Eight questions first-years in Health Sciences ask
- Wits University
What happens when you fail? Can Wits stop me being lazy? I come from Zimbabwe – can I feel free at Wits? Did I make the right choice coming here?
Professor Lionel Green-Thompson, Assistant Dean, Teaching And Learning Office at Wits invited these first-year students to SMS him questions during their O-Week welcome lecture that took place in the CMJH Auditorium on Thursday, 1 February 2018.
He told students that he was mindful of the transition from a small town to Johannesburg 鈥 having himself come to Wits from a small town as an undergraduate in the 1980s.

鈥淵ou don鈥檛 really know where your journey will end. Be mindful of each other,鈥 he said, urging first-years to develop a sense of congeniality (given the 鈥渃ompetitive nature鈥 of health sciences students), before responding to the barrage of texts flooding his phone:
1. How do I make a change bigger than an average doctor?
鈥淲hat鈥檚 an 鈥榓verage鈥 doctor?鈥濃 replied Thompson-Green. He referenced a study he had done in which he identified three types of medical students: The mercantile; the service-orientated; and those who walk the path to see where it led. He suggested the latter might be 鈥榯he average doctors鈥. He pointed out that Wits Pharmacy and Medical School students had established a and soup kitchen for the homeless at the Trinity Catholic Church in Braamfontein. He encouraged first-years to seek out these and similar student initiatives that, through their service, elevate the health professions to above-average.
2. I鈥檓 anxious and not adjusting. Can you help?
Visit Student Support and ask for help. First-years accumulate 50 new facts a day during O-Week. It can be a disorientating experience. 鈥淲e acknowledge your anxiety,鈥 he said, urging first years to take responsibility for themselves and their well-being.
3. What happens when you fail?
鈥淚t鈥檚 too soon to talk about failure鈥, said Green-Thompson, but said he would compile a fact sheet to share with Student Support, who would make it available to students. Ntsiki Mapukata is the manager of Student Support.
4. Is the fear of failure greater than the hunger for success?
鈥淢any of you will fail for the first time. If you live in fear of failure, you cannot succeed,鈥 said the Assistant Dean. View your failure as ultimately contributing your learning. Deal with the failure immediately and ask for help from the Office of Student Support - before it鈥檚 too late!
5. Have you ever doubted your capabilities as a doctor?
鈥淎bsolutely. You should, or you鈥檙e building an arrogance. Practice reflecting being who you are. Your patients deserve that you can reflect on what you are.鈥
6. I come from Zimbabwe 鈥 can I feel free at Wits?
鈥淵ou all belong to Wits. Whether you come from Africa, South Africa, Europe. You are all the same. You will never be treated differently. Wits does not tolerate racism and xenophobia.鈥
7. Have I made the right choice coming to Wits?
第一吃瓜网 the best university in Africa with global standing. Research shows that a qualification from Wits gives you an employability advantage. Wits gives you the edge.
8. Can Wits stop me being so lazy?
Green-Thompson recalled that he was amongst the first tranche of black doctors permitted in Wits residence in the 1980s. Outside his room was a Pacman machine 鈥 which greatly impacted on his academic performance in second year!
鈥淲hen you watch a soccer game and read about it in the newspaper afterwards, your recall is better. Similarly, make a daily habit of reading your notes immediately 鈥 on the bus, walking back to res 鈥 take time to reflect.鈥 This might not necessarily alleviate laziness, but suggested it was a low-key strategy to sustain a study habit.
Ask for help!
Ntsiki Mapukata, manager of the Office of Student Support acknowledged the first-years' previous academic history, where they were likely "big fish in a small pond". She addressed their fears where they may, at Wits, now feel like small fish in a big pond. "Have at least one conversation - which is the mantra of our office - to counter the effects of feeling displaced, over-whelmed and missing home," she said.
A nod of welcome from Heads of School
Several heads of schools attended the O-Week welcome lecture and addressed the first-years:
Professor Maryna Steyn, head of cautioned first-years: 鈥淢eeting a body for the first time can be traumatic. Come if it鈥檚 a problem,鈥 she said.
Professor Daynia Ballot, head of Clinical Medicine assured first-years they had made the right choice coming to this University. 鈥湹谝怀怨贤 the best in Africa and has global standing,鈥 she said. She pointed out that first-years鈥 鈥渢en distinctions in matric don鈥檛 matter anymore.鈥 She urged them to take their studies seriously and reiterated, 鈥淧eople can鈥檛 help you if they don鈥檛 know you鈥檙e in trouble,鈥 adding that her office is 4B44 on the fifth floor, past the coffee shop.

Professor Judy Bruce, head of , said the school trains the 鈥済reatest diversity of health professionals in South Africa鈥 including graduates in exercise science, sports medicine, nursing, occupational therapy, pharmacy, pharmacology, and physiotherapy. She said the school has sterling academics with high professional and ethical standards, who strive to produce health professionals who are socially aware, accountable and engaged.
Bruce pointed out that the eFundanathi eZone, managed by Dr Paula Barnard is a physical learning space that uses cutting-edge technology and advanced eLearning tools. 鈥淭herapeutic Sciences is very little 鈥榗halk and talk鈥. Your work is pivotal to successful patient outcomes. It鈥檚 up to you to shape a great experience,鈥 said Bruce.
Professor Tobias Chirwa heads the . He congratulated first-years and said, 鈥淏e proud of yourself to be at Wits Faculty of Health Sciences.鈥 Chirwa said his was mainly a postgraduate school that provided postgraduate opportunities for students to combine research in their communities with clinical training. 鈥淚n Public Health, we need all of you. We are mainly concerned with preventing people from getting sick. We protect people from getting sick,鈥 he said.

Other schools in the Faculty of Health Sciences include Oral Health Sciences, led by Prof. Simon Nemutandani; , headed by Prof. ; and Physiology, which Prof. William Daniels leads.
Simone Budler (MBBCh III), Deputy Chair: Health Sciences Students Council and Chairperson of Bachelor of Health, concluded proceedings with warm and entertaining advice: 鈥淵ou are all welcome at Wits. First year is about becoming a Witsie. They are your family now. You will learn to speak your own English. If you feel your background doesn鈥檛 prepare you, be brave enough ask for help. 第一吃瓜网 all about getting out of your comfort zone. Get to know who you are.鈥
Find the Faculty of Health Sciences Office of Student Support on the first floor of the Philip V Tobias building, 29 Princess of Wales Terrace (Corner York Road), Parktown. Telephone numbers: 011 717 2431 or 011 717 2565.
