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Tuesday, 15 March 2016

Mpumi’s aspirations sparked by IT and her love for the city of love, Paris




IT is so rare to find glittering, precious gemstones in the townships of Gauteng, let alone in South Africa that sparkle so glowingly as to beckon their destiny like NOMPUMELELO PRECIOUS MOTLOUNG is doing. Nompumelelo has her sights set on being the next Steve Job, the local Beyonce, or even fly to far-away Paris and live in the city of love. However, at the moment she is determined to get an education, become an IT specialist or be involved in bones and skeletons as a forensic expert. Here she tells Thembi Masser about hacking computers, lighting electricity fuses, singing and hockey.

Mpumi, as she is affectionately known, was born in Secunda, Mpumalanga, but relocated to Etwatwa in Ekurhuleni to chase her dream of becoming an IT specialist. She is now in her second year of her diploma studies at the Springs College, where she found solace in the fact that at least poor students are offered bursaries to enable them to obtain a tertiary education without fuss and red tape hampering their progress. And, most importantly, the college finds work for IT students immediately after successful completion of their studies. Students are placed with esteemed companies like Telkom, Transnet and Samsung. Mpumi is eager to be employed by Telkom above all others.

She is blessed to have an industrious father like Joseph who is indeed a jack of all trades. Joseph is a motor mechanic, a carpenter, a plumber, electrician and a number of many other trades.  And Mpumi has a hand in trying to do all those things while growing up, helping her father finish tasks. But it was the sparks of electricity that caught her attention. She developed a love for light, and life, “because electivity gives energy. I used to help him when growing up in Secunda,” she explains. In the beginning she fiddled with pistons and radiators but they proved be too much for her. “There are far too many components and parts under the bonnet of a car and, in the end, I scrammed away.” So she focused her sights on the electricity network instead. And for a while that proved to be a cinch she was looking for.

So when she finished her matric enrolled at the Brooklyn City College for a diploma in electrical engineering. She dutifully did and passed N3 but suddenly after that the lights went out and she dropped out of her course. Someone lite a spark and advised her to try her luck in IT. “This man saw my matric results even before I went to Brooklyn and advised me I was good for IT. At the time I did not listen because I saw myself as an electrical engineer and nothing else.” So she ignored him. It was only when she doing her N3 that it all became clearer for her. “So I went back to the drawing board to consider my options.”

After a period of much research and introspection she decided to do IT at Springs College. “The fact they find work for you after your studies did it for me. Apart from that IT offers so many possibilities.”  And I can also own a business in the future if I wanted to, she adds. “There is good money in the industry as not so many people are into IT.”  But even at Springs College someone nearly derailed her desires, but her focus never lost direction. During registration, a lecturer offered a word of advice that nearly threw her off the track. “He advised me to stick to electrical engineering because I did so well at Brooklyn and that I have a flair for it.” But, politely, she refused. Instead she secured herself a bursary and successfully registered for a three year diploma in IT. 

So far she has grown to love IT, especially as some components of electrical engineering are infused into her present course. “This is to my advantage as I did that before. I have also discovered that I like being behind the behind the computer. And everything is so much fun, interesting. I am studying to work under good conditions away from the harshness of the sun and other inclement elements. And I hate hard labour.” 

Mpumi says IT as interesting as it is ‘naughty’. “You can hack anyone to steal money. But look at me though. I am a sweet girl who habours no such thoughts.  My ultimate thoughts are to work for Telkom and, later, I imagine myself developing products for Apple, where there is a lot of moolah,” she laughs.

But far away in the beginning when she still at school she wanted to be in forensics. That is until her school, Sandra High, took her with her school mates to a career exhibition. She discovered that in forensics she will mess herself with blood-and that she had to do a basic course that covered everything forensics. So she shied away from it. “Imagine me fiddling with human stools and besides you, see I have a fragile heart and do not want to see people hurt.”

That sparked her decision to play with electrical components with her father. But long before IT, electricity and her father and forensics, she was keen to be a singer but her mother poured cold water on her ambition. ‘She said singers die paupers.” And that was regardless of the fact that that at school Mpumi was an established chorister. And a sport personality.

In the end she wants to go and live in Paris, “the city of love.”

