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Tuesday 5 January 2016

SKILLS DEVELOPMENT & TRAINING NEWS

Mentoring - the ultimate New Year's resolution

Eat less, exercise more, work harder, take more time off, become a volunteer. Ever notice how your New Year's resolutions stay the same year after year, yet you never actually turn your end-of-year determination into the life-changing habits and career growth you envisioned?
© Cathy Yeulet – 123RF.com
© Cathy Yeulet – 123RF.com
This year, it might be worth looking at your vision for the future from a different angle, and pay it forward in a way that will also bring personal growth and career advancement, an education expert says.

Hard to sustain


"There are many reasons why New Year's resolutions don't become habits and this is true even of those who are altruistic and service-oriented. While many of us feel we should be doing more for the community, most of us find it really hard to sustain our commitment to volunteer," says Dr Felicity Coughlan, Director of The Independent Institute of Education.

But she says a decision to become a mentor will tick all the boxes and ensure this year's resolutions make a personal and societal difference well into the future.

Pay it forward


"Mentoring is the ultimate New Year's resolution - a gift that keeps giving, that pays it forward, that does not involve a huge amount of time if you leverage technology to help you do it, and that enriches you too," she says.

Coughlan notes that a mentor is any person who has a relationship with a less experienced person focused on the development of the skills, contribution and job satisfaction of that person. 

"It is a guiding and modelling process in which the mentor and the less experienced person discuss the work (and work life balance) of the mentee and generate solutions and strategies for success. It is not training - it is about helping the person develop insights into how best to manage their careers; how their actions impact on their success and how to leverage the things they are good at." 

Peer-to-peer mentoring


She says anyone can be a mentor - regardless of their current position - as there will always be someone who is less experienced or just starting out who may look for guidance. 

"Some training is valuable, but most of what you need to know you can find using the services of Dr Google. From an experience point of view, you do not need more than a few years' experience and you do not have to be in a senior or management position. Some of the most effective mentoring is peer-to-peer."

Coughlan says that the following points are critical to the success of the mentoring relationship - for the mentor and mentee:

1. Determine when.


How much time can you commit? Be honest with yourself - choose a number in your head and halve it.

2. Determine who, what and where.


You can mentor someone in your current workplace either as part of a formal programme, as an initiative of your own or with a team, or you can join a mentoring programme for tertiary students. You can also volunteer to mentor a young person from your community or extended family.

3. Get organised.


A good mentor must be organised. Not only does this help you to show the person how to use organisation skills to succeed, but you will find the time commitment of mentoring easier to handle if it becomes part of your daily planning. 

4. Be process-oriented.


Mentors understand how and why things work and are consistent in their approach to work.

5. Be curious and respectful.


Ask questions from the mentee and lead them to their own conclusions. A good mentor observes behaviours and their consequences and helps a mentee to link the two objectively.

6. Deal with your own issues outside of the mentoring relationship.


The best mentors can really focus on the career needs of the mentee and not try to mould them to succeed where they did not, or push them into following their own path. A good mentor can separate him or herself from the mentee and enjoy being part of a different world view.

7. Be patient but firm and objective.


Express opinions and help brainstorm options, but let the mentee find his or her own way (mistakes and all). Do not become judgmental. If a mentee fears judgement or disappointing the mentor they will lie or under-report and this makes the whole process useless.

8. Be realistic.


Know when the impact you are having is too low to justify the time commitment or when you are in fact holding someone back.

"This list may read as daunting, but we have found with our mentors that a conscious attention to these areas of their own functioning has had the really big positive impact of also improving their own performance and satisfaction at work. 

"Mentoring really is the best resolution you can take as you start your new year, because you will make an important difference to someone else while at the same time refining some of your own personal and work habits for the benefit of your own career. That is hard to beat as a way to get ahead in 2016."

FMCG NEWS

Retailers focus on educational wins

Over and above the expected 'back to school' specials, Shoprite and Checkers are giving back through their educationally-minded initiatives of 'Class of 2016' and 'Feed a Child, Nourish a Mind'. Here's how.
© Hongqi Zhang – 123RF.com
© Hongqi Zhang – 123RF.com
The Shoprite Group is proving its belief that education is the foundation for future entrepreneurship and equipping the youth to unlock their potential through initiatives that offer consumers the lowest prices and best value on Back To School items, while also facilitating learning.

