Saturday Star News

Unified approach wins plaudits at summit on technical and vocational education

The conference set a bold vision for inclusive, industry-aligned education

Staff Reporter|Published

The 8th Annual Technical Teachers Conference in Johannesburg marked a historic first, uniting South Africa’s Departments of Basic Education and Higher Education & Training in a powerful show of alignment for technical and vocational education. Co-sponsored by Kagiso Trust and Sasol Foundation, the event celebrated 10 years of the Technical Schools of Excellence Network and 40 years of Kagiso Trust’s transformative work. With innovative workshops, virtual reality learning, and a focus on modernizing TVET curricula, the conference set a bold vision for inclusive, industry-aligned education. The presence of both the Department of Basic Education and the Department of Higher Education & Training at this year’s Annual Technical Educators Conference was “symbolic and powerful”, according to Dean Zwoitwaho Nevhutalu, a Trustee at co-sponsor Kagiso Trust. Nevhutalu told delegates at the conference in Johannesburg that the united front presented at the conference for the first time “shows us that bridging the gap between educational levels is possible, necessary and urgent”.  

Degrees don't always translate to jobs.

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The conference included another first: the presence of lecturers from technical and vocational education and training (TVET) colleges and schools of skills, as well as the high school educators who have traditionally attended.  

Tshamani Mathebula, the head of the Sasol Foundation Trust, said the unified approach was a significant step forward. “It strengthens the articulation between educational levels and underscores the importance of cohesive, responsive vocational pathways,” she said.

Sizakele Mphatsoe, Kagiso Trust’s head of education, said the conference came at a “crucial moment” in the evolution of the TVET sector as the Department of Basic Education conducts a curriculum review and beds down the General Education and Training Certificate, introduced in 2023 as part of a three-stream model that provides different educational paths for learners based on their performance and career aspirations.  

“The alignment of curricula with industry demands is urgent and essential,” she said. “To truly empower the next generation, we must reconstruct our training models, embedding digital fluency and entrepreneurial thinking at every level of learning,” he said.  

Speaking at the conference’s gala dinner at Birchwood Hotel & OR Tambo Conference Centre in Boksburg, Kagiso Trust chairperson Mankone Ntsaba said the event marked two milestones: 10 years of impact by the Technical Schools of Excellence Network, spearheaded by the Sasol Foundation; and 40 years of transformative work by Kagiso Trust. 

“The Trust’s 40-year legacy reflects our evolution from a donor-funded entity at inception to a self-sustainable organisation that partners across government, civil society and the private sector to enable inclusive, sustainable education,” she said.

Ntsaba added that the partnerships behind the conference were “an example of how our legacy is not a solo journey but a shared one. Together we have built a platform that empowers technical educators, the very backbone of our economic engine.”  

In its efforts to Ignite Human Capacity in schools, Ntsaba said Kagiso Trust was investing in modern technologies, supporting the professional development of educators and co-creating education models that respond to urgent development needs.  

“Let us continue to engineer hope, craft opportunities, and shape a South Africa where education is not a privilege for the few but a right for all,” she said.