
- Modern tools and an environment where curiosity is rewarded
- Permanent employment after training if you perform well – no empty promises
What you will learn with us
During your training, you will gain broad insight into the world of IT—from theory to practice. Among other things, you will deal with the following topics:
- Networks and protocols: How do computers actually communicate with each other?
- Structured cabling: What's behind the walls—and why organization matters
- Linux servers: The basis of modern IT – open, flexible, powerful
- Virtualization & containers: Modern concepts such as Docker & Co.
- Windows environments, clients, user and rights management
- IT support and troubleshooting: Solving problems that others don't even understand
What we want from you
You don't have to be a pro—that's what training is for. But a few things help:
- A high school diploma or (technical) college entrance qualification
- Genuine curiosity about IT – not just because it sounds cool, but because you really want to know how things work
- Enjoyment in thinking through problems and finding solutions
- Reliability and team spirit – we are a small team, so every individual counts and mutual respect is not just a cliché
- Basic knowledge of German and English (technical terms in English are normal in IT)
Nice to have - but not a must
- You've played around with Linux before or know what an IP address is
- You have worked on your own projects—whether a home network, Raspberry Pi, or Minecraft server
- You are interested in network technology, protocols, or the question: "How does the Internet actually reach me?"