President Cyril Ramaphosa highlighted five new goals for the state with two of these directly linked to education. With a focus on improving educational outcomes and the inevitable impact this will have on employment, there is clarity on what needs to be achieved. How we get there is the question.
The education crisis canโt be solved by government alone but rather, all parties with a vested interest. From teachers and parents to the private sector and the state, all will need to work collectively to overcome one of SAโs greatest challenges, thereby unlocking the potential that lies within our young population.
โThereโs a gap between the skills we need and the skills we have. As a country, we need to think about where our economy is going and what skills we need at foundation, high school, undergraduate and post-graduate level. Then we need to consciously build the school curriculum to make sure we deliver these skill sets,โ said Khanyi Nzukuma, current CEO ofย Glacierย by Sanlamย and former high school teacher.
Nzukuma was speaking at a recent debate called โMacro conversations in micro spacesโ aimed at unpacking how the youth can be better prepared for the jobs of the future. Hosted byย Sanlamย in collaboration with theย iMadiba Project, the topical conversation was facilitated by Primediaโsย Africa Melane. Fellow panellists included educational psychologist and life coachย Dr Tshepiso Matentjie; 2018 Global Teen Leader,ย author,ย Google Science Fair Grand Prize Winner and Times Top 30 Most Influential Teenย Kiara Nirghin; and lecturer and founder of Mentor Me to Successย Nosipho Bele.
Here are some of the key takeoutโs for key stakeholders in education โ parents, NGOs, teachers, government and the private sector:
- Enable STEM learning from early on:Nirghin โ a Stanford student and the youngest panel member at just 18 โ said she believes her future job will be in computer science and biotechnology. She emphasised the importance ofallย children learning STEM (science, technology, engineering and maths) subjects as early on as possible, โI think when you don’t have girls involved in STEM, what you basically have is a country that has half the amount of innovation that it could possibly have.โ She also said that as 80% of the jobs today are not going to be jobs in 20 yearsโ time, itโs vital to teach kids how to question, โTeaching teachers how to mentor children to allow them to explore and ask questions; thatโs what our schools need.โ The reality is that not all children will pursue STEM careers, but parents have a fundamental role to play in fostering curiosity.
- Mentorship can play meaningful role in future success:Agreeing with the critical role mentorship can play, Nosipho Bele added that a lot of it comes down to showing children โ from poorer communities especially โ whatโs possible. โThe vision for Mentor Me to Success involves young people helping other young people. For example, a second-year university student might help a matric student to register, get into university and apply for funding. That sort of ripple effect becomes very important.โ
- Hard and soft skills important in equal measure:While the importance of hard skills withindigital-age-ready educationย is evident, the power of soft skills should not be underestimated. These skills such as empathy, creativity, strategy and critical thinking are what is predicted to differentiate humans from machines. Nzukuma added, โAligned with President Ramaphosaโs directive, we need to give youth the best possible chance of sustained employability in the Fourth Industrial Revolution. The best way to do that is through education that instils the right hard and soft skills.โ
- Parents are a critical link:Parents are uniquely positioned to play an impactful role in developing soft skills in a child. ButDr Tshepiso Matentjieย said that many parents are preoccupied with just putting food on the table and focussing on getting their kids to pass โ not necessarily the Fourth Industrial Revolution. โWe need to have more of these kinds of conversations. Parents especially, because theย types of conversations you have within your home environment can make a child believe โI can do moreโ.โ
- Hands-on, local solutions starting from foundation:Matentjie said she has three things sheโd like to discuss with President Ramaphosa:
- Early childhood development: โThatโs where we fail most of the kids.ย We fail them in stimulating their brains to make sense of things.โ
- Teacher salaries: โWe need to take care of our teachers because if they’re not feeling taken care of, they’re not going to show that love and care for the kids that they’re teaching.โ
- Indigenous knowledge systems: โWe are in Africa. It’s the most exciting place to be. We keep looking at outside and first world countries to develop what it is that we need to do in terms of our education and economies and we borrow. What about cultivating it here? How can we develop the innovations we need at home?โ
She concluded that the only way to learn is to get your hands dirty. We need to help learners to be writing business plans by the time they finish matric. So, our young people can create the small businesses our economy needs.
The iMadiba Project is a global initiative to carry on Mandelaโs legacy by having evocative conversations that could lead to meaningful change.ย Artistย Erhardt Thielย built each micro-museum as an artistic installation ofย Madibaโs Robben Island cell. They have bars, as the cell did, and an open doorway which symbolises that the space is always open for dialogue. Collectively, theyโll soon create the worldโs largest museum for reflection. They comment on where weโve come from, the work weโve done in moving the country forwards and the work thatโs still ahead of us.