Showing posts with label The Youth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Youth. Show all posts

Friday, 3 July 2015

What do you do for fun?: "I climb mountains"

Guest blooger Roslyn Baatjies
I imagine that the answer to this question: ‘’So, prof what do you do for fun?’’, to NMMU Vice-Chancellor Prof Derrick Swartz would be, ‘’I climb mountains’’.

I thought about that this morning when the man himself spoke about his planned climb of Mount Fuji in Japan next month to raise funds for bursaries for our financially needy students.  He mentioned that he recently did mountaineering in Norway and that he was invited to climb Kilimanjaro with another group. Unfortunately the latter clashed with his university commitments.

As part of Prof Swartz's personal commitment to the University's 10-year celebrations, he will be climbing Mount Fuji in Japan on 7 August to raise funds for academically-deserving but financially-needy students at NMMU.

The poster for the VC's #climb4nmmu
The #climb4nmmu campaign will also give Prof Swartz the opportunity to highlight the extent of the need for financial support for such students especially within the Eastern Cape, which is recognised as the poorest province.

Prof Swartz's 3,7km climb will be symbolic of the challenges many students face in order to get a tertiary qualification such as perseverance, taking responsibility and integrity. There are 10 base camps leading up to the peak, one for each year of NMMU's first decade.

All funds will go to the University's Bursary Legacy Campaign run by the NMMU Trust. Their Ignite a Candle campaign is already supporting worthy students.

The University is hoping to raise at least R500 000 to support a further students for the duration of their degrees or diplomas.

"I studied at university because of the bursary support I received from people I never knew personally. My bursary was a gift from the past to the present.”

"I strongly believe that this is our generation's responsibility too. We can give back in thousands of different ways. The #climb4nmmu campaign is just one way,’’ says Prof Swartz.

The VC, Prof. Swartz during fitness test.
The VC addressing the media this morning.
Everyday mountains have a way of humbling us. It has a way of connecting us to ourselves, nature and to others, by simply being out there. Embracing adventure means knowing it’s not always going to turn out exactly the way we want it or expect it to and so are the mountains, just like life. 

So in the same way the daily challenges give our needy students a new perspective, we bid that our vice-chancellor will embrace this adventure and not only raise funds, but come back to NMMU with new ideas to challenge us and the status quo.

The University has created a dedicated website in support of the #climb4nmmu campaign. Go to http://trust.nmmu.ac.za/VC-s-Climb-Campaign

Tuesday, 30 June 2015

Opportunities galore for learners and students this recess


Guest blogger Roslyn Baatjies
For many learners school’s out, but for those who intend improving their marks and getting into university next year, there is no rest.

Driving into work this morning, we saw a number of young people entering the campuses and someone asked when lectures are ending. I responded that lectures have ended and that those young people were learners attending either the accounting or engineering winter schools or the Science Discovery Week at NMMU.

This week close to  900 Grade 11 and 12 learners will be exposed to the fascinating worlds of accounting, science and engineering over the June/July school holidays at Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University.

The Science Discovery Week – that will be attended by 300 learners from 56 schools in the Eastern Cape - promises to open the eyes of Grade 11 and 12 learners to the intriguing fields of Science in a fun and informal setting. Daily activities will include visits to various Science Faculty departments where learners will participate in subject-specific experiments.
Offered for the past eight years, the event started off with 60 learners and has now grown to 300 participants. With topics like ‘’Game Changers - The Good, the Bad and the Ugly of Science”, “Light Fantastic” and ‘’Chemistry Unplugged‘’ learners will not only be educated, but also entertained.

NMMU’s Accounting winter school programme, geared towards helping Grade 11 and 12 pupils improve their marks and their chances of attending university, boasts an impressive track record.

Almost a third of the 520 pupils who attended last year’s Grade 12 winter school successfully registered for degrees or diplomas at NMMU. An analysis comparing their June matric results with their December results has revealed that many of them shot up by as much as 30%.

This year’s week-long Accounting winter school for Grade 12s, sponsored by Deloitte, takes place from June 29 to July 3, while the three-day Grade 11 winter school, sponsored by PricewaterhouseCooper (PwC), takes place from July 7 to 9.

The annual engineering winter school has been offered for the past 10 years and will take place from 12 to 17 July. The programme for 30 learners from 14 high schools will include, among others, visits to VWSA and Continental Tyre.

In addition, a winter school project with a difference will be held off-campus by the NMMU Department of Social Development Professions and driven by social work lecturer Dr Veonna Goliath.

Dr Goliath says the winter school is truly interdisciplinary in nature and has a longer term community development focus.

The project, located in the Northern Areas at Bethvale Primary School, was initiated by the Uniting Reformed church in Chatty and part of Dr Goliath’s  post-doctoral work. From Monday 29 June to Thursday 2 July 2015 tutors from mainly the Faculty of Education’s postgraduate programme will tutor Grade 10 and 11 learners in specific subjects.

And in rural Eastern Cape, our SRC is making information accessible in a bid to assist high school learners in raising their awareness of matters relating to access to higher education.


At NMMU there definitely is no lack of opportunities to share or gain knowledge. 

