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Home Entertainment Announcements

Career Guidance Is Lying to Our Children (And We Need to Fix It)

by Mzukona Mantshontsho
February 10, 2026
in Announcements, Club Sports, Community, Entertainment, Events, Featured, Health, Local Business, Local Heros, Municpality, National, News, People, Schools, Sports, Spotlight
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Career Guidance Is Lying to Our Children (And We Need to Fix It)
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By Zamaphathwa Phathwa

BA Law & Politics Graduate | Legal Writer & Commentary on Public Accountability | Future Prosecutor | Criminal Law & Justice Researcher | Academic Tutor

LEGAL LENS – Your legal friend explaining the law clearly, critically, and without the noise.

Introduction: The Career Story We Were All Told

For years, learners have been told a simple story: study hard, go to university, get a degree, and success will follow. It sounds neat. Motivational, even. Unfortunately, it is also incomplete.

Many graduates only discover too late that a degree is not the final destination but merely the first checkpoint. Careers such as law, medicine, accounting, and engineering require additional training, professional exams, accreditation, and years of training before actual practice begins. The shock that follows is not a personal failure; it is a systemic one.

Defining the Problem: Career Guidance vs Career Reality

Career guidance

Career guidance typically focuses on subject choices, university applications, and entry requirements. In other words, it answers the question: “What can I study after matric?”

Career reality education

Career reality education goes further. It answers the more important question: “What will my life actually look like if I choose this career?”

This includes:

the full qualification pathway

post-degree training requirements

professional examinations

timeframes and costs

employment prospects and competition

alternative career options.

South Africa largely offers the former while neglecting the latter.

Why Career Expos Are Not Enough

Career expos are often presented as the solution to career uncertainty. In reality, they are a partial and unequal intervention.

Limited access

Career expos are frequently hosted in urban centres, require transport, and are not accessible to all schools, particularly those in rural or under-resourced areas. As a result, the learners who most need guidance are often excluded.

Assumption of prior knowledge

Career expos rely on the idea that learners will ask questions. However, expecting an 18-year-old, fresh out of matric, to ask technical questions about professional accreditation or post-degree requirements is unrealistic. One cannot ask the right questions about a career one has never been properly introduced to.

Surface-level engagement

Most career expos offer brochures, slogans, and general encouragement. Rarely do they provide honest discussions about:

How long does a qualification truly takes

How competitive entry into professions is

the financial burden beyond tuition

The number of graduates who never enter practice

Students leave inspired but uninformed, and inspiration without information often leads to disappointment.

The Consequences of Poor Career Reality Education

South Africa already faces severe youth unemployment. According to Statistics South Africa, young graduates experience high levels of unemployment and underemployment, despite holding formal qualifications (Stats SA, 2023).

When students enter degrees without understanding professional realities, the result is:

extended periods of study

financial strain

delayed career entry

feelings of personal failure for systemic shortcomings

The issue is not ambition—it is misinformation.

What the Government Needs to Do

A nationally standardised programme

Career reality education must be formalised as a national programme, coordinated by the Department of Basic Education and the Department of Higher Education and Training.

This programme should:

begin in Grade 11

continue into first-year tertiary education

be career-specific

be offered multiple times per year

be automatically accessible (no applications or selection criteria)

Career information should be treated as a public good, not a privilege.

Law as a Case Study

Law is a prime example of why career reality education matters. Many students believe that completing a law degree leads directly to becoming a lawyer. In practice, the pathway includes:

different types of law degrees with different outcomes

articles of clerkship or pupillage

professional examinations

admission procedures

long waiting periods before practice.

Without early explanation, students are left confused and discouraged. Clear, early guidance would prevent unrealistic expectations and unnecessary attrition.

The Legal and Policy Dimension

Meaningful access to education includes access to accurate and sufficient information. An education system that prepares learners academically but not professionally undermines:

the right to education

human dignity

youth development objectives

national skills development goals.

The state is not required to guarantee employment, but it is required to ensure that educational pathways are transparent and understandable.

The Role of the Private Sector

Private companies and professional bodies benefit from skilled graduates and must therefore contribute to preparing them. This includes:

collaborating across industries

participating in structured career reality programmes

sharing realistic expectations of entry-level work

providing honest data, not marketing slogans

Career development should be a collective responsibility, not a branding exercise.

Making Career Education Enjoyable in Schools

Career education does not need to be dull or intimidating. Schools can:

Use career simulations

Invite alumni to speak honestly about challenges.

encourage open questions without judgment

normalise uncertainty and exploration

A simple truth applies: there are no stupid questions, only systems that explain too little.

Conclusion: From Movie Trailers to Instruction Manuals

A degree is not a magic wand. Graduation is not the finish line; it is the starting gun.

If South Africa is serious about youth development and graduate employability, it must move beyond motivational talks and career expos. Students deserve clear, honest, and accessible explanations of the careers they are expected to build.

It is time to stop selling careers like movie trailers and start explaining them like instruction manuals.

Mzukona Mantshontsho

Mzukona Mantshontsho

Yo School Magazine, founded to empower schools, helps learners research, write, and publish newsletters, bulletins, and maintain websites. With a mission to promote dialogue on issues affecting young people, the organisation encourages learners to celebrate excellence, embrace growth, and strive for greatness. Yo School Magazine aims to foster better individuals and future South African leaders through positive and productive behaviour.

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Nyakaza Media Solutions, founded to empower schools, helps learners research, write, and publish newsletters, bulletins, and maintain websites. With a mission to promote dialogue on issues affecting young people, the organisation encourages learners to celebrate excellence, embrace growth, and strive for greatness. Nyakaza Media Solutions aims to foster better individuals and future South African leaders through positive and productive behaviour.

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