As South Africa prepares to observe National Children’s Day on 1 November, the question every boardroom, policymaker, and family should be asking is: how are we investing in our children’s potential? For the Ruta Sechaba Foundation, the answer has become increasingly clear.

“Quality education for disadvantaged learners is not a cost – it is the smartest investment a nation can make,” says Natasha Mkhize, Executive: Strategic Relations at the Ruta Sechaba Foundation. “Supporting the brightest learners from disadvantaged backgrounds does more than change individual lives – it generates a ripple effect that strengthens families, communities, and the country’s economic future.”

The Foundation’s recent impact study, covering 2020 to 2024, tracks 2,752 learners and highlights significant academic transformation. In English, 86% of learners scored above 65% in 2024, up from 77.8% in 2020. In Mathematics – a crucial gateway to STEM careers – 66.5% exceeded 65%, compared to 61.5% at the start of the study period. Grade 12 results show that 71.5% achieved an aggregate above 65%, with 94% of graduates earning university exemption. “These aren’t just statistics,” Mkhize adds. “They represent futures unlocked and opportunities created.”

Equally striking is the psychological impact. Surveyed learners highlighted the scholarship’s role in building confidence and ambition. “Being selected affirmed their worth during challenging times. It gave them permission to aim higher and believe they belonged in spaces of excellence,” explains Mkhize. Attendance data supports this transformation, with average absenteeism remaining below 10 days annually despite pandemic disruptions, demonstrating learners’ commitment and resilience.

The benefits extend well beyond academics. Of alumni surveyed, 67% are pursuing tertiary education, with 37% achieving distinctions and another 31% performing above average. Importantly, scholarship recipients are giving back to their communities, tutoring younger learners, volunteering at orphanages, coaching sports teams, and mentoring the next generation. “When you invest in one exceptional learner, you’re creating a catalyst for community transformation,” says Mkhize.

The Foundation’s model is also highly efficient. Costs per learner have decreased, while reach and impact have expanded. Corporate donors and education sector leaders benefit from measurable, high-return investments in human capital. “We’ve more than doubled our donor base and expanded our funding capacity since 2018,” Mkhize notes. “The model works, it scales, and the outcomes are undeniable.”

This Children’s Day, the message is clear: only a small fraction of South African children from disadvantaged communities accesses the quality education needed to succeed. The Ruta Sechaba Foundation identifies and supports these learners, offering opportunities to excel academically, in sports, leadership, and life.

“The return on this investment is profound,” concludes Mkhize. “Communities are transformed, and a generation of leaders emerges, equipped with both excellence and empathy. Every child deserves this opportunity, and every decision-maker should ask: how are we investing in the human capital that will shape our future?”

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