Monday, 29 June 2015

NMMU funny man in the running for SA Comics Awards


 Guest Blogger Khanyisa Melwa
Accolades amassed by NMMU students and staff are never in short supply. It is not everyday however, that we can say that one of our own IT students stands a chance of winning awards at the South African Comics Choice Awards.

Our very own, Lukhanyiso Matshoba’s people-centred style of comedy has earned him nominations at the 5th Annual South African Savanna Comics Choice Awards.

Lukhanyiso has been nominated in the following categories: Best friend of Comedy and the Audience Choice, for which he will need the public’s votes in order to win.



The budding comedian recently returned from Johannesburg where he was battling it out with stand-up comics from around the country, for the coveted Best Newcomer nomination which will be announced in early July.

Lukhanyiso "DirtyBumzz" Mathshoba on the carpet in Joburg recently.
This young man, who is currently completing his IT Diploma at NMMU, started stand-up comedy in 2013.

“It was when I was in the Drama Society that I discovered I had a knack for making people laugh,” he says.

He says he chose the stage name “DirtyBumzz” because he wanted to destigmatise the name.

"Dirty bums" is a term that is often used when one is referring to disadvantaged or marginalized people. My aim is to give those people hope and to motivate them. To make them believe that they are capable of doing so much.” says the budding comedian.

His material consists of stories about his township upbringing; and he compares this with life in surburbia, in a bid to ultimately unite people through laughter.

Lukhanyiso doing his thing on stage.

“Winning these awards would be great. No one from the Eastern Cape has ever won a Comics Choice Award. So it’s not only me who will be winning, but PE and the Eastern Cape too,” says Lukhanyiso.

For Lukhanyiso to win in the aforementioned categories, members of the public will need to vote and stand a chance to win a VIP experience to the awards. The winner will receive two double tickets to the awards show on the 15th of August 2015, dinner at Montecasino to the value of R500, a chance to sashay down the yellow carpet with celebs, comedians and media as well as access to the after party.

SMS 3975 to 45757 to vote.

SMS’s cost R1.50 | Limited to 20 votes per mobile number | RSA Only

Let's get behind our funny man, and bring those accolades home!


Wednesday, 18 March 2015

‘Jumping off planes with parachutes’: attributes for success …


NMMU Vice-Chancellor's Scholars with Chancellor Santie Botha and Vice-Chancellor Prof Derrick Swartz (centre).
An excellent academic record just isn’t going to hack it anymore. That’s as Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University (NMMU) Chancellor Santie Botha* intimated in her address to the university’s chosen few – the 2015 cohort of Vice-Chancellor’s Scholars.

Today’s ever-changing world means what was good enough yesterday is no longer good enough today. Instead, today’s generation must strive far beyond top marks.

Ask the Chancellor herself.

The former South African Business Woman of the Year works in our volatile, uncertain, ever-changing world … a far cry from the one in which she grew up when a degree guaranteed you a decent job.

Now, says Ms Botha, only the fittest, creative out of the box thinkers, entrepreneurs and true innovators are successful.

“You won’t be boarding trains with tickets, you’ll be jumping out of airplanes,” Ms Botha told the 26 Vice-Chancellor’s Scholars, their parents and NMMU staff at the Awards Dinner to recognise their achievement in being selected to the R82 782-a-year bursary.

“Success is no longer about playing it safe.”

Instead, she continued at the prestigious event in the university’s Indoor Sports Centre, it’s about getting involved beyond your books, showing what you can give and by providing solutions to the likes of our ailing global economy, crime, terrorism, climate change, poverty, disease … (no pressure, guys!)

To do this, you need:

1. The ability to add true value

2. The capacity to try new things

3. An appetite for risk and

4. The acceptance of trial and error as a career strategy.

Ultimately, to succeed in a world that is going to bulge to three billion within the two decades with a massive middle class, today’s students are going to have to add real value in whatever field they find themselves in.

Are you up to it?
VC Scholars (back from left) Mylon Jonas, Ruan Olivier, (front) Carla Barnard, Anandi Botha and Sumaiya Moses

*Full transcript of Chancellor’s address at the Vice-Chancellor’s Scholarship Awards Dinner

I would like to start by congratulating every one of the students here this evening on being a deserving winner. It is an honour to have students of your calibre at Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University to specialise in your chosen fields. I would also like to congratulate you on your excellent choice of university. I can assure you, that wherever you might end up working in the world one day, you will never have to explain where Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University is situated or which country you are from.

Also, as you have chosen the only university in the world that carries the name of the greatest leader of all time, Mr Nelson Mandela … I would like to give you one of his famous quotes…’A good head and a good heart are always a formidable combination. There are very few misfortunes in the world that you cannot turn into a personal triumph if you have the iron will and the necessary skill. It is what we make of what we have, not what we are given, that separates one person from another’.

My request to you is that as young achievers and potential leaders in your respective fields and also of our beloved country and beyond…that you don’t only look at what Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University can give to you but also what YOU can give back to the university. What I mean when I say that is that you don’t only excel in your academic studies but that you get involved …. In community work, in sport, in research and truly make a difference to other people’s lives, your own life and ultimately, make NMMU the university where all top achievers want to be. Because this will prepare you even more for the world of work when you leave here.