Feed a child, nourish a mind


Proper nutrition leads to better learning and clearer thinking. With over 4-million school children affected by hunger in SA every day, Checkers partnered with The Lunchbox Fund to develop a special exam pad. Each R10 purchase of the product will provide a nutritional, hot meal for a schoolchild in need.

Class of 2016


For the past decade, Shoprite stores have sponsored school fees for hundreds of learners through its annual 'Class Of...' competition.

The initiative is set to continue in the new year, with every one of Shoprite's 420 South African stores providing a learner with free education for a full year through its 'Class of 2016' competition.

'Class of 2016' entry forms are available in stores. Entrants just have to write a short essay or draw a picture, depicting what they want to be when they grow up. Click here for more on the competition.

Back to School savings


A number of top stationery items are on offer at Shoprite and Checkers stores, including school shoes retailing for as little as R59.99 and a wide range of branded merchandise. Click here to view the Shoprite Back to School catalogue and click here to view the Checkers Back to School catalogue.

PRIMARY & SECONDARY EDUCATION NEWS

WISE to host first 2015/16 Learners' Voice Programme session

The World Innovation Summit for Education (WISE) Learners' Voice Programme will host a residential session in Doha, Qatar, bringing together 33 young learners for an intensive ten day workshop on education leadership at the Qatar National Convention Centre.
© kasto – 123RF.com
© kasto – 123RF.com
The 2015/16 students, who began their journey at the November WISE Summit, will attend the first of two core residential sessions from 4 to 12 January 2016, which are designed to impart a foundational understanding of key concepts and evolving trends in education, as well as knowledge of pressing global education challenges.

WISE, a global initiative of Qatar Foundation for Education, Science, and Community Development (QF), is closely aligned to QF's mission of helping to transform Qatar into a knowledge-based economy, and through its youth-empowerment initiative it brings the voice of young people to the challenge of rethinking education.

Focus of workshops


Specialists from the Yale World Fellows Programme will hold a series of dynamic workshops in leadership and communication skills. The focus on education, leadership, and communication is designed to support the participants as they research and develop a variety of innovative projects throughout the year-long programme. The second residential session of the Learners' Voice Programme will be held in June in Madrid.

The 2015/16 learners were chosen from over 1,300 applications submitted from around the world. Learners' Voice has had a lasting impact on its participants as it has evolved to include residential sessions, online activities and the development of group projects. 

A successful story is that of the Orenda Project developed during the 2013/14 Learners' Voice Programme by four students from Georgetown University School of Foreign Service in Qatar (GU-Q) and one student from the UK's University of Warwick. 

Access to education


The Orenda Project is based on the concept of co-creation as a way to increase access to education and works directly with target populations to establish schools in a sustainable, community-driven way.

The Learners' Voice Programme was established in 2010 as an initiative of WISE with the intention of engaging the perspectives and creative energies of young people in debates around important education issues and challenges. 

This year's learners, aged 18-25, collectively represent 29 countries, and will benefit from the expertise of the WISE team and global education specialists including faculty from Yale University and Babson College. The Learners' Voice Programme is supported by its partners Banco Santander through its Universities Global Division.

HIGHER EDUCATION NEWS

Milpark's MBA amongst the best in SA

PMR.africa has recently completed its survey on Accredited Business Schools offering MBA degrees in South Africa and Milpark Business School (MBS) in Johannesburg has received the Silver Arrow Award for its third consecutive year. MBS placed third overall in PMR.africa's annual (2015) survey and has been rated the number one private MBA provider.
Dr Cobus Oosthuizen<br>Image credit: Russell Roberts/Financial Mail - Milpark Education
Dr Cobus Oosthuizen
Image credit: Russell Roberts/Financial Mail
In the national survey of accredited public and private business schools offering MBA and MBL degrees in South Africa, employers rated MBA graduates and students in their workplace. Employees were ranked according to a list of criteria, including academic knowledge, entrepreneurial skills, ethical business conduct, strategic management, leadership skills and operational management. 

"We pride ourselves on our MBA graduates. They prove to be exemplary performers in the marketplace, raising the bar and setting an example that commands respect. Milpark Business School graduates are responsible leaders who project concern for humanity and the earth in the context of accountable business practice. Grounded by strong, local business roots, they tackle the marketplace with a global vision and are equipped with a solid foundation and the core competencies required to manage a successful business," says Cobus Oosthuizen (Ph.D.), Dean of Milpark Business School. 

