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    Home » We Are Educating for a World That No Longer Exists
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    We Are Educating for a World That No Longer Exists

    May 26, 20264 Mins Read
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    Semone Peacock Diretor at Logiscool Ruimsig
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    South Africa keeps talking about job creation while ignoring the far more uncomfortable truth: millions of young people are entering the economy unprepared for the jobs that actually exist. The country is not short on talent — it is short on digital skills development.

    Every year, thousands of capable, motivated and educated young South Africans leave schools and universities expecting opportunity, only to collide with a labour market that has fundamentally changed. Industries are no longer hiring purely for qualifications or theoretical knowledge. They are hiring for adaptability, digital fluency and problem-solving ability in an economy increasingly shaped by artificial intelligence, automation and data-driven systems.

    The disconnect is becoming impossible to ignore. According to Gartner, only 7% of HR leaders believe their workforce is fully prepared with the skills needed for the future, exposing a widening global capability gap as technology reshapes work faster than education systems can respond.

    South Africa faces this challenge at an even greater scale because the country is attempting to compete in a digital economy while large parts of its population still lack meaningful access to structured technology education. The implications extend far beyond unemployment statistics.

    At a national level, weak digital capability limits competitiveness, discourages investment and constrains innovation. At an individual level, it traps young people in a cycle where ambition exists but access to future-ready skills does not. The result is a workforce increasingly disconnected from the direction global industries are moving.

    The problem is not simply that schools need more technology. Many schools already have some form of digital infrastructure. The deeper issue is that technology exposure without structured digital skills development changes very little. Giving learners devices without teaching them how to think critically, solve problems and create with technology is the equivalent of handing out calculators without teaching mathematics.

    This is where a different model is beginning to emerge. Rather than relying entirely on traditional education systems to close the gap, organisations are increasingly stepping into the role of future skills enablers. Structured coding, robotics and AI literacy programmes are becoming part of a broader ecosystem focused on building practical capability rather than passive exposure.

    More importantly, this is not about turning every learner into a software engineer. It is about developing the foundational thinking patterns that modern industries now demand — logical reasoning, systems thinking, creativity, adaptability, digital confidence, and the ability to break down problems, test solutions and iterate quickly.

    These are no longer specialist skills. They are becoming economic survival skills. Students exposed to structured digital learning environments learn how to build solutions instead of simply consuming technology. They begin to understand how digital systems work rather than interacting with them passively. Over time, this changes not only technical competence but also confidence and mindset.

    For businesses, this creates an opportunity to rethink the purpose of CSI and BBBEE investment. Instead of focusing purely on compliance-driven spending or short-term visibility projects, organisations can begin investing directly into the future workforce they will one day depend on. The conversation shifts from “How do we contribute?” to “How do we ensure young South Africans can participate meaningfully in the economy we are creating?”

    This also introduces something many traditional CSI programmes struggle to provide: measurable capability development. Structured digital skills programmes can track progression, engagement, project completion and practical outcomes over time. This creates a far clearer relationship between investment and long-term impact.

    The long-term implications are significant. A digitally capable workforce is better positioned to compete globally, drive innovation locally and create new forms of economic participation beyond traditional employment structures. In a world increasingly shaped by AI and automation, adaptability and digital fluency will determine who participates in growth and who is excluded from it.

    For South Africa, this is no longer optional. The future economy will not slow down while we catch up. The organisations investing in digital capability today are not simply funding education initiatives. They are helping determine whether the country becomes an active participant in the future economy or a spectator watching it happen elsewhere.

    Because in the end, talent is not South Africa’s constraint — capability is.

    Semone Peacock is director of Logiscool Ruimsig.

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