Because we live in the right-brain society today. Where it is about survival of the fittest, creative out of the box thinkers, entrepreneurs, true innovators. People who question the status quo…irrespective of the kind of discipline that you are in. To always ask the critical questions and improve on the answers. Everybody has a point of view but it’s impossible for everyone to always be right …Think of the global challenges today… an anemic global economy, transnational crime and terrorism, climate change, poverty, disease … and there-in lies the challenge … how to become involved in solving those global challenges and creating a new order..

To succeed in the world to come, you won’t be boarding trains with tickets; you’ll be jumping off planes with parachutes.

We live in fast changing, enormously disruptive times. Success is no longer about playing safe, being predictable, or following schedules. That’s how it was when I was growing up.



There are too many disruptions still afoot to believe in the train metaphor anymore. Digital-mobile-social-technology platforms have already laid waste to a whole range of industries and professions. There are no predictable trains running in media, music, and communication or publishing anymore because the old rules have been overturned by the fact that a billion people now carry connected consumption devices in their pockets.

Watch the heat being turned up even more, as easily used software and mobile hardware takes away a big chunk of what professionals used to see as their bread and butter. Doctors, lawyers, accountants will no longer be able to sell simple processing or basic procedures – they will have to elevate to higher-level advisory roles, or become irrelevant.

In the next two decades, three billion people are expected to be added to the already growing middle class. That’s great for consumption - many sales to be made - but a huge strain on limited resources like food, water, oil. Technological change will have to be even more rapid for the planet to cope with all those extra wallets, mouths and fingers. New forms of energy, synthetic foods and tighter environmental regulation are not just likely – it’s a done deal.

So, you will ask me, what is “safe” in the world of work tomorrow?

The truth is, no one knows. “Safe” work does not exist anymore. In our unpredictable world today, you have to be able to do the following.

1. The ability to add true value, not just simple procedural inputs

2. The capacity to try things out that have never been done before

3. An appetite for risk and

4. The acceptance of trial and error as a career strategy. Thinking out of the box and finding your “own brand and your own way” of doing things in your chosen discipline is a no brainer.

It’s scary stuff, but if it’s any consolation, I am in exactly the same boat. But I know that at the heart of success, it is always about providing genuine, distinctive value to others. And that never changes. What does change, however, is the form and format of delivery with constant re-invention at its core. What is new today is yesterday’s news tomorrow. And that is what I want you to have at the back of your minds as you start your studies.

So in a competitive environment, where you want to win, you always have to push the boundaries. And when you make those big decisions, there is always risk involved. If there is no risk involved, then the decisions are not big enough to start off with. Remember the market today is global…and the war for the best talent is intense. You have to ensure that you become the best that you can ultimately be.

To every parent, teacher and headmaster here this evening, I would like to congratulate and thank you for your support, your love and belief in creating deserving winners and our leaders of tomorrow.

Ndiyabulela nongomso.








Thursday, 12 March 2015

#NMMUWalk - Putting the ‘social’ back into ‘social media’

By guest blogger: Khanyisa Melwa

The advent of social media has completely changed the way we interact and engage with one another. Filters and hashtags have become somewhat of a lingua franca. As millennials, we are often referred to as hyper-taskers and our teenagers are now screenagers. We live in the information age, an age where one chooses to be ignorant as information is readily available with a click of a button.

With this in mind, it was quite refreshing to be a part of an event that puts the ‘social’ back into social media. I’m talking about the first #NMMUWalk that was hosted by Cityofpe together with the Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University (NMMU) on Tuesday evening.

The #NMMUWalk is essentially an Instawalk (Instagram Walk) which is about getting the community together to take pictures of our beautiful city/campuses and share them on Instagram. It’s an opportunity for people to get to meet the people behind the Instagram accounts and interact with them on a human level. “It’s about growing the community, that’s our emphasis” says Joshua Terry, one third of Cityofpe. The community in this case, was the NMMU community.

The walk began at Madibaz Café, with some quick treats, because you know – food. Whilst enjoying the delicacies, I couldn’t help but feel like an amateur (which I am) when I heard these guys and girls talk about their lenses and cool cameras. Canon 550D’s, ISO’s and Insta-lenses were the order of the day. Did you guys even know Insta-lenses existed? I didn’t. Apparently some company in Cape Town manufactures these, a pretty nifty gadget for you iPhone users.

Our Instawalkers at the kraal.


We then missioned down to the kraal to begin our expedition, in search for the coolest shots of our beautiful campus. Bar the odd selfie here and there, our Instawalkers achieved this with aplomb, as a plethora of beautiful pictures of the campus can be seen under the hashtag - #NMMUWalk on Instagram.

River Leask doing a 'RiverJump'
What was even more interesting was how 25 completely different students, with everyone studying different courses and from different backgrounds could come together for a new experience and enjoy it so much. We all came to take pictures of a beautiful campus and share these on Instagram but the bi-product of this was that friends and connections were made and for some, followers were gained.

