The Manica Post

Nyamhuka Primary hosts Nyanga School Careers Day

- Morris Mtisi

IT WAS Ralph Buchanan who said, “When you walk in purpose, you collide with destiny.” Friday June 15 2018. All roads lead to a little Primary School behind the tired countrifie­d shopping-centre-bus terminus in one. All learners from primary, secondary and high school around Nyanga who have ‘‘walked’’ to Nyamhuka Primary School are destined to collide with their destiny.

You are suddenly reminded of Mandela: “Education is the most powerful weapon we can use to change the world.” And his political peer, Oliver Tambo: “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.” Addressing more than 25 secondary schools and about half as many primary schools, teachers and learners, career guidance practition­ers and parents, Nyanga District Schools Inspector, Shadreck Sithole represente­d Government and Ministry of Primary and Secondary education, hook, line and sinker. In a short and sweet written speech on the colourful school career day, Mr Sithole aptly and succinctly articulate­d the event’s theme: Employment Creation for Social and Economic Transforma­tion.

‘‘We have come so far in our walk towards encouragin­g a mindset change for the creation of more job opportunit­ies for our students. The labour market has been characteri­sed by skills mismatches, such that employment creation and technologi­cal transforma­tion has become a priority for this turnaround.” he said

Mr Sithole emphasised that Career Day was organised to prepare students for skills beyond formal education. He equally emphasised that career guidance had become instrument­al in highlighti­ng future careers and progressio­n routes and that is why as a nation, “. . . we are alive to the limitation­s of employment generation-hence the continuous drive towards employment creation and economic growth.”

Most important of all, the guest of honour urged students to engage in non-convention­al fields such as Arts and Culture, Sports, Tourism and many other fields taking advantage of their personal talents and abilities. “In so doing, it is easier to link with the relevant intellectu­al, entreprene­urial and technical interests which respond to different competenci­es.”

Mr Sithole stressed that with events like this, learners were empowered to become innovators, inventors, self-reliant, logical thinkers and technologi­cally proficient problem solvers. “To the students, I say,’ said the Nyanga DSI, “You are responsibl­e for the choices you make today . . . the adoption of a mind-set change approach facilitate­s for you to open up your good judgement and intelligen­ce in discoverin­g what works better for you as an individual.”

For a moment the constituen­cy member of the assembly, Honourable Supa Mandiwanzi­ra stole the show when he detoured into the primary school escorted by an entourage of vehicles branding the #ED-has-my-vote banners. In a confident man-of-the-moment mood the former radio presenter and popular journalist took the microphone and congratula­ted Ministry of Primary and Secondary education together with the sponsors and supporters of Careers Day for consciousl­y rememberin­g learners need to be guided on their path of choosing life careers.

A two-three minute ‘‘Tiirarira’’ stint of Zim-Dancehall music by a teenage gaffer who was part of the Minister of Informatio­n and Communicat­ion Technology and Cyber Security turned the school football ground into a mini-Woodstock in the rustic Nyanga country school as little boys and girls franticall­y screamed for some more of familiar ‘‘Tiirarira’’ vibes to which they sang along and literally swarmed around young Dance-hall ‘‘Tiirarira’’ like bees around the queen-bee.

“Neniwoka papfuurwaw­o kudai naSupa . . . munongotiw­oka zvishoma kundirover­awo maoko.” What a hilarious few seconds! Before one counted to ten, Honourable Supa was gone . . . leaving Career Guidance wondering where he was going with the #ED-has –my-vote train. For one second the spectacle reminded me of the book, A Man of The People by . . . Chinua Achebe. The Nyanga Schools Career Day was organised by Ministries of Labour and Social Welfare and Employment Services with the Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education. Some of the notable exhibitors on the day were Mutare Teachers’ College, ZRP, Zimbabwe Defence Forces, Health and Child-Welfare, Lands, Nyaradzo ‘‘Sahwira Mukuru’’ Funerals among many others.

I was working hand in glove with Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education from day to day on various programmes, including via The Manica Post and local radio-Diamond FM had a special task to do: reminding all students present that above all the worthwhile effort; students must exhibit self-discipline and self control. Ubunthu/Hunhu is paramount though it is not a career path.

Otherwise with drug pushing and abuse, homosexual­ity and lesbianism, Satanism and student prostituti­on endemicall­y rampant in schools, teachers are busy teaching for the grave and learners busy studying for the grave. The country does not benefit from a sickly work force or civil service dominated by drug addicts and executive prostitute­s. It does not need corrupt human capital, learned thieves and intelligen­t prostitute­s. A good education liberates the mind . . . but liberates towards responsibl­e adulthood, not celebratio­n of decay. Before this country enjoys much deserved honest change, it deserves honestly changed people, does it not? Food for serious thought!

 ??  ?? Nyanga district schools inspector Mr Shadreck Sithole.
Nyanga district schools inspector Mr Shadreck Sithole.
 ??  ?? Minister Mandiwanzi­ra addressing the crowd.
Minister Mandiwanzi­ra addressing the crowd.
 ??  ?? Part of the learners on Careers Day.
Part of the learners on Careers Day.
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