The future of science and innovation begins in the classroom — and this year, that future shone brightly as Sefako Makgatho Health Sciences University (SMU) launched its transformative Mathematics, Sciences & Technology (MST) Awards programme. More than an academic initiative, the MST Awards are a bold signal of SMU’s mission to ignite excellence, inspire ambition, and reimagine university recruitment in communities rich with talent but historically overlooked.
In a powerful collaboration with the Limpopo Department of Education – Mopani East District and the Gauteng Tshwane West District Department of Education, SMU has taken its message of hope and opportunity directly into schools, not just to celebrate top achievers, but to reposition the university as a home for Africa’s next generation of scientists, innovators, and health professionals.
The MST Awards recognise excellence in Mathematics, Physical Sciences, and Life Sciences — foundational subjects for careers in STEM and health sciences. Yet the programme is more than a celebration of academic success. It is an intentional act of transformation, reaching into classrooms to affirm young learners that they are seen, they are capable, and they belong at institutions of higher learning.
The first MST Awards ceremony was held at Sekgosese High School in Limpopo’s Mopani East District, where learners, teachers, and officials gathered in celebration of schools whose academic outcomes have defied the odds. Among the schools honoured were Sekgosese Secondary School and Motloboni Combined School, whose learners continue to rise despite systemic challenges.
Building on this success, the programme moved to Gauteng, where Kgatoentle Secondary School hosted the second leg of the MST Awards, in collaboration with the Tshwane West District. Here, IR Lesolang and Reitumetse Secondary School were among the recognised institutions for excellence in science education.
These celebrations were not just about honouring individual learners — they were about elevating entire school communities, encouraging educators, and creating a space where academic ambition is nurtured, not marginalised.
A forward-thinking vision for student recruitment
SMU’s role in this programme is both strategic and deeply rooted in its transformative vision. For learners, the awards are a visible reminder that their dreams of becoming health sciences professionals are within reach. For teachers, it is an affirmation of their role as nation-builders. For the broader community, it is a declaration that no learner should be left behind because of geography, circumstance, or a lack of exposure.
“The MST Awards are not merely about recognising achievement, they are also about disrupting outdated models of university recruitment and rewriting the narrative of who gets to access quality higher education,” said Tshimangadzo Mphaphuli, a strategic communications leader at SMU.
Together with Ntsheu Collins Mangena, the visionary behind SMU’s progressive student recruitment strategy, Mphaphuli has been instrumental in repositioning the university as a destination of choice for top-performing STEM learners, especially those from communities historically excluded from such opportunities.
“These awards are a deliberate, strategic investment,” Mphaphuli continues. “They affirm to high-achieving learners that SMU doesn’t just welcome them, we see them, believe in them, and are ready to walk with them all the way to graduation. This is not traditional recruitment. This is nation-building through academic transformation.”
The MST Awards are part of a broader recruitment strategy championed by Mangena, a forward-thinking student recruitment leader who is shifting the paradigm of university engagement.
“At SMU, we are not waiting for talent to find us; we are going out to find it, especially in places where it has been historically ignored or underestimated,” said Mangena. “This programme is about recognising brilliance where it exists, not just where it is expected. We are targeting the cream of the crop, yes — but also building bridges for the next generation of learners who, with the right support, will become South Africa’s future health science leaders, researchers, and innovators.”
Mangena’s vision is grounded in a belief that academic excellence should not be a privilege of proximity, but a reality for all learners with potential from township classrooms to rural school halls.
Impacting lives, shaping futures
Grade 12 learner Phomolo Rambau, an award recipient from Sekgosese High School, expressed gratitude and a renewed sense of direction. “I am very happy and grateful for this recognition. It motivates me to study even harder and to pursue my dream of studying health sciences at SMU,” she said with pride.
Through this initiative, SMU is strengthening its ties with schools and education districts, while redefining what it means to recruit — not just students, but potential, purpose, and promise.
Beyond the trophies and certificates lies a deeper message: that every learner has the power to lead, to innovate, and to contribute meaningfully to South Africa’s future. By walking into school halls and shaking the hands of tomorrow’s leaders today, SMU is living out its commitment to be a university not just of academic excellence but of transformation, access, and impact.
By Dimakatso Modise