Barriers were transcended at the #NMMUWalk; people you would normally speak to over an app using a smartphone were now standing right next to you taking the very pictures that would leave you awestruck on Instagram. Not only that, but societal barriers were also dismantled, this was evidenced by the diversity of the students present. This goes to show how social media – which is famous for rendering active-users as anti-social can now be used as a socializing agent, which can only bode well for social cohesion in our beautiful country.


It’s really cool to know that we go to a university that encourages creativity, diversity and a vibrant student life. Kudos to the lads from Cityofpe for hosting this event with NMMU, I hope this was the first of many.

Photo: Stuart William Black aka Crazyninja88 on Instagram

Tuesday, 3 March 2015

Lessons learnt while at NMMU

Guest blogger ... NMMU Psychology alumnus Curwyn Mapaling
The Top Seven Things I Wish I Had Known Earlier in Life

1. Set a goal and don’t stop working on it until you reach it. 

You have within you the intrinsic potential to achieve all that you set out to do. Nothing is impossible as long as one works hard to achieve it. I was unsuccessful the first time I applied for two of the awards that I received in 2014, namely the Abe Bailey Travel Bursary and the Golden Key Community Service Scholarship Award. This happened despite having worked on my CV, motivational letters and going for mock interviews. The experience at the time was both heartbreaking and disappointing, but just because it didn’t work out the way I wanted it too, doesn’t mean it didn’t work out exactly how it was intended to. I had the choice then to just give up or try again. I tried again and applied what I learned from the process. When I was later awarded both I was delighted that I didn’t give up on these dreams when I was unsuccessful the first time. This also motivated me to apply for the Mandela Rhodes Scholarship which I was awarded later that year. What are some of the dreams that you might have given up on? What is stopping you from trying again?

2. Get off your Umtarara! 

Get involved in something...anything...but just do something. Every accomplishment starts with the decision to try. Do not conform to the culture of learned helplessness whereby people wait around doing nothing, waiting for things to be handed to them. 

3. Find a Mentor 

Someone, anyone who believes in you and is willing to walk the road with you as you try to achieve your dreams. No one does it alone. Not someone who will just be there, but someone who will be honest with you and tell you the hard truths that you need to hear in order to be your best. Talk to that person, visit with that person, don't be afraid to ask them the things you need to know or are confused about or afraid of. 

4. Don't be offended or over sensitive when people give you honest advice.

It isn't always easy to hear criticism, but just because someone challenges you doesn't mean they are against you, they are trying to help you be better!

5. Use your talents, whatever they are

I’ve been involved with certain groups and organisations and the reason my involvements worked for me was because they were things I enjoyed and loved to be a part of. It is easy to be committed to something you enjoy doing because it doesn't feel like work. 

6. Giving back to those in your community gives so much more back to you

A little involvement changes everything. All our little bits of goodness and kindness put together can overwhelm the world with much needed positivity and progression. 

7. There are many different types of leaders

Not all leaders are the loud person in front of a crowd. Personally, I struggled to see how I could have any type of leadership impact as that just wasn't me. I then learned about servant leadership. A servant leader doesn’t focus on being the best in the world but rather being the best for the world. I would like to encourage you all to explore the many different types of leadership and to find the one that works for you and is best suited for who you are. Find a leadership style that allows you to remain true to who you are and what you believe in. 

In closing, a quote from GT Ferreira, “Everything will be ok in the end. If it’s not ok, it’s not the end yet.” 

  • Curwyn is currently doing his Masters in Clinical Psychology and Community Counselling at Stellenbosch University.  He completed his Bachelor of Psychology (Counselling) at NMMU last year.








Monday, 23 February 2015

Let’s hear your voice

Lifeatnmmu is Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University’s blog. It’s here, as indicated by the blog’s name, that we unashamedly share insights into life at our new generation university.

From monkeys making a nuisance of themselves to students who personify excellence, the range of subjects under the university spotlight is vast. But generally those views only come from yours truly – an on-the-payroll middle management employee.

And so, in the interest of diversity and a wider range of subject matter, we want to give staff and students an opportunity to share their insights and experiences on this blog.

Yes, we’re opening up this platform in cyberspace to your pen … (and we’ve already had more than 1.1million views).

The opportunity comes with a couple of provisos:
  • The blog must have relevance to NMMU, and preferably be directly linked to the institution
  • The blog should be upbeat in nature (we’re here to grow one another). Even in negative situations, you can have a positive approach by offering constructive criticism
  • The blog must be well-written and not longer than 650 words
  • The blog must be accompanied by a head and shoulders photograph of yourself and an image or three that illustrates the topic of your blog
So let’s hear from you.

Let’s hear about your field trips; your eccentric lecturer; your experiences at a sports event; your response to NMMU’s values; your take on student life; your insights on the shuttle service; your feelings about sharing space with nature; your commentary on NMMU’s research, engagement, teaching and learning or anything associated with NMMU; your version of what it means to be a Madibaz; your feedback on negotiating parking space at NMMU …

In short, your opinion!

If you’d like your blog considered, please mail it to derry@nmmu.ac.za

Let’s hear your voices too.

Monday, 9 February 2015

The secret for a successful stay at university

Guest blogger ... NMMU student
Rashied Adams
You have just been admitted into a university and have a dream of becoming a teacher, scientist, lawyer, medical doctor, etc. The sad reality is that your dream could just remain a mere dream.