FACT BOX

Primary School: Highveld Secunda

High Schjools; Highveld Park, Sandra

Subjects: Physics, maths, English, Afrikaans, LO, tourism, LS

Favourite subjects: English

Favourite sport: Hockey

Favoutite teachers Ms De Beer, Ms Davies and Ms Pretorious

Favoutite universities: UCT, Stellenbosch

Favourite careers/occupation: electrical engineering, IT, forensics, singer, dj  

Mpumi's college mates are as enthusiastic about life as she is


Tuesday, 8 March 2016

‘I am God-send to be with kids and to be the minister of education in SA’




Nothando believes that children are out future
NOTHANDO MASEMULA is an aspirant child psychologist who also eyes the prospect of the post of the minister of education. She runs the Sisonke After School project for learners in Etwatwa but, oddly, she plans to have no children of her own. Her mission is to help children reach for their dreams and to thrive in the world that promises so much but is littered with obstacles and variables. She opens her heart and talks to Thembi Masser about the state of education in SA and of the support her child psychologist aunt has given her from the very beginning.

At only 26 Nothando is determined to be a champion and a God-send for children. Her project, Sisonke, which she started running from August 2015, aims to work with learners right from grade 1 right up to grade 12. That project holds tutorials at a public  library every afternoon during week days. Sisonke helps learners with their homework, subject improvement and providers assistance in career advancement.

“At present,” she points out, “the education system is in shambles.” She says there is a lack of communication between teachers and learners. “Teachers are not adequately trained in the curriculum and therefore there is a vacuum between them and the children.”

Nothando has completed a teacher’s diploma at Unisa. She is currently busy with an advanced certificate in the discipline. “Later I will do child psychology because that is where it all leads.”
She explains that her diploma and certificate will be converted into a degree and then she will do her honours in psychology. But she is also a logistics drop-out. “You see I was pressured to do logistics after completing my matric because I was indecisive about my next move at the time.”

Her mother, Lillian, an ex-nurse, and her aunt, a child psychologist and an ex-teacher, wanted her to do something worthwhile. They were keen that I become someone ‘important’. “My aunt suggested logistics.”  So Nothando enrolled at Unisa for a three year diploma in logistics. But after only a year she quit. “It was not for me. When I looked in the mirror I saw a vast difference between Nothando and logistics.”

However, logistics did not fade into thin air as fast as she hoped it will. She went on a learnership at Germanlogistics company Dachser as an import controller. But that did ignite a spark to continue with her short-lived career.

She also did an internship with glass company PFG as a training administrator. In between, she did her teaching practicals at Creative Foundations and Training. “And now I am a qualified facilitator.”   

Although training as a teacher was the one thing uppermost in her mind, she had other things that she had to do off the classroom after she dropped out of the logistics studies. In that ‘gap year’, she, among other things, ventured out to explore life in Mozambique. There she intended to open a gym. However, it did not materialize. “But I enjoyed the beaches.  I was particularly intrigued by the scenery in Shama-Nkulu and Alton Maje and Costa do Sol and Maputo. It was heaven on earth.”
“But mosquitos spoilt the fun, they are a problem there,” she frowns, “and they seemed to bite only me instead of the locals,” she says, laughing.     
 
Establishing Sisonke has not been an easy ride. It was hell, she says. Even now, she continues, parents are skeptical of her. “I can assure you it is only because of my age. They take one look at me and then look at me in wonder.”

Sisonke also has no credible meeting place, a home, a venue. At present they operate out of a public library where they have to make a payment every month. Most parents do not pay every month, so she has to use her personal savings to augment whatever parents pay in that month. Lack of qualified staff also hampers proceedings. “People look at me in astonishment when I say I need qualified teachers.” That the curriculum changes every now and then also put the skids on the progress of her project. “That frustrates me big time. On top of that the kids are a headache.” Because the venue is problematic, she cramps all the learners from all the grades into one room. I help them with their home work in the first hour and in the second we do maths and other subjects.”

Surprisingly, Nothando says money, or the lack of it, is the least of her worries. “Not at all,” she quips.

But she is adamant about the poor state of the education in South Africa. “It is shambolic,” she asserts. “I wish to, and will be the minister of education one day just to sort out the mess one and for all,” she continues.

She feels secure in the company of children. “I am not sure why, but there is some serenity when I am surrounded by these lovely angels. Many kids are affected and infected by crime and abuse. Most of them do not access counseling and because of this they become scarred for life. When I am with them I know they will do well and this fuels my ambition to be a child psychology.”

