What hit classrooms this week was a STEM hype push that swapped speeches for supplies and put rural kids directly on a science pipeline.
Campaign overview and intent
Campaign overview and intent
- Dr Nomalungelo Gina rolled through rural high schools, pushing STEM uptake.
- Her approach leaned on face time with learners and teachers.
- Donations targeted basic tools, blocking maths and science progress.
- Focus stayed on underserved communities facing resource gaps.
- Dr Nomalungelo Gina kicked off outreach at KwaNxusa High School.
- Early stop highlighted improved 2025 matric outcomes.
- Learners received scientific calculators and printing paper.
- Messaging tied STEM skills to daily problem-solving.
- Gina returned to Mabayana High School tied to her upbringing.
- Her story connected local roots to earning a PhD.
- School progress jumped from weak results to strong 2025 passes.
- Donations added calculators, paper, and school shoes.
- Dr Nomalungelo Gina praised ML Sultan High School's performance.
- Sustained 100 percent pass rates set the benchmark.
- Leadership and community backing drove stability.
- Commitments included calculators, paper, and private-sector links.
- Her plans feature STEM career expos later this year.
- Fields spotlighted cover robotics and renewable energy.
- Learners get direct insight into tech career paths.
- Expos aim to translate subjects into real jobs.
- The Department of Science, Technology, and Innovation backs the drive.
- Tools like the Sisanda App expand virtual science access.
- Digital Schools programs push tech into classrooms.
- Long-term goals target future-focused schools nationwide.
- Many schools still lack labs and solid buildings.
- Teacher shortages slow subject delivery.
- Connectivity issues hit rural learning hard.
- Families struggle with basic school costs.