How does one succeed academically at university?

Firstly, establish the fact that your qualification you have registered for comes with promotion rules and criteria. Familiarise yourself with these rules and criteria from the word go; because it is possible to be academically excluded from your faculty.

What does this mean?

It means that if you have not passed a certain amount of modules for the year, you may not be allowed back into the programme the following year. These rules vary from university to university. You can get this information in your Faculty Prospectus or Faculty Yearbook.

Secondly, attend all lecturers – this is how you learn.

Thirdly, make notes in lectures, in a way that you understand. You can never make too many notes!

Fourthly, every evening at your residence before you retire for the day, just read once over the work you have covered for the day. It is as easy as that. This makes studying before the exams so much easier.

Fifthly, manage your time properly; have a schedule in your diary where you have time for studying, reading and assignments.

Lastly, take responsibility and know your primary reason for being at university – to get your qualification. Only you can make it happen!

Work hard, before you know it, you will be kneeling before the Chancellor on graduation day and your dream will become reality.



Wednesday, 4 February 2015

The difference is in the 'umph!'


Guest blogger ...
Student intern Khanyisa Melwa
As the beginning of the academic year draws near, I’d like to extend my heartiest welcome to both the first year and senior students of Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University (NMM). Do you guys have the “umph” to make this a great year?

I’m sure words like “assignment” and “test” have become something of a distant memory to most of you, but don’t fret, academia is near!

You will have seen or heard that we, as a university, are celebrating our 10th year. Our 10th year as a new generation university since the coming together of three separate institutions, namely: The University of Port Elizabeth, PE Technikon and Vista University. With this in mind, it is important that we take stock of what it means to be an NMMU student in 2015.

Being a part of a comprehensive university such as NMMU is a privilege, one we should never take for granted. Here, we are afforded the opportunity to make a difference in society with courses that meet both immediate industry and societal needs.

As our namesake once said: “Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world”.

How are you going to use your qualification to change the world?

Ponder on this.

Suffice to say that without goals, one is merely day-dreaming; wandering aimlessly in a fast-paced world of #Hashtags and selfies. I urge you to draw up a list of goals at the beginning of this academic year and be resolute in achieving these.

In the same breath, it would be incorrect in both logic and principle to speak about goals without any mention of excellence, as it is one of our institutional values. It only makes sense that we continually endeavour to live out each of our values – respect for diversity, excellence, Ubuntu, integrity, respect for the environment and taking responsibility.
A key NMMU value

It is also imperative that we strive for excellence in everything that we do; because that’s what gives us the competitive edge. That’s the difference between being good and being great, and fortunately, mediocrity is not in our DNA as Madibaz. That would be an indictment of Nelson Mandela’s character, the man whose name we so proudly carry.

So remember this fellow Madibaz, the difference between “try” and “triumph” is that little “umph”.


Monday, 2 February 2015

Is this you? A tech-savvy, future-focused, mature Millennial …


Colour blurs with today's Millennials
I’m confused. I’m a Baby Boomer, born after the Second World, who inherited many of the traits of that generation. We’re self-starters; mostly independent and responsible for ourselves. We get on and do.

Now meet the Millennials – today’s student generation, aged 18 to 34. Who are you?

At Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University (NMMU), you are our number one stakeholder, or to put it very simply, the reason why we exist. Without students, we would not be here.

And so it’s pretty darn important that the old-timers among us (the Baby Boomers, the Silent Generation before us and Generation X after us) understand just what makes you tick.

If I have done my research correctly, you’re pretty chilled when it comes to gender (blurring), modern families, race and with living alongside gran and gramps.

You believe in causes; endeavour to be ethical; are mature; seek solutions and sustainable values.

But you also, if what the experts are saying is true, like to set yourself apart with your lifestyle, the way you dress and even where and when you go on holiday. You like to volunteer and share, be it online or materially. This comes naturally to you.

You aren’t in a hurry to marry or have children and you have developed some excellent life skills just because of the period in which you have lived (a recession).
The Millennials or Generation Y  are set on seeking solutions
What amazes me most about you, however, is your ability to handle technology, lots of it, all at once. You can use five screens; think in 4D and not just multi-task, but hyper-task. Apparently, the latter has seen your brains evolve to process more information at even greater speeds.

Now that’s fairly frightening for someone who methodically likes to do one thing at a time, but we’re willing to try to understand you. Furthermore, I’d like to vouch that the Baby Boomer Generation and Generation X (aged 34 to 54) are all at pains to meet your needs (you are, after all, either in or about to enter the workplace and earn the stuff that makes the world go around - money).

So we’ll be trying to reach and inspire you as marketers by:

· Talking to you in images

· Keeping our communication tight and bright

· Talking to you as adults

· Tapping into your entrepreneurial spirit (come on, we want to help you find solutions to all the stuff we messed up – like our environment)

· Feeding your curiosity and

· Asking for your guidance

Yes, I am asking for your guidance. How do we connect with your generation?
We need your help in marketing to Millennials
Will Instagram and Twitter do it? Or should we showcasing the good deeds of NMMU – the outreach programmes that see borderline maths pupils pass with a distinction for Matric maths or our involvement in seeking renewable energy solutions. Or what? What can we do to ensure that NMMU becomes a university of first choice?

