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by Admin

South Africa 6- People I’ll Never Forget

February 6, 2012 in Stellenbosch by Admin


A tribute to the wonderful people I met through this trip and the wonderful times we spent together – fellow study abroad group members from MSU, trip coordinators and family, my host family and friends, other teachers at my school, and last but not least, my students. :) Locations: Stellenbosch, Robben Island, Table Mountain, Camps Bay, Hermanus, Cape Agulhas, Brackenfell, Tiger Tiger (Rondebosch), !Khwa ttu San culture center (Yzerfontein), Eikendal Primary School (Kraaifontein), Durbanville, Newlands Stadium (Rondebosch), Opskop (Stellenbosch), Kenridge, Knysna Featherbed (Garden Route- Knysna), Botlierskop Day Safaris (Garden Route- Mossel Bay), Cango Caves (Outdshoorn), Cango Ostrich Farm (Oudtshoorn), Canal Walk Mall, Deo Gratia (Durbanville), The Lapa (Durbanville) Music: “For Good”- Idina Menzel (Elphaba) and Kristin Chenoweth (Glinda), from “Wicked (Original Broadway Cast Recording)”

by Admin

CRAIG DAVID: TUBERCULOSIS AFFECTS “REAL PEOPLE, REAL FAMILIES

May 23, 2011 in Student by Admin


In a clip British R&B star Craig David talks with Dr Sizulu Moyo, a tuberculosis researcher at Stellenbosch University. Against the backdrop of a busy research laboratory, Craig learns that lots of progress has been made and momentum gained in the diagnosis and treatment of tuberculosis thanks to collaboration among partners as well as increased awareness and commitment from poor and rich countries alike, spurred by the link between tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS: tuberculosis is the leading infectious killer of people living with HIV. Two key challenges mentioned by Dr Moyo are the need for sufficient funding to develop an effective vaccine and the need for tuberculosis patients to complete their course of treatment (which lasts 6 months or more) to keep the medicines effective: incomplete treatment will lead to the tuberculosis bacteria becoming drug-resistant. While people are aware that they should finish treatment, she explains, “it’s a complicated scenario; there are many things that come into play…We need understand where they are coming from. They are people with lives, with families.” Despite her laboratory surroundings Dr Moyo remains very aware of the real-life implications of her research: “It’s not only about the documents that you read, any nice brochures, it’s not about the presentations that you make… tuberculosis affects real people, real families and real communities.”