Child psychologist, she says, help children realize their potential. They also help children deal with stress. “Children do sometimes feel isolated, forlorn and then end up not sure of themselves. They do not do their homework and they often throw tantrums to attract attention and sympathy. Then you need to hear them out to try and solve their problems.”

But she has no plans to have her own children. “I think, as a career woman, you will never have time for your kids. But, who knows, things can change as life moves on.”

In the meanwhile, she plans to shake Sisonke up. She dreams to turn it into a fully-fledged school one day and hopefully conduct training for teachers and parents. And, ultimately, possibly run the country’s education department.

Fact Box

Primary schools: Benoni West, Lee Rand, Vetkenner, Halfway House, Germiston Junior, JS Mdlaza
High school: Wordsworth
Favourite subjects: accounting, business studies, computer studies, maths literature, English, LO
Favourite subjects: business studies

Favourite teacher: Ms. Tempest 

Tuesday, 3 November 2015

VULINDLELA MIAMI BUSINESS DIARY by Letta Balebeng


VULINDLELA MIAMI BUSINESS DIARY

Innovative Startup ideas for Smart Entrepreneurs

Keagile Balebeng

Are you interested in starting a business in South Africa? Do you need ideas or information on the best business investment opportunities in South Africa?


Then I advice you read on. South Africa is the second largest economy in Africa. The country ranks 39th on the Ease of Doing Business Rank and the World Bank ranks it as an upper-middle income economy.
Although poverty is still a problem in South Africa, and a huge fraction of the population is unemployed, there are many untapped business opportunities for insightful investors. So if you have some funds that you would like to invest in South Africa, then here are the ten best small business investment opportunities you can explore:

Cape Town, Durban, Richards Bay, Sandton, Centurion, Johannesburg, and Pretoria.

Top 10 Small Business Investment Opportunities in South Africa



Being a rapidly growing country, the demand for land, houses and other facilities by individuals and businesses is booming. And this makes the real estate sector one of the most lucrative aspects of the South African economy. If you have little capital, you can start dealing in low cost land and housing units. And if your capital is on the high side, you can invest in large expanses of land as well as housing estates.


2. Clothing and textiles

South Africa’s clothing and textile industry is another very lucrative sector. The demand for South Africa-made clothing and textile products is high not only in South Africa, but also in neighboring countries. So, if you have what it takes to break into the textile market, then you can make lots of profit in the long term.



Although there are quite a number of processed food manufacturers in South Africa, the huge demands are still yet to be met. So, there is enough room for new investors in the food processing industry. You have a wide range of products to choose from; fruits and vegetables, juices, animal products, and so on.


4. Agriculture

South Africa has a wide expanse of land that can be utilized for agriculture. With huge demand for agricultural products and adequate workforce, new investors can easily start a business in the agriculture sector. Depending on your capital, you can start on a small scale or on a large scale. With a low capital, you can cultivate selected crops on a small piece of land or rear animals such as fishes or poultry. But if you have larger capital, you can cultivate a wide range of crops and rear animals as well.



South Africans are now feeling more comfortable with buying their needed products and services online. So, online retail stores in South Africa are now enjoying more patronage. And chances are you will make lots of profit by starting an online retail business. Even if you are on a low budget, you can start with just one product category and expand from there.

6. Foreign cuisine

South Africa plays host to many expatriates, and many tourists visit the country annually from different parts on the world. For these reasons, there is always huge demand for foreign delicacies, which most of the restaurants in South Africa don’t offer. So, there is huge profit potential in a restaurant business that offers various foreign cuisines such as Italian delicacies, Chinese delicacies, American delicacies, and so on. In addition, you can still offer local delicacies to cater to South Africans as well.


7. Online marketing

Many South African businesses are trying to establish and improve their online visibility as a way of attracting customers through the internet. In fact, businesses are setting aside a sizeable fraction of their marketing budget for online marketing alone. This creates huge opportunities for online marketing experts such as SEO consultants, website designers, copywriters, and social media managers. If you have a good background in any aspect of online marketing, you can start a business and make money from your skills and expertise.