Tell us. Show us. Please be part of sharing the NMMU success story.

And end my confusion.

Monday, 26 January 2015

Dare we get excited about our new SRC?

SRC President Hlomela Bucwa and Deputy President Thanduxolo Bhengu
Year in and year out, we go through the motions of electing a new Student Representative Council (SRC), and year in and year out, we hear exciting manifestos and promises of progress, most of which amount to naught.

This year, dare we hope that the young men and women tasked with representing the students of Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University (NMMU) will live up to their promises?

I’m hopeful.

In fact, I’m excited about the SRC of 2014/15 after attending their investiture today.

Not only do we have our first female president since NMMU began ten years ago, but we also have a team which, at face value, recognises its role as servant leaders.

What a pleasant change from the usual demands of the Me-Myself-I generation.

This team of 21, along with seven faculty representatives, is committing itself to honesty, humility and to seeking solutions if the inaugural speech by its president Hlomela Bucwa is to be believed (see full transcript of speech at end).

I believe it. I believe it because the final-year Law student spoke with sincerity and passion. She spoke of the vision of the SRC, its simple mission of representing all students and its many strategic priorities – not least of which is ensuring that those who are academically deserving of studying further be given that opportunity.

“We practice a humanizing approach within the classroom. But there is nothing humane about a student who is forced to sleep in the bathroom; there is nothing humane about turning away a student with 41 points just because there is no funding; how can we send students out to sleep on the streets?

“We need to have a humanizing approach outside of the classroom too,” an eloquent Hlomela implored her high-profile audience of NMMU executive management.

And that is why the new SRC has committed to prioritise and attend to what is really important – starting with access the education for deserving students.

For Hlomela this also means “the parties, Mr and Miss NMMU, and the like” will have to wait too. “It’s simple. It’s about going back to basics and recognising our priorities”.

With only 381 first-year students successful in attaining NSFAS funding (they heard on Friday last week), Hlomela and her team know that much work lies ahead. After all, NMMU welcomed 5 850 students to its ranks on Saturday. Considering that the bulk of NMMU’s students come from the country’s poorest province, the Eastern Cape, financial assistance for just 380 first-year students is miniscule. Guestimates are that close to 90% of those who study at NMMU need financial assistance of some sort.

So the SRC of 2015 has a big ask ahead. But I’m confident they’ll break ground. After all, the Sakh’ingomoso campaign to assist disadvantaged students is already underway and reaping rewards for students who might have otherwise lost out on a university education.

We wish the SRC well in implementing its plans and promises – initiatives that can only make NMMU a better place for its students.

SRC inaugural speech by Hlomela Bucwa

“But I being poor have only my dreams; I have spread my dreams under your feet; tread softly because you tread on my dreams.”

The SRC is a statutory body created by the Higher Education Act 101 of 1997. Chapter 4 of the Act provides that “The establishment and composition, manner of election, term of office, functions and privileges of the students' representative council of a public higher education institution must be determined by the institutional statute and the institutional rules.”

With profound gratitude and humility I stand to present the vision of the SRC.

Vision
Our vision as an SRC, taking into consideration the vision of the institution, is to a dynamic, transformational SRC recognised for its leadership, policy reform, innovation and vibrant student life. To be an SRC that considers the best interest of students at all times through maintaining integrity, accountability and respect. This will reflect in both the strategic and operational goals of the SRC.

Mission Statement
Our mission is to represent all students to the best of our ability, to re-establish an SRC that is accessible, transparent and accountable to its students. To ensure integrated leadership amongst SRC, its sub-councils, societies and house committees.

SRC Strategic Objectives
Access & Success
Academic Excellence 
Student Housing
Campus Cohesion
Student Development & Sport Transformation
Policy Reform
Communication
Social Cohesion

29 RSA Constitution states
            Education
            (1) Everyone has the right-
                        (a)        to a basic education, including adult basic education; and
                        (b)        to further education, which the state, through reasonable measures, must make progressively available and accessible.

NMMU is situated in the Eastern Cape, one of the poorest provinces in the country. There is unequal access to resources and infrastructure, which has a direct impact on the level of access to education, lack of success in institutions of higher learning and minimal transformation.

It has become culture in our country that every year after the release of the matric results our students fill our admission offices seeking access into the university. One might argue that these students should not be given the opportunity to apply. However, the circumstances that prevail in our province do not allow us to adopt this view. Our students study in poor conditions with a lack of resources and qualified teachers. They lack the inspiration to want to further their education and this is mostly caused by the lack of funding for higher education and training. Our education system must improve; free education is good however quality education is even better thus we must strike a balance between cost and quality.

Initiatives such as Sakhi’ngomso and Operation Sangena by the SRC are to be used as tools in achieving this goal and not merely to fill the calendar. They must be well structured so as to fulfil their set objective, primarily that of access to university. A strategy needs to be formulated on how the SRC and University Management can improve the application process and admission form to have an effective and inter-related relationship between the various university departments, furthermore must invest in community development to ensure that prospective students are groomed as early as Grade 9 through information sharing and mentorship.

