Sunday World (South Africa)

So the journey continues ...

I hope to help shape this university into a global centre of excellence

- Tinyiko Maluleke • Professor Maluleke is the principal and vice-chancellor-designate of the Tshwane University of Technology. Follow him on Twitter @Proftinyik­o

In the afternoon of the last Friday of November 2021, Mr Tilson Manyoni, the chairperso­n of the Council of the Tshwane University of Technology (TUT), telephoned to inform me that the council had resolved to appoint me as principal and vice-chancellor of TUT.

After a long and heavy pause, I expressed my gratitude for the confidence of the TUT council in entrusting me with this great responsibi­lity.

I am under no illusions about how challengin­g it is going to be to lead the leading university of technology in Africa. But, what a privilege it is to be allowed to play a part in the ongoing transforma­tion of this already highly esteemed institutio­n. I have accepted the responsibi­lity with bold humility, but also with absolute determinat­ion.

TUT has already proven that it has a key role to play in the production of the hustler graduates of whom I wrote last week.

Look around you and you will find TUT hustler graduates everywhere, in every sector, shaking and moving things forward. Becoming a hustler graduate is first and foremost an attitude of mind that says, I must find a job quick, but if I don’t, I will invent one.

From the first day of the first year, the potential hustler graduate targets work, not graduation, as their initial end goal.

Skilled enough to easily bag a convention­al day job within or outside the discipline of their training, what sets hustler graduates apart is their ability to create work for themselves, including work that has never existed before.

Hustler graduates are shapers of work in the future and creators of the future of work.

More than two decades ago, when I landed my first academic job as a twodays-per-week research assistant, I had no clue what a hustler graduate was.

That job was but one of three jobs which I was juggling across the week at that time. In those days, I believed that my US master’s degree, of which I was most proud, was a licence to juggle. So I shuffled as many jobs as was necessary to put bread on the table. In my own small way, I was an anonymous hustler graduate.

You see, I am not that kid who was consumed with the single ambition of becoming an academic when he grew up. There were no tangible role models to nudge me in that direction. Not within my extended family in Limpopo. And not in my Soweto hood of Meadowland­s.

But between my feisty maternal grandmothe­r and my pedantic father, I was schooled in the ethic of salvation through hard work and the pursuit of perfection.

The closest I came to tangible academic expertise was from the Marivates, a family that boasted medical doctors, professors, teachers and school principals. During my primary education in Valdezia, Limpopo, where the Marivates originate, they were held up as examples worth emulating.

But I and my fellow students surmised the Marivates had a special education gene. So how did I, a black South African, born and bred under the shadow of the apartheid system, end up burning the years of my youth on a PHD by the time I was 33, an associate professors­hip at 36 and a full professors­hip at 38?

I guess, deep down, I never believed the myth about the Marivate education gene.

The truth is, I drew and have continued to draw inspiratio­n from their example.

Thanks to such inspiratio­nal educators as the late Curtis Nkondo and DZJ Mtebule, my principals at Lamola Jubilee Secondary School in Meadowland­s and Bankuna High School in Tzaneen, respective­ly, I started to believe that through education, I could be anything I wanted to be.

Through the instructio­n and example of the likes of Dr Khoza Mgojo, Dr Simon Gqubule, Prof Bonganjalo Goba, Dr Jean-françois Bill and Prof David Bosch, among many others, I fell in love with knowledge creation.

So impressive was my research, teaching and supervisio­n profile, the University of Natal leap-frogged me from lectureshi­p at Unisa to associate professors­hip. Two years later, Unisa hired me back as full professor.

Since then, I have served in such executive management positions as executive dean, executive director for research, deputy registrar, deputy vice-chancellor and adviser to vice-chancellor at three of our top universiti­es.

Here I am today, willing and able to take leadership of the largest and most dynamic university of hustler graduates – the Tshwane University of Technology.

 ?? /TUT ?? From the first day of the first year, the potential hustler graduate targets work, not graduation, as their end goal, says the writer.
/TUT From the first day of the first year, the potential hustler graduate targets work, not graduation, as their end goal, says the writer.
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