University of Cape Town: Blue carpet rolled out for top first-year scholarship winners
The University of Cape Town (UCT) rolled out the blue carpet at Glenara on 19 February when Vice-Chancellor (VC) Professor Mamokgethi Phakeng honoured 17 of the country’s top matriculants, now UCT first-year students. Each has earned a Vice Chancellor’s Scholarship for their stellar results.
Their first week at UCT was something of a baptism of fire, with student fee protests bringing in-person teaching to a halt. But the recipients were in high spirits, describing their experiences as “staggering”, “extraordinary”, “interesting”, “vibrant”, “exciting”, “incredible”, “busy” and “refreshing”.
Invited by Professor Phakeng to introduce themselves, they shared their degree choices (ranging from medicine, chemical and electrical engineering, computer and actuarial science to genetics and biochemistry) and hopes for their UCT journey.
In her welcome to the scholarship winners, Deputy Vice-Chancellor for Research and Internationalisation Professor Sue Harrison said they could be reassured that their academic programmes were cutting edge, based on internationally renowned research and scholars.
UCT’s Vision 2030, built around sustainability, research and transformation, “cuts across everything we do at UCT”, Professor Harrison said.
“And it’s helping us think about how we position our research; [this is] to be excellent and sustainable with an impact that reflects where we are as a country and continent.”
Road less travelled
To ease the scholarship awardees’ passage into academia, three guest speakers shared their experiences of UCT; how they had broken new ground by asking questions of the university and themselves – and by choosing the road less travelled.
National Research Foundation P-rated scholar and 2020/21 Human Sciences Research Council Emerging Researcher Awardee, Dr Ryan Nefdt, shared his journey as the Department of Philosophy’s first lecturer of colour.
Having grown up in Mitchells Plain, “the other Cape Town”, Dr Nefdt fell in love with philosophy as a curious young student. He was always asking “big questions”, he said. That curiosity and desire to learn took him on a multi-disciplinary journey at UCT and abroad.
“[So] It doesn’t matter where you came from. Just go for it.”
Silos are meant to be broken, he said.
“During my career I decided that these boundaries that you find in different majors and departments in different buildings … that’s nonsense.”
Nefdt emphasised the role of interdisciplinarity in solving problems.
“Every problem we look at has an economic dimension to it, a scientific dimension, a philosophical dimension, and there’s no reason to stay in your corner. It’s strategically important to make sure you know what you’re doing, and that you ‘get’ the basics of what you’re doing … but be open to those moments where you can find ways to talk about things that no one has spoken about before.
“I’ve made lots of moves like that in my career. And some of them have resulted in publications in logic and linguistics and philosophy.”
And learn how to take and weigh up criticism, he advised.
“Besides opening yourself up to interdisciplinary options, possibilities and experiences, don’t be closed off to criticism. Sometimes people are going to be harsh, sometimes your lecturers are going to be harsh as well. And sometimes they’re going to be harsh because they want you to develop and grow. And sometimes because they’re just jerks – and you need to be able to deal with both!”
VC Prof Mamokgethi Phakeng (right) congratulates the Vice-Chancellor’s Scholarship recipient and MBChB student Alexandra Van Stelten at a lunch to honour top matriculants, now first-years at UCT.
Be relevant, open to challenge
Guest speaker Dr Timothy de Wet took the road less travelled, he told the group. He graduated with a PhD in 2021 and is set to graduate with an MBChB in December 2022, thanks to UCT’s intercalated programme, which grooms clinician-scientists.
It had been a 10-year journey.
“Find those support structures and friendships that will carry you, potentially throughout your life.”
Dr De Wet said higher education would challenge the group; both academically and their perspectives of “what is right”. They would also be challenged socially, especially those new to Cape Town.
“But there are also many opportunities, many people that you will meet, so find those support structures and friendships that will carry you, potentially throughout your life.
At a higher level, he urged the students to remember that they are now part of one of the world’s leading universities, at the tip of Africa.
“And that gives you both a valuable exposure to academics and science that is world-class. But that also challenges you to consistently ask yourself: What is your situation within this country and within academia? And what are you interested in? What research are you doing? How is that relevant to the people who maybe aren’t at UCT, but are [living in poor communities] along the road to the airport?”
MBChB first-year student Iman Khan, a Vice-Chancellor’s Scholarship recipient, joined 16 other awardees at a lunch hosted by VC Prof Mamokgethi Phakeng.
De Wet added, “And UCT does a good job of bringing those two aspects together, challenging the main ways global power structures of academia don’t always enable people within South Africa, or Africa, to answer those problems.
“And for all those reasons, UCT is a really exciting place to be. You’ll grow a lot. But enjoy yourself as well.”
Venture into the unknown
Guest speaker Kumoetsile Komane, a postgraduate student in accounting, was top of her class throughout her BCom degree. She urged the group to embrace the “I don’t know”.
That’s the first part of transitioning, she said.
“Be adaptable. Be sure you consciously invest in transitioning, and embrace that shift.”
“Ask a lot of questions. Don’t’ be afraid to say, ‘I don’t understand’. There are always people who can answer your questions.
And be open to change, she said.
Guest speaker Kumoetsile Komane (back), a postgraduate student in accounting, urged the students to embrace the “I don’t know”.
“Be adaptable. Be sure you consciously invest in transitioning, and embrace that shift. But be self-propelling too. Act out of your own will; you must be intentional about everything you do. You have to navigate this sudden independence.
“But you can’t do it alone,” Komane added.
“No one is an island. You need others to get where you are going; people who are like-minded and can act as a support structure.”
Lastly, she urged the group to have fun.
“Do the things you love. I still play netball. I use going out as a reward. University can be the best years of your life. Make it that.”