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Men in the Making gets support from corporates

Corporate South Africa has joined hands to tackle one of South Africa's greatest social ills - the lack of direction for young men, which is leading them to commit acts of violent crime, driven by unemployment, drugs, and alcohol.
Men in the Making gets support from corporates

The Men in the Making initiative allows young men to experience a day within the biggest corporate brands in the country, exposing them to different careers and expanding their horizons. For many, the opportunity includes an address by the CEO, job shadowing, team building exercises, a career guidance session and motivational talks.

Tracker launched Men in the Making on 25 March 2009, immediately gaining support and endorsement from the Department of Basic Education. Of the 150 corporate participants, many of the country's well-known leaders have joined - PricewaterhouseCoopers, Rand Merchant Bank, First National Bank, Etana Insurance, Outsurance, Hollard, MWEB, Exxaro, SASRIA, Transnet, and Murray & Roberts, to name a few.

Positive feedback

In its first year the event reached 400 students from 35 companies. Growing year-on-year the initiative reached 1,400 young men from 150 companies in 2013, creating a total of 5,379 young men who had experienced the Men in the Making opportunity over the last five years. Annually the event feeds back positive case studies with images of boys engaging with corporate leaders and executives, with some organisations digging deep to make a connection - as one example, SA Express went out of their way to fly boys from Kimberley and Bloemfontein to Johannesburg to expose them to the aviation industry.

Aside the individual case studies, Tracker also adopted Magaliesburg State High School, a semi-rural community based school that improved its matric pass rate from 66% in 2008 to 84.5% in 2013 with some boys in the programme obtaining distinctions in selected subjects.

Call for help

"There is no doubt that young men need the support and environment to enable them to deal with societal pressures and overcome obstacles that could potentially hinder their dreams," explains Tshego Bokaba, CSI manager at Tracker. "The concept was derived from the realisation that the boy-child in South Africa is calling out for attention, help, recognition and acknowledgement as he grapples with the challenges of life and the suppression that he sometimes experiences - especially as more focus and glamour is placed on girl-children."

"This private-public partnership - the Department of Basic Education, in particular - will find expressions in other state organs that will help bring the two closer together for a better South Africa. The quality of corporate involvement is truly revealing and shows a growing commitment to 'get off the fence and lend a hand' in tackling our country's biggest issues. The output is that a vast number of young men are making changes in their lives and finding a path - one that leads in the opposite direction to a life of crime, violence or dependency," she concludes.

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