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Tebello Nyokong

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Nationality
  
South African

Institution
  
Name
  
Tebello Nyokong

Institutions
  
Fields
  
Chemistry


Tebello Nyokong nrfcomsinfonrfcommuniquewpcontentuploads2013


Born
  
October 20, 1951 (age 72) Lesotho (
1951-10-20
)

Notable awards
  
Order of Mapungubwe in Bronze, South African Chemical Institute Gold Medal, L'Oreal-UNESCO Award for Women in Science

Alma mater
  
National University of Lesotho, McMaster University, University of Western Ontario

Africa rising prof tebello nyokong


Tebello Nyokong (born October 20, 1951) is a South African chemist and professor at Rhodes University, and a recipient of the Presidency of South Africa's Order of Mapungubwe in Bronze. She was awarded the South African Chemical Institute Gold Medal in 2012, and named one of the top 10 most influential women in science and technology in Africa by IT News Africa. She is currently researching photo-dynamic therapy, an alternative cancer treatment method to chemotherapy. In 2007, she was one of the top three publishing scientists in South Africa, and in 2013 she was awarded the National Research Foundation's Lifetime Achievement Award.

Contents

Tebello Nyokong Distinguished South African Professor Tebello Nyokong on science

21 icons prof tebello nyokong short film


Education

Tebello Nyokong SAASTA getSETgo November 2013 Meet multiple awardwinning

Nyokong came from a poor background. She had to wear second-hand clothes and was barefoot. As a young girl she was sent to live with her grandparents in the mountains of Lesotho. She learnt about science by observing the wildlife whilst she worked as an eight-year-old child caring for sheep. Nyokong says that she would spend one day at school and then one day with the sheep as someone had to care for them. Nyokong says that one of her childhood ambitions was to own her own pair of shoes. When she started school she was steered away from science as she was told that it was too hard. It was only with two years to go that she changed direction and with perseverance completed the science course.

Tebello Nyokong Distinguished South African Professor Tebello Nyokong on science

Nyokong earned her bachelor's degree in both chemistry and biology from the University of Lesotho in 1977. She went on to earn her master's in chemistry from McMaster University in Ontario, Canada. In 1987, she received her Ph.D in chemistry from the University of Western Ontario. After earning her PhD, she received a Fulbright fellowship to continue her post-doctoral studies at the University of Notre Dame in the United States.

Career

Tebello Nyokong Rhodes University

After finishing her Fulbright fellowship in the United States, Nyokong returned to Lesotho, briefly as it turned out, to take a position at the University of Lesotho. In 1992, she took a position as a lecturer at Rhodes University. The National Research Foundation gave her a high rating and helped Nyokong obtain a research laboratory at the university. Soon, she moved from lecturer to professor, and then distinguished professor. She is known for her research in nanotechnology, as well as her work on photo-dynamic therapy. Her pioneering research in the latter is paving the way for a safer cancer detection and treatment, without the debilitating side effects of chemotherapy.

Nyokong published an open letter that she wrote nominally aimed at her 18-year-old self (who would have been working hard to complete a three-year science course in just two years). The letter reassured her younger self to have courage as her family may not realise the opportunities ahead. It finishes with "You believe you can be a wife and a mother and still be a bread winner and contribute to society. And you will."

In 2014 she was a professor at Rhodes University in Grahamstown. She was the subject for a photographic portrait for Adrian Steirn's "21 icons". which imagined her returned to her childhood role as a shepherd but now the shepherd is an adult and she is wearing her chemist's white coat. Copies of the picture were sold for charity.

Awards

Nyokong has been recognized both nationally and internationally; some of her honors are:

  • 2004 awarded the Order of Mapungubwe: Bronze
  • 2009 L'OrĂ©al-UNESCO Award for Women in Science
  • 2010 inducted into the Lesotho Hall of fame
  • 2010 honorary doctorate from the Walter Sisulu University
  • 2010 honorary doctorate from the University of South Africa
  • 2011 honored by the Royal Society in Chemistry/Pan African Chemistry Network as a Distinguished Woman in Chemistry
  • 2012 awarded South African Chemical Institute (SACI) Gold Medal
  • 2013 awarded National Research Foundation's Lifetime Achievement Award
  • References

    Tebello Nyokong Wikipedia