In order to cut cost, many individuals and businesses in developed countries like the US and the UK now hire freelance writers from other countries. But South Africa tops the list of their preferred countries because the country is widely regarded as a native English-speaking country. So, if you have good writing skills, you can make a lot of money by working as a freelance writer for clients from all over the world. Writing assignments you will handle include blog post writing, article writing, press release writing, proposal writing, newsletter writing, copywriting, and so on.


9. Technology products

South Africa is one of Africa’s largest markets for technology products such as PCs, smart-phones, and tablets. Since these devices are in huge demand in South Africa, new investors can make lots of profit by selling the latest products by global brands such as Apple, Samsung, Sony, and so on. In addition to selling technology products, you can sell their accessories as well. And if you have the expertise, you can render repair services, too.


10. Tourism

South Africa hosts thousands of visitors every year. These people come from various parts of the world to behold South Africa’s rich cultural heritage, beautiful sceneries, lush landscapes, and so on. A smart business move is to offer services that cater to tourists, such as working as a tourist guide.



Ajaero T. Martins, 2015,Starting a Business in South Africa: 10Big Opportunities MyTopBuisnessideas.com, Africa.


Shared by Letta Balebeng


Saturday, 31 October 2015

Science is...not SCARY!

   
Science is...not SCARY!

Monsters, ghosts, witches and wizards all strike fear into the hearts of kids. The only thing scarier (for some) is……… SCIENCE!

Sci-Bono is offering kids of all ages the chance to experience science in a way like never before. Hands-on and interactive, the centre offers more than 350 exhibits, science shows and experiments that will debunk the myth that science is scary or difficult. For one day only you will get a chance to see for yourself – kids dressed up on Halloween will get free entrance!

ONLY on 31 October 2015!

All primary school learners across Gauteng are invited to take advantage of an amazing offer! Between 19 October and 8 December primary schools qualify for a 50% discount when visiting
Sci-Bono Discovery Centre. Bring your learners to a world-class science centre to experience the amazing world of science and technology in an environment where nothing is off-limits. Stimulating and interactive exhibits, science shows and hands on experiments are just some of the activities that will keep your learners enthralled for hours. To make a booking for your school please contact Cynthia Sithole on 011 639 8491 or email 
info@sci-bono.co.za.

Saturday, 24 October 2015

Lesufi to announce plans to support young writers

Gauteng Education MEC Panyaza Lesufi will on 28 September
2015 launch the Young Writers Programme. The programme is aimed at supporting young and emerging writers in evaluating their books for school libraries in support of the Department of Basic Education’s Reading Promotion Campaign.


Details of the event are as follows:
Date:               Monday, 28 September 2015
Time:              17:00h for 17:30h
Venue:           Emoyeni Conference Centre
                     15 Jubilee Road, Parktown

                     Johannesburg

Saturday, 8 August 2015

More than half of the children in SA live in poverty-UN

Opportunities should be created for youth to blossom
Southern Africa faces an increasing orphan crisis due the HIV and AIDS pandemic, crisis or other causes. According to surveys, about 43 million children in the Southern Africa region do not have parents. They are also susceptible to violence, hunger and other abuses.

The UN estimates that more than half of the children in South Africa live in poverty. The HIV/AIDS epidemic which is sweeping the nation is leaving South Africa with a population of millions of orphans and vulnerable children. 1 in 5 children are orphans in South Africa and it is estimated that these figures will rise to 1 in 3 by 2015. (MRC, 2007)

This large number strains systems by which families and communities have traditionally provided care for orphans. Support for some orphans is being provided by a variety of government, community and non-governmental organizations, but this assistance reaches only a small percentage of those who need it.

The future of these children is usually not too bright as most are not adopted and have to fend for themselves, lacking work skills, many of these orphans and vulnerable children are destined to a life of poverty.

Jewels of Hope strive to provide a solution to this problem by using some forward thinking entrepreneurial ideas.

Jewels of Hope serves by designing marketable jewellery, sourcing and buying raw materials, preparing bead kits, providing training in the production process, child development and opening access to markets.

“We believe it is part of the solution to develop children from a point of despair to becoming confident and competent young citizens, empowered to build a self-reliant future for themselves”, says Janine Ward, Co-CEO  at Jewels of Hope.

