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20 April 2023 | Story Nonsindiso Qwabe | Photo Supplied
Simphiwe Kunene revelling in the moment during the April 2023 graduations.

“The University of the Free State has given me more than just a degree; it has given me skills, attributes, and so much more, but above all else, the university gave me an opportunity.”

This is according to former Qwaqwa Campus SRC member Simphiwe Kunene, who walked across the stage to receive his Bachelor of Education in Intermediate Phase Teaching during the April 2023 graduations on the Qwaqwa Campus.

Support enabled Kunene to juggle multiple roles

Kunene, who has been involved in student life since his first year, said the support received from various individuals and structures at the UFS enabled him to juggle his multiple roles successfully, and groomed the sharp leader he considers himself to be today. As a first-generation student from the rural town of Nquthu in KwaZulu-Natal, Kunene said he “never imagined some of the achievements and support I received from the university. My journey may have been uneasy, but it has also been filled with many beautiful memories and significant moments. My life has been one of many firsts, and so I want to create many others like me."

While pursuing his studies, Kunene was a tutor and a residence assistant, and held positions in the CSRC and ISRC. “My story, like many others before me, has been riddled with challenges and adversities that sought to deter me from completing my studies. Relocating to a new environment is always difficult, and studying there is even more challenging. The challenges have been bigger, but the support from the university was way bigger. The dream has always been bigger.”

His most memorable moments are being elected as ISRC Secretary General and winning an A-Step award for best tutor in the Faculty of Education. “From a very young age, I've always wanted to change the world in one way or another. I figured that perhaps one way to do that was to be a teacher, and the Qwaqwa Campus offered me the platform to help me realise that dream of mine.”
With this degree, Kunene hopes to impact the lives of his learners just like the warm embrace of education has impacted him. 
“I am convinced that this degree – which is the first in my family – will drive out the scourge of poverty and restore dignity to the community, myself, and my family. For me, education is supposed to transform the lives of those it touches. I am a teacher, and that's my calling. My mission is to transform lives. I want to make education fashionable. This degree is the very foundation on which this premise is built.”

Driving quality, impact, and care 

He is now pursuing an honours degree with specialisation in Management and Governance in the Faculty of Education and is working as a facilitator in the Centre for Teaching and Learning. “I will forever be grateful for the support and opportunities afforded to me by this great university. I can say without fear of contradiction that lives have been changed with quality, impact, and care.”

News Archive

Young language Einstein set for Europe
2017-07-10

Description: Young language Einstein set for Europe Tags: Recipient of UFS Senate medal receives Erasmus Mundus master’s bursary.  

Willem Carel Brink will be studying in France and Italy
for the next 
two years as part of his master’s
degree programme
Photo: Rulanzen Martin

German, French, English and even Latin are just a few of the languages known by Kovsies’ own language guru, Willem Carel Brink.

This arty junior lecturer and 2015 Senate and Dean’s medal recipient at the Department of Afrikaans and Dutch, German and French at the University of the Free State (UFS) received the Erasmus-Mundus bursary to conduct his master’s degree under the Erasmus Mundus Master en Cultures Littératures Européennes (CLE) title. He departs for Europe in September. “It is a structured interdisciplinary study which focuses on European literature, culture and other aspects,” Willem says. The subject for his thesis will be determined during the duration of the course.

Two-year course under Erasmus Mundus 
The Erasmus CLE master’s is a two-year course which is presented by five partner universities in France, Senegal, Italy and Greece. Students are expected to indicate at which universities they want to study but cannot spend both years at the same university. “France was my first choice, because I know the language – which was a prerequisite for selection,” said Willem. He is fluent in Afrikaans, English, German and French! 

“I will spend my second year in Bologna, Italy,” he said. It is therefore also expected that he does an Italian course during the first year to prepare him for the second year in Italy.

Future collaboration with UFS a prospect
Future collaborations between him and the language departments at the UFS are possible prospects for the future when he returns. “What makes this degree especially attractive to me is that it has value in terms of the local environment in the teaching of European languages and literature.” 

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