Saturday Star

Lesufi happy to

- KARISHMA DIPA karishma.dipa@inl.co.za

WHEN he was appointed Gauteng education MEC five years ago, Panyaza Lesufi acknowledg­es he may have initially been out of touch with the bleak realities that the South African schooling system faced.

At the time, in 2014, he didn’t realise how challengin­g it would be to transform what he considered an outdated schooling system into a world-class education sector, which would allow Gauteng pupils the opportunit­y to compete with their internatio­nal counterpar­ts.

But, the Ekurhuleni-born politician got a reality check from pupils and staff from an Ekurhuleni township school he also attended decades ago as a young boy.

“I remember, one of my first days in office, I went to one of my former schools to announce that I planned on introducin­g ICT (informatio­n and communicat­ions technology) and that pupils will use (electronic) tablets and teachers will use laptops.

“But the pupils laughed and said they didn’t even have proper toilets and that their school’s windows were broken – I was speaking about tablets and Smart Boards. It was a far-fetched dream that shook me. I was out of touch with reality at the time,” he says.

Lesufi, however, did not allow this rude awakening to deter his plans of transformi­ng Gauteng’s schools. Instead, he worked tirelessly with his team and peers for half a decade to introduce technology to several of the province’s schools and to ensure their pupils were digitally savvy.

Many of Gauteng’s pupils now use tablets, teachers work with laptops and Smart Boards, and computer literacy is now an integral part of the provincial schools’ syllabus. Despite technologi­cal innovation­s, he also attended to several infrastruc­tural challenges at many of Gauteng’s schools, determined to improve the quality of education in the province.

His efforts were not in vain, as under Lesufi’s leadership, schools in Gauteng received the best 2018 National Senior Certificat­e examinatio­n results, making the province currently the best-performing in the country.

The 50-year-old views this as one of his career highlights. “I will never forget that moment when Gauteng came out on top. It was something we’ve been working hard to achieve ever since I came into office.”

Now, after five years as the Gauteng education MEC, Lesufi has decided to vacate his office and is awaiting further deployment pending the results from this week’s election.

His time at the helm of the provincial education department has moulded him into an even more determined public servant. “Even if you must make me the sweeper, I will be the best sweeper in the country,” he declares.

“I don’t want it to be about me and my aspiration­s. I want to be something that can make people happy, something that will protect the weak, the vulnerable and the poor. I have accepted my fate that the people will decide where I will go.”

 ??  ?? FORMER MEC of education in Gauteng Panyaza Lesufi has said farewell to the education team. He spoke to the Saturday Star about his experience and moving on. African News Agency (ANA)
| NOKUTHULA MBATHA
FORMER MEC of education in Gauteng Panyaza Lesufi has said farewell to the education team. He spoke to the Saturday Star about his experience and moving on. African News Agency (ANA) | NOKUTHULA MBATHA
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