Local Grade 7 learners get a chance to look to the future

Grade 7 learners at primary schools in Macassar and Somerset West were introduced to a wide range of careers and skills-based opportunities last week as their schools hosted back-to-back career days.

On Wednesday 27 May Firgrove Primary School hosted neighbouring Oklahoma Street and St Paul’s primary schools for a joint Life Orientation Club Expo.

A woman speaks into a microphone on stage while another person stands at a podium beside her in a formal presentation setting, with a projection screen and exit sign behind them.

Jo-Ann Apollis, principal of Oklahoma Street Primary School, alongside Edeon Wyngaard, principal of Figrove Primary School. Apollis urged learners to seize opportunities the generations before them never had, while Wyngaard encouraged them to pursue skilled careers.

Themed “Explore – Discover – Inspire”, the event featured a local husband-and-wife team – Vernon Davids, an antenna and RF design engineer and CEO of Lambda G, and Dr Melissa Boonzaaier-Davids, a marine biologist.

Woman stands on stage holding a microphone, giving a presentation with a projector screen behind her and an open laptop on a table nearby.

Dr Melissa Boonzaaier-Davids tells learners how her dream of becoming a marine biologist began on a beach when she was seven years old. Today, having completed her BSc, master’s and PhD, she is living proof that it all starts with a dream.

Also speaking were Micka Alexander from Helderberg FM, food scientist Chloë Wyngaard, Damian September of Northlink College’s plumbing and construction facilities and representatives from Macassar Fire Station.

Across the N2, False Bay Primary School hosted its own career day on Friday 29 May, also welcoming St Paul’s Primary and drawing professionals from a wide range of industries.

Guests included Axios School of Skills, social workers from PATCH Helderberg Child Abuse Centre’s satellite station in Macassar, spray painters, builders and electricians from JC Charles Bouers, Belgium Campus iTversity and Diana’s Sewing & Dressmaking.

  • Contributing journalist, District Mail and Helderberg Gazette

By this year, attackers were using AI to scale and accelerate cyber crime, which extends from generating code and automating attacks, to crafting convincing phishing and deepfake scams. The AI Incident Database lists more than 7 000 incidents in which AI was used as a hacking tool.

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