 “Donating to charity is of course a wonderful thing, but the face of charity is increasingly taking an entrepreneurial character and thus it is crucial for the children to develop artisanal skills”, she added
Through this empowerment initiative, children are taught to be self supporting, they stop worrying about the next meal, but start building on self confidence and respect. By giving them the ability to provide for their family and others, they can feel a sense of accomplishment and pride and look forward to their future.

They have also created an environment within the organization where children are motivated to take proactive steps in preparing for their futures

Jewels of Hope provide tools to churches and community organizations to establish Connect Groups, with five children between the ages of 11 and 18 years, assisted by an adult who not only acts as a jewellery trainer but also as a mentor and support for the difficult life situations the children face. This group meets weekly and provides a means for personal growth, income generation and life skills for vulnerable children, without them missing school.

Jewels of Hope also help these children grow spiritually, by creating a safe space for them to work through various mentorship booklets with the Trainer, sharing life’s challenges and praying together.

 The organization began in 2004 as a single support group with 11 children from child-headed households, who made jewellery to support themselves. Ideas and systems developed and this group became a model which has been extended through partnerships to other locations in Africa.

Tshepo in Zeerust
Nthabiseng in the Jewelry of Hope offices in Fountainbleu 
Smangele and Nthabiseng in Durban


Mantoa showing her best smile ever








Tuesday, 4 August 2015

Lehlomela plants a biokinetics seed in the hearts of black women

Lebogang Lehlomela has built a lucrative business for herself
Although LEBOGANG LEHLOMELA bemoans the fact that her high schools lacked certain sports amenities like swimming and tennis, she made it to become a sport science graduate and a biokinetic, a rare profession and feat for many black people in South Africa at the moment. Her ambition now, apart from making her practice the best in the country, is to pilot the career to black women. She tells Thembi Masser about her mother’s wish that she becomes an engineer and Virgin Active.   
  
Lebogang, 27, obtained her degree - sport science - at the Tshwane University of Technology (TUT). Sport science was not her first love, she reveals, but once she found herself on the lawns of TUT she, out of the blue, registered for the course. Even she chose to go to TUT just because they were the first to respond to her application to be their student. So it was while in her first year as a student the bug to be a biokenitist clawed its hooks in her. She was intrigued by her physiology lecturer’s exotic profession, biokinetics.

“I asked more questions about this biokinetics,” she enthuses. “I was intrigued, fascinated.  The more I asked, the more I fell in love with it.”  But she went on to finish her sport science degree.
She explains what entails the sport science course:  Sports science is about conditioning players and there are there are two components, fitness and health. In fitness, she says, it is about flexibility, agility, strength, body composition and reaction time. The health component encompasses cardio vascular fitness and body composition.

It was after completing her sport science degree that she enrolled to do a year of biokinetics study. What irks her even now was that out of a total of 12 attendees there were only 3 black students.Biokinetics is more about prevention and treatment of injuries as well as chronic deceases. For complete healing biokinetists prescribe exercising for chronic diseases unlike medical doctors who prescribe medication for diseases.   

“In my second year of study I joined Virgin Active as a life style consultant to augment both my sport knowledge and my purse.’

To date she has been in practice for 6 months as the owner of Lehlomela Bio. “But before this I worked at Greenstone Life style for a while to get my mojo on.”

Now that she is on her own her goal is to more Africans at public clinics practicing as biokinetics. “Public clinics are not as well endowed with a complete set of health personnel as your private health care, so it is my quest to see more Africans studying biokinetics and to teach the public about the wonders of biokinetics.” This is important, she says, because many people rely on medication most of the time instead of throwing exercise into the mix after injury or a diseases attack.   

Lebogang started her schooling at the ST John’s primary school in Actonville, Benoni and then proceeded to the nearby William Hills High schools. Her choice of subjects at school, unknown to her then, pointed the way to her future career. She liked biology (although she loathed the plant part of it) and maths the most above English, Afrikaans, physical science and computer studies.   
“At the time I did not know what I was going to do after grade 12. My teachers too did not help much. Again, at that time there was no career guidance classes at the school.” But her mom was interested in her future. ‘She insisted that her daughter must be an engineer.”


Lebogang was a shy, quiet learner. “I was a studious learner, but I could have done better if there were swimming and tennis facilities at high school. You know. The best facilities are always at private schools, which most of us do not afford.”  

Lebogang with her class at the Mokoka library in Vergenoeg, Daveyton, Benoni