A key objective of Milpark's Business School is to enhance the potential of present and future business leaders in South Africa by enabling them to compete successfully in the global marketplace. To address this goal, Milpark offers a multi-disciplinary MBA programme with a strong practical orientation. With two intakes per year (in January and July), Milpark Business School's flexible delivery options are designed to fit today's modern, time-sensitive lifestyle, with the option to study through contact learning via evening or weekend classes, or distance learning.

Since 2009, Milpark's MBA has consistently been rated in the Top Ten of Accredited Business Schools in South Africa, further cementing the institution's relevance and position in the upper ranks of local business schools. 

Milpark Education's Business School was established in 1997 and was one of the first private providers of management higher education in South Africa. In 2007, Milpark Education (Pty) Ltd was registered as an independent Private Higher Education Institution (PHEI) with the Department of Higher Education and Training (registration number 2007/HE07/003).

For more information, visit http://bit.ly/1iAb7MY

AGRICULTURE NEWS

A place in the sun for university graduate

Alvercia Juries (26), is graduating with a B Nursing degree from the University of the Western Cape, with her four-year studies having primarily been funded by Fairtrade brand Place in the Sun. She is the first person in her family and her community to attain a tertiary qualification and the first amongst those belonging to South Africa's network of Fairtrade-accredited farms.
A place in the sun for university graduateFairtrade is an ethical certification established to promote equality and sustainability in the farming sector. Globally, the system benefits more than 1,4 million farmers and workers in 74 countries. In South Africa, 72 wine farms are currently Fairtrade-accredited, with a premium of R600 per ton paid for their grapes. The money raised from the premiums goes towards social development projects that benefit farmworkers, their families and their communities. Although there are around 20 Fairtrade wine brands made and sold in South Africa, there are over 300 locally produced Fairtrade wine brands marketed globally.

Fairtrade premiums pay for education


Alvercia is the daughter of Devon Valley farm worker Arend Juries and his wife, Charmaine. She has become the role model for many, including her younger sister Chandré, who is now studying for a business diploma at Boland College. Juries senior is responsible for the health and safety of the workers on the farm, where some of the grapes are grown to produce the popular Place in the Sun wines. The balance of the grapes are grown on the farm next door which is also Fairtrade-accredited.

Without access to funding for their tuition, their studies were made possible by the Fairtrade premiums paid for the wine grapes grown on the two adjoining farms of the Carinus family. Cameron Goieman is another member of their Devon Valley community studying at Boland College, thanks to the premiums, and it is expected that others will follow. 

Place in the Sun wines are made at the award-winning Zonnebloem cellars close by in Stellenbosch. They are sold in South Africa, Scandinavia, the UK and the US and many other parts of the world.

The Nietbegin Joint Body Trust, representing the 220 farm workers and their families in Devon Valley, administers the funds generated by the premiums. Since the launch of Place in the Sun wines in 2011, premiums have funded a range of projects. Apart from the tertiary tuition, textbooks, and transport for the students, premiums have paid for early-learning initiatives, school fees and uniforms at local schools of choice, sporting and other recreational activities, the creation of two vegetable gardens to improve nutrition and community eye testing.

Wednesday 23 December 2015

BIP Ready To Kick Off

THANDISIZWE MGUDLWA

"THE Black Industrialists Programme is ready to start", so says Trade and Industry Minister  Dr.Rob Davies.

Davies says the programme will boost the number of black industrialists in the country.

With the SA Cabinet giving the policy the go-ahead earlier this year, Davies has now confirmed that everything is now in place for it to start. 

According to the DTI, the Black Industrialist Programme (BIP) aims to provide financial and other support to new entrants or existing players in a bid to open up a sector of the economy that’s remained largely in white hands. The programme is aimed at creating at least 100 black industrialists in the next three years.

Dr. Davies says, “This programme will now start to operate, we will start to receive the applications.”

He says the criteria will be tight to cut out broad-based empowerment fronting and rent-seekers wanting to make a quick buck.

He further notes that industrialising is the only future for an economy battered by its reliance on exporting raw minerals and the global slump in commodity prices but that this has to be inclusive.

The minister reiterated that the definition of black industrialist would be very tight.

“We want to make sure that we are targeting the right kind of people so the definition of black industrialist is quite tight,” he said last Thursday in Parliament.

