BOOSTING YOUTH OPPORTUNITIES
Skhumbuzo Macozoma
It has been 41 years since that fateful year
where a legion of young people stood up
against a tyrannical government bent on
imposing an unjust educational system on
them, 1976 the year of my birth. Many a
book have been written about that standoff.
What strikes me though is that all those
young people wanted was access to quality
education, which would stand them in good
stead in South Africa and the rest of the
world.
41 years later we grapple with that very
struggle; access to quality education. Oliver
Tambo said: “The children of any nation are
its future. A country, a movement, a person
that does not value its youth and children
does not deserve its future.” Words from
the mentor I never had. It is this belief that
must drive us to fully emancipate our youth
and by ensuring access to education and
opportunities.
The youth dividend is a point in a country’s
history when its economy takes a decisive
turn for the better. Economic growth
accelerates as a result of a decline in a
country’s mortality and fertility rates.
This means that the age structure of the
population changes.
Fertility rates in South Africa have declined
from 6.4 births per 1 000 women in the
Fifties to 2.4 by 2010.
Yet the country may not be able to capitalise
fully on the youth dividend because
of its poor education and lacking skills
development. Added to this is that more
than half of the youth – those between 15
and 34 – are unemployed.
To overcome this stumbling block, it behoves
all state entities and private businesses to
step into the gap. SANRAL is doing so, and
on a significant scale with a wide range of
interventions. It does so because of its own
needs to sustain a high level of competent
and well-trained work force and also
because there is a dire need in the country
for people with mathematics and science
skills in their educational background.
I am passionate about youth development,
in word and in deed. I am a firm believer
that education is a tool that can dismantle
poverty and inequality. Today I am CEO of
SANRAL, this alone speak volumes on the
impact that education can have on one’s life.
SANRAL invests in the skills development
of young people in line with the National
Development Plan’s 2030 Vision. Since the
inception of SANRAL’s bursary programme
in 2007, the agency has been very successful
in identifying exceptional students from
previously disadvantaged communities.
We are also specifically focused on the
education of women in the civil engineering
and built environment sectors. In 2016,
SANRAL awarded 122 bursaries to students
at nine universities. This investment of
more than R7.5m includes bursaries for 14
postgraduate students who are conducting
ground-breaking research in infrastructure
development.
We will persist in our endeavour to
contribute to the development of young
people.
SANRAL backs the Science-for-the-Future
programme at the University of the Free
State. This comprises the ICT Laboratory
Programme which delivers e-education in
science and maths to high school students
as well as the Family Maths and Science
Programme. The latter equips educators to
deliver activity-based sessions on maths and
science for young learners and their families.
We invest in the Science, Technology,
Engineering and Mathematics Pipeline
Project at the Nelson Mandela Metropolitan
University. The aim of this programme is
to increase the number of learners in and
around Port Elizabeth who qualify to study
for a degree in a science-related field.
We also sponsor the Chair in Pavement
Engineering at the University of
Stellenbosch, the Chair in Science,
Mathematics and Technology Education
at the University of the Free State and the
Chair in Transport Planning at the University
of Cape Town.
SANRAL awards bursaries to its staff but its
emphasis is on external bursaries for higher
education and scholarships for high school
learners. The intention is not that all who are
assisted will eventually work for the roads
agency but to grow the number of people
who can move into science-related work
opportunities.
Numerous SMMEs were awarded contracts
worth R3.5bn in 2015 of which almost
R2bn went to black-owned businesses. This
resulted in 4 120 people, of which more
than half were youth, benefiting from skills
development programmes.
All of these programmes and initiatives are
aimed at upskilling the youth, and growing a
sophisticated and transformed workforce in
the construction sector. We have
embarked on a process to do even more:
Horizon 2030. We will use this year to
consult and plan to achieve this goal.
May the sacrifices made by the students
of Morris Isaacson High School, Hector
Pieterson and innumerable other youth
across South Africa not be in vain.
Skhumbuzo Macozoma is the SANRAL CEO