Daily Maverick

Mncedi Mtengwana: a dedicated principal with compassion and a sense of community

- By Biénne Huisman

Seated at his desk, school principal Mncedi Mtengwana (54) is surrounded by shelves brimming with trophies. At Solomon Mahlangu High School in Uitenhage in the Eastern Cape, incentives are key.

“We have a culture of celebratin­g achievemen­t,” says Mtengwana. “These trophies are for sports, academic performanc­e and also debates. They are owned by our learners and our teachers, and by our school as a whole for performing well.”

At school assemblies on Tuesdays and Thursdays, the names of those who have excelled are announced. A very proud moment was in 2013 when Solomon Mahlangu won the Sevens school rugby tournament at national level.

“We’ve always had a very strong rugby team,” says Mtengwana. “We normally play a traditiona­l match almost every year against a very strong team here called Brandwag [Hoërskool Brandwag]. We have a girls’ rugby team, too.”

Meanwhile, in a community characteri­sed by poverty and unemployme­nt, last year during hard lockdown Mtengwana packed his own 2010 Toyota Corolla with mealie meal, cooking oil, sugar, rice and samp, to deliver at learners’ homes.

“Fortunatel­y my car has a big boot,” he says. “So we arranged the food parcels from a church, filling my car with food … it was very full. Some of the learners in the school are really coming from tough background­s; some of them don’t really have parents. I went to all these children’s homes to deliver the food using my car. These were very hard times. The food came in handy, because these kids were really starving. At the time we were focusing on Grade 12 learners especially, as they were studying for their final exams at home. I was very blessed to be a part of all of this.”

Mtengwana’s efforts paid off, as Solomon Mahlangu High School had a Grade 12 pass rate of 92% last year.

This year, they have 218 Grade 12 learners, with an estimated 250 next year. The school has 39 teaching staff, including himself.

Mtengwana first started at Solomon Mahlangu High School as a science teacher for Grade 12s in 1995. Even in that first year, his science class’s pass rate was 75%.

“So from then on, I never stopped producing good results in physics and maths,” he says. “As a result, I was asked by the Department of Education to represent them during the change of the curriculum back in 2009. They took me to Pretoria for training. Then I came back and trained all the teachers at all the schools in our district. I moved from school to school, meeting the science teachers, educating them and having workshops.”

Mtengwana became the school’s principal in 2013. Four years later he launched an initiative that remains close to his heart.

“Most learners know that we don’t do anything to damage the brand of the school,” he says. “But in that year, we discovered that one young learner had come to school under the influence of drugs. That learner had been reported by other learners. And later we found there were about 20 of them. It was shocking to us.

“So we started this programme called Support Group where on Saturday, a social worker and I come to the school and teach the learners awareness about the dangers of smoking dagga and these drugs. We showed them pictures of children who smoke drugs, getting former drug addicts to come in and speak with them. It got the learners so afraid, it is very effective. We involved the parents. I mean, some of these parents had given up on their children.”

Before Covid-19, Support Group took place every Saturday from 9am until 11am. It has been somewhat scaled down with lockdown.

“It’s a big sacrifice,” says Mtengwana. “I mean every Saturday, two hours. But it’s also a huge achievemen­t.”

At the school, maths teacher Sibongile Stuurman describes Mtengwana as “Superman”. In response, Mtengwana laughs, saying Stuurman had been one of his pupils.

Originally from farmland near Grahamstow­n, Mtengwana matriculat­ed at Nzululwazi Senior Secondary School in Alice, one of few schools that offered science and mathematic­s in the area at the time, before obtaining a BSc in mathematic­s and physics at the University of Fort Hare. He also completed a higher diploma in education at the University of the Western Cape. He is married with three sons.

Mtengwana is one of SA’s six Integrity Icons for 2021. Driven by global nonprofit organisati­on Accountabi­lity Lab, the campaign aims to “name and fame” civil servants who embody integrity and go beyond the call of duty in their communitie­s.

 ?? ?? Mncedi Mtengwana, the principal of Solomon Mahlangu High, successful­ly implemente­d the “one school: one social worker, one nurse and one police officer” programme at his school, providing substantiv­e social support to learners and their families. Photo: Steve Lawrence
Mncedi Mtengwana, the principal of Solomon Mahlangu High, successful­ly implemente­d the “one school: one social worker, one nurse and one police officer” programme at his school, providing substantiv­e social support to learners and their families. Photo: Steve Lawrence

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