More broadly, "The policy describes a black industrialist as a juristic person that includes co-operatives, incorporated in terms of the Companies Act (2008), owned by Black South Africans as defined by the Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment (B-BBEE) Act who creates and owns value-adding industrial capacity and provides long-term strategic and operational leadership to a business."

Dr. Davies also revealed that  to benefit, those interested had to be real entrepreneurs in the industrial economy.

“We want to be very very clear that this is not an opportunity for someone who is peripherally connected to manufacturing.”

He said the programme would provide dedicated financial support and all kinds of other support as it unfolded.

“We are asking all parts of government . . .  to dedicate a particular portion of their activities for the Black industrialists programme.” 

Furthermore, A dedicated forum of officials will be created that would be responsible for funding decisions, he said.

“It won’t be politicians, it will be officials who take funding decisions from the participating DFI’s.”

DTI adds that the BIP programme, which is a key component of the dti’s Industrial Policy Action Plan, was approved by Cabinet on November 4 this year.

"The BIP programme will form stakeholder relationships with multi-corporations, commercial banks, development finance institutions and state-owned enterprises - all with a common goal of assisting black industrialists towards accessing capital markets and growing in the sectors that they operate in."

However, political analyst Moeletsi Mbeki  takes a different stance.

Commenting last week on the BIP Mbeki said the ANC does not seem to understand how capitalism works. “I am surprised it does not understand what capitalism is. The ANC was started by a capitalist class who started businesses. They were industrialists. They did not go to Paul Kruger and say, can I set up my printing and publishing business?” The capitalist system works through innovation and is driven by individuals; it is entrepreneurs who must come up with ideas, and not government. “Governments don’t innovate, they administer,” he says.

“The idea that the ANC government can create industrialists is laughable. John Dube (founding president of the ANC) did not go to the colonialists and say, give me money to set up printers for iLanga (LaseNatal, the first Zulu newspaper in 1903).”

President Zuma Still Busy During Festive Period

Zuma hosts annual chess day

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Pawn and the king: Pretoria teenager Willford Gwabeni was lucky enough to play against President Jacob Zuma during the annual JG Zuma Foundation chess tournament on Sunday.
President Jacob Zuma spoke out against alcohol and substance abuse during an address to hundreds of chess enthusiasts who gathered in his home village of Nkandla for the annual JG Zuma Foundation chess tournament on Sunday.
Zuma said life was similar to a game of chess because individuals had to make decisions about the direction they want their lives to take, which meant it was important to “make the right move” as one would in chess to achieve success.
This was the seventh year the tournament was organised at the behest of the president in order to teach the youth patience and strategic thinking as well as promote recreational activities in rural areas.
Zuma, an ardent chess player, wants to see the game being rolled out to other remote communities of the province as it requires minimal infrastructure.
He said chess was the most exciting sport even though it does not rank in the same level of popularity as soccer and rugby.
Initially, only about 60 youngsters participated but the since the introduction of the annual tournament, numbers have grown tremendously with 310 people taking part this year.
“The game encourages you to think strategically as you have to combine strategy and tactics,” Zuma said.
Zuma also joined in on the fun and played against partially sighted teenager Willford Gwabeni, who travelled by taxi all the way from Pretoria to be part of the event.
“Chess is a game of the mind. You have to visualise your moves before making them so Willford was no easy opponent for the president,” chess coordinator for the JG Zuma Foundation, Sandile Xulu said.
Zuma sponsored Gwabeni and his father’s flight tickets back home sparing them a more than eight hour road trip. Xulu said the popularity of the event had spread to other provinces as this year they had the Steve Tshwete municipality form Mpumalanga joining the 11 KZN districts in the competition.
“They brought the Woza Nabangani Bakho Chess Club and for us this was very exciting because we’ve always only had KZN teams taking part but now our vision of taking the game across the country is being realised.”
Xulu also facilitates the introduction of chess to rural schools and they have already done it in 20 schools in the iLembe district. He said they were seeking funding to fulfil their mission.
“We are making progress and the numbers are evident in those coming to the tournament, for example this year for the first time we had a grade R pupil, Fanele Xulu from Nkandla, who is only five years old.”
The Amajuba district team won this year’s tournament with Mandeni and Nkandla taking second and third positions respectively.
In the open section, Wandimuzi Khanyile was crowned the champion, followed by Khetha Mngadi in second and then Davidson Kondowe.
NOKUTHULA NTULI
SOURCE: The New Age Online