The University of Leeds in South Africa: Exceptional work from a remarkable team

The 2025 team of staff and students spent a period of 4 weeks in rural Nkandla delivering a series of cycling clinics for beginners & improvers as well as a week-long sport & leadership festival for 3 schools in the township of Eshowe. Our team comprised two staff members Matty Walsh and Fenella Walsh (one from Leeds Sport and one from LUU, supporting our commitment to working in partnership) and eight students Muskaan Kapoor, Molly Blakemore, Pippa Hooper, Rosie Gibbins, Kate Gibson, Ryan Mellor, Mitchell Hale and Tom Cunningham from a range of disciplines, including one international student from India and 2 students from underrepresented backgrounds.

Cycling clinics are the main focus of the project and these are conducted alongside our long-term partner, KZN Cycling and their local development officer, Sonqoba. The clinics aim to introduce cycling to new audiences as well as further develop the skills of more competent riders. Students also teach bike maintenance skills to help keep the fleet on the road. Year-round talent ID, coaching & competitive opportunities are offered via KZN Cycling – an important pathway opportunity for young people in the area. In an average month, Sonqoba delivers 12 clinics engaging with 220 young people. In August 2025, our volunteer team were able to deliver 25 clinics in 8 schools, including 3 new ones, engaging 1,100 learners – a significant increase in scale and an introduction to cycling for some completely new learners. One week of the project was also spent delivering a sport & leadership festival for Grade 7 pupils at 3 schools. This involved daily rotations of leadership session, classroom sessions and sports activities with the week culminating in pupils leading activities for their peers. Students design their own classroom sessions, usually related to their degree, bringing a range of topics this year including a challenge in engineering the tallest tower, and a lesson in cell biology. Threaded throughout the project is a range of cultural experiences to support students to learn more about Zulu culture, including a visit to a traditional Zulu home, lessons in Zulu dance and a safari. The 2025 team have been our top performing team to date in terms of clinics delivered, and participants engaged. In 2025 we also won the award for ‘Global Impact’ at the University of Leeds partnership awards.

Summary of feedback from students, schools and pupils

  • A key focus for 2025 was improving our data collection and evidencing of impact on both the UK & SA side of the project.

  • On the UK side all students are skills audited at the start point, mid-point and end point of the project to assess their progress against 10 key graduate level skills. The highest scoring skills at the end point. They also write a reflective essay on the final week of their visit outlining their key successes, challenges and learnings from the project.

  • On the SA side we conducted interviews with staff and pupils in 7 schools and sent an end survey to schools we had contact details for. Schools were asked to score the engagement out of ten to produce a Net Promotor Score (NPS).

Vision:To use sport & education to inspire, engage and develop young people and communities in both Leeds and South Africa’

I learned that not everything is in my control, and the best way to deal with challenges is to stay flexible and open. Over these weeks, I’ve developed leadership, adaptability, problem-solving, communication, teamwork, and organisation skills – things I’ll carry with me long after the programme ends. I’ve become more aware of my strengths and weaknesses, especially when leading, but also of how powerful it is when everyone supports one another. This has been life-changing for me – it’s made me more confident, adaptable, and aware of the world. I wish I could come back and spend more time with these incredible children, because they’ve left a mark on me that I’ll carry forever.
— Muskaan Kapoor, International Business & Marketing student
I think what I have experienced in this project has affected how I will act and see the world in the future. I hope to have a role in coaching football for girls to ensure they have access to the same opportunity I had when I was younger.
— Pippa Hooper, Biochemistry & Biology student
I loved every minute of the programme – everything forms part of the experience and I am so glad to have done it. It has helped me understand what I want to do when I graduate and I am sure I will go back to SA.
— Mitchell Hale, Business Economics student
This programme is making a real difference in our school. I see the difference in the learners in school. They are interested and challenged and they’re learning. Kids really care about this programme. On day 1 some of the children knew nothing about how to ride a bike and now they are having a competition.
— Sipo Matondo, Teacher at Halambu Primary School – Cycling programme
Our students come back from the sports festival so motivated and so positive. I love the connection they have with the Leeds students and they speak about them for months after they have left. So they really make a connection and I just love the positivity that they leave with our children.
— Belinda Wynne, Head of John Wesley Primary School – Sports leadership festival
This week was fun, competitive and funny. The teachers were fun and everyone loved it. I like rugby, soccer and athletics. I learnt about Middlesborough, Scotland and Wales.
— Gratton College pupil
The thing I liked the most was the leadership sessions because they taught you a lot – how to work with other people and how to communicate things. I also learnt about Spain and learnt some Spanish.
— John Wesley School pupil
Cycling is fun & exciting. We learn and also get educated. I learnt a lot and I love it a lot.
— Myankanya School pupil
We get to show off our talent.
— Manqondo School pupil

Key Objectives and Principles

 

Plans for 2026 and Next Steps

  • 2026 will mark the 10-year anniversary of the Gryphons Abroad project and we hope to bring the 100+ staff members and students who have participated in the project, and stakeholders and funders together to celebrate this milestone

  • Project costs continue to rise and in response to this the 2026 visit will be a period of 3 weeks rather than 4. This balances the cost to students & staff commitment required from the service, with continued impact. We have successfully secured further support from the Footsteps Fund & Turing Fund to deliver the 2026 project. This will financially support students to access the opportunity; something that this year’s cohort expressed was vital to their participation alongside their other commitments. We are aiming to recruit 10 students, with 50% of these from underrepresented backgrounds. Financial sustainability will be a priority for 2025-26 and we will be seeking support from Student Opportunity & the FD project management office to progress this.

  • The initial 3 year cycling hub agreement between our charity partner, the Bambisanani Partnership & KZN Cycling comes to an end this year but the charity & NGO have indicated they are keen to continue working together. We will work alongside the charity & KZN Cycling to secure an agreement. Initial consultation with partners following this year’s visit has highlighted a need for more targeted interventions aimed at female pupils in the Nkandla region. Of the participants in the cycling project this year 73% were male and 27% were female. Although the number of male participants significantly outweighs the number of female participants, this ratio is a significant improvement on clinics delivered from April-July 2025 which engaged only 7% female participants. However, it does indicate a need for more targeted work in this area and we would like to support KZN Cycling in piloting this with the support of our female staff and students.

Key Facts


We thank our partners for their ongoing support in delivering this project:

The Bambisanani Partnership

Rob Stephenson Trust

Footsteps Fund

KZN Cycling


The University of Leeds has been a key member of the Bambisanani Partnership for almost ten years now, contributing significantly to the development of our governance and strategy as well pioneering outstanding operational work in South Africa. Andy Lockwood and Suzzi Garnett deserve considerable praise for their wonderful work and its resulting impact. Their support for other Bambisanani institutions and colleagues in both countries is fantastic: they lead the way in so many areas and are always willing to share ideas with others. They have lead on our groundbreaking Cycling initiative in partnership with KZN Cycling - an initiative that is truly transforming the lives of thousands of young people in the remote and rural Nkandla region. Next year will be the Tenth Anniversary of University of Leeds students volunteering in South Africa; these students can all articulate how this experience has benefited them in so many ways not least on their view of the world and their place in it. This all amounts to exceptional work from a remarkable team. Well done and Thank you.
— David Geldart, Founder/CEO, The Bambisanani Partnership
Editor

I specialise in designs and displays for schools.

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