It must be noted that we cannot speak about access without entertaining the issue of funding.

“Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter” - Martin Luther King Jnr

I must express my disappointment in how we have dealt with Financial Aid thus far as an institution and I speak upon the pilot project of NSFAS that we became a part of in 2014. I was in the forefront of our SRC marches with colleagues of the SRC and the DASO march late last year.

I must commend the work Financial Aid has done thus far under the leadership of Mr Wayne Muller who has worked closely with us as an SRC in this crucial time. However, it cannot be Mr VC that every year the incoming SRC raises the same issue.

NMMU has accepted 5000+- first years YET NSFAS has only accepted 381 students with what money are these students to study. What becomes of their dreams, what becomes of their future?! We have heard of the advantages of the new systems but we see the disadvantages on a daily basis.

The disappointment in a parent’s eye who has been waiting for the list with the hope that her son’s student number will appear. When we walk back with them to a residence not knowing where they will sleep or what they will eat.

Sometimes the SRC is forced to break rules and policies and it would seem like we are ill disciplined. For the first time in a leadership journey I saw my Deputy President in distress … it dawned on us that we are dealing with people’s lives the great responsibility we have.

A strategy needs to be formulated on how the SRC can better assist students with their academics. It is then imperative that we continue to advocate for initiatives such as the 24-hour library service, more tutoring and mentoring sessions in residences and the introduction of a weeklong study break. Furthermore, install study and computer labs in all residences, video recorded lectures and moving of supplementary exams to December. However, we cannot be limited to these as the SRC and its sub-structures such as the Faculty Council together with academic societies must work hand in hand with the SRC to achieve this objective to enhance academic excellence.

Integrated Leadership
The SRC 2015 has a vision to create and promote a culture of an integrated student leadership, to work in close-knit with various student governance structures. The SRC is the highest student decision making body entrusted with the responsibility to represent students in upper management. Sub-structures such as societies and the residence council are under the care of the SRC and are to work with the structure to serving students.

In the past it was been evident that these structures have worked in isolation and have merely seen the SRC as a sponsor and not as a partner or guide. It is this disturbing trend that is developing which we seek to do away with. The SRC must be able to consult with these sub-structures; it must be able to task a residence/society.

Policy Reform
Institutional policy is at the core of work as student leaders. Thus policy knowledge and training is essential in ensuring that our strategic objectives are achieved and we are able to champion student issues successfully.

Relationship with the institution
I am delighted to see you here this morning in spite of your busy schedules … you reveal that you are determined to work with us.

The logo
The circular nature of the outer element suggests cyclical and continuous change - a key element of a university, fostering fresh thinking and innovation. It is also suggestive of a rising sun, a new dawn - the birth of a new university. The circle is a symbol of unity, with the triangular elements representing diversity, as well as engagement and interaction, both amongst ourselves and our stakeholders in the broader external community. The inner element emphasises that we are a people-centred organisation, striving to optimise the potential of all our people. It is also suggestive of a learning and supportive environment. The globe represents our international sphere of influence, as well as our connection to our natural resources.

Building an effective SRC
“The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy.”

My first encounter with the SRC was in my first year at the first year’s picnic. I met the SRC President. I remember coming home and informing my parents that I wanted to be in the SRC and their response was NO.

Four years later I now stand before you as a President and this journey would not be complete without acknowledging my former colleagues who we struggled together, brutalised, went hungry, uniform less with and we formed a brotherhood. And yes, I become one of the boys as I was the only female in the caucus. I must thank Thanduxolo Bhengu, Baxolile Nodada, Duncan Monks, Luthando Mtyobile; Kwezi Mandabane.

What drove us was not because we had nothing better to do but the passion we had to serve others. Bax will always say we don’t have to do what we do. Some of us have funding, accommodation, come from decent homes and lack nothing yet you sacrifice your time, academics, family, friends for the service of others.

In order to achieve our set objectives and vision the SRC as a structure must be effective and functional. SRC members must view themselves in the same equal footing as student leaders elected to serve and represent students.

The SRC has 21 central portfolios and all ought to be functional furthermore must be an action plan and a vision for each portfolio in line with the vision of the SRC as a whole and the institution. SRC members must respect and uphold the Constitution as should the student body as a whole. It guides us as a structure and informs our decision making even though it may be amended.

The executive committee merely exists to ensure the day-to-day running of the SRC and all portfolios report to the executive as provided above. Understanding that all members are equally there still remains the principle of order and stability that must be maintained. As such, the organogram, reporting procedures and communications channels adopted by the SRC must be followed by all members.

We have been entrusted with a huge responsibility and the privilege of serving in the highest student decision making body. Students must always remain central.

It is the mandate of the SRC to ensure that it devises ways to eradicate student challenges and serve the interest of the student body as a whole to ensure that the SRC fulfils its mandate. It is important for the structure to understand its background and provide strategies that will seek to remove the vast margins of inequality. Members of the SRC must also go back to basics by focusing on crucial issues that affect our students and the community at large.

