Cape Times

Tenacity brought her from KZN township to being researcher at the CSIR

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CSIR RESEARCHER Dr Sibusisiwe Khuluse-Makhanya, in an interview with Business Report, shared her aspiration­al career journey from growing up in a KwaZulu-Natal township to where she is now.

What sets Khuluse-Makhanya apart from others is that she has just completed her PhD in spatial statistics, a growing field, and has become the first black female researcher at the CSIR to do so.

Some of the research she is doing at present is looking at climate adaptation. Khuluse-Makhanya combines data from multiple sources and coverage over space and time as to which areas people will settle in and then maps a trajectory for the next 30 years.

In South Africa, there are too few women in the fields of science, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s and statistics is a scarce skill worldwide.

In matric she wasn’t sure what she wanted to do, but she loved maths. Khuluse-Makhanya asked her mother for advice.

“My mom said I could be a clerk or a secretary. My mom was worried about finances,” said Khuluse-Makhanya. However, at the time a representa­tive of the University of Natal came to give a talk at her school and discussed entry requiremen­ts.

This serendipit­ous visit set her on the path to university. Although she didn’t get a bursary, through her lack of knowledge of funding models, she managed to get enough funds to attend varsity and ended up studying statistics.

Fast forward to 2007 she started working at the CSIR in a research career. While working, she continued to study on a parttime basis. Khuluse-Makhanya was awarded a Mandela-Rhodes scholarshi­p, which allowed her to take a year off to attend postgradua­te courses at Harvard University in the US. – Philippa Larkin

 ?? PHOTO: PHILIPPA LARKIN ?? CSIR researcher Dr Sibusisiwe Khuluse-Makhanya.
PHOTO: PHILIPPA LARKIN CSIR researcher Dr Sibusisiwe Khuluse-Makhanya.

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