Honesty
Humility
Solution driven

Always remember the mandate … students remain central.


Tuesday, 13 January 2015

Make your dreams come true …


Today is international Make Your Dream Come True Day. (I kid you not). I learnt this in today’s newspaper. I also discovered in the self-same publication that Blade and the boys will be increasing State funding to academically-deserving, financially needy students at South Africa’s universities.

This is good news for the oh-so-many young people whose dreams cannot come true without financial support for tertiary studies.

So Dr Nzimande, our minister of Higher Education, is offering funding to some 205 000 students at university and to another 200 000 students at vocational colleges. R9.5 billion is the sum mentioned for this year.

Last year, according to the Herald, the sum dished up to students was R8.3bn, excluding the R1m bailout fee for the previous shortfalls in payment via the National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS).

It all looks pretty pleasant on paper but past experience has shown us at Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University (NMMU) that centralising the student aid system (partially, as a means of defeating corruption) is not necessarily the answer. It certainly wasn’t for so many of our students. Far fewer students benefitted from the loan system at NMMU in 2014 than in previous years. But perhaps others benefitted elsewhere instead.

Whatever happened then and whatever happens in 2015, we all know that the R9.5bn is never going to be enough in meeting the needs of so many financially impoverished students.

According to the good Minister there are about 425 095 spaces available at South Africa’s 26 universities, 50 technical and vocational education and training (TVET) colleges (the old Further Education and Training (FET) colleges) and 21 Setas.

We have about 6 000 of those places at NMMU each year. Always they are filled. But always there are students who lose out simply because they do not have the money to pay for their studies.

What happens to the dreams of these students?

Do their dreams fade? Do they become part of the sad 25.5% unemployed official statistic for South Africa? Or do they hold onto those dreams?

Walt Disney once said: “if you can dream it, you can do it”.

There’s a ring of self-belief to his statement; something that looks beyond present physical and material circumstances; a cry that encourages us not to give up.

So if there are any students who might be reading this; students who are struggling to find the financial means to book their spot to a better life, please, please, please don’t give up.

After all, it is international Make Your Dream Come True Day – a day dedicated for doing something towards achieving your dreams. So stop thinking, wallowing and wondering and do something constructive towards that dream – ask for help; seek advice; find a job; research opportunities; visit a bank; fill in a NSFAS application form; study harder …

Be a doer!

You might be further inspired to persevere in your dream after watching NMMU’s television commercial http://ow.ly/Heb7l


Wednesday, 17 December 2014

Forget the car park blues ...


I glance out of my office window at Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University (NMMU) to an almost empty car park. The students are on holiday and the bulk of our academic and support staff are too.

Just as I start to suffer from the “car park blues” and feel sorry for myself with the resentment rising within because they are relaxing while I am still beavering away, I remember …

I remember that I have a job. I am employed.

I have somewhere to go each day and a means of earning a living.

I am fortunate.

I am especially fortunate in South Africa with its official unemployment figure of 25.5% (unofficially, it’s put at over 30%) – which equates to about 5.2 million South Africans without a job, according to StatsSA.

I also remember that I am naive in believing that all 27 000 of our students are relaxing. Few can afford the luxury of a two-month lay-off from a financial perspective. Many of them have to work to supplement the cost of obtaining a tertiary qualification.

As a former lecturer, I once had a student who went overseas every end-of-year break to work on building sites in the United Kingdom so that he could pay for the following year’s tuition fees.

Apart from the financial benefits for students who work in the holidays, there’s another – perhaps more important reason – that students should seek holiday employment during their study years. It just makes them more marketable. It gives them the edge when it comes to entering the workplace for real.

And it’s not just me saying that. Research by Adcorp in 2012 shows that those who take up internships are 30% more successful in finding longer-term placements than those who have had no previous work experience.
Doing holiday jobs gives you more than just financial rewards
I know I have an internship to thank for my first job as a young reporter at the Herald. I worked there every holiday. Perhaps it is simply a case of better the devil you know than the unknown student who sends in his CV. Whatever the reason, I will be eternally grateful for the opportunity I had to practice my future trade and be assured I had chosen the right career. 

But holiday jobs need not be within our chosen field because all work has something to teach us in terms of discipline, commitment, being prompt, being polite, perseverance and interacting with people.

If students find themselves scrubbing dishes, serving people, handing out flyers, inputting information, answering telephones or whatever it is, it also shows a certain willingness (though sadly, there appears to be a growing movement among young people to think they are above certain forms of work – see Catherine Wijnberg’s excellent article: http://ow.ly/G1wr0) and this is to be commended.

Remember the student who worked on the building sites in the British mid-winter. Such work not only paid his fees, it made him appreciative of the fact that he needed a qualification if he did not want to be labourer for the rest of his life.

But it also gave him a head start when it came to permanent employment – his employers recognized his work ethic and his ability to work with people from all works of life (a must for a journalist). Today he travels the world for a top sports media group.

So if you are working student reading this, laugh off your form of the “car park blues” because you have given yourself a head start in the job market – one in which 600 000 graduates in South Africa also find themselves permanently unemployed.
Take advantage of such opportunities to bolster your CV and supplement your study fees