A brilliant African Lady earns PhD in Statistics while nursing her new-๐๐จ๐ซ๐ง twins, celebrates achievements.
Jesca Batidzirai, a brilliant scholar from Zimbabwe, has achieved incredible success by earning her PhD in Statistics from the University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, all while nursing her new๐๐จ๐ซ๐ง twins.
Jesca, a lecturer at the universityโs School of Mathematics, Statistics, and Computer Science, focused her doctoral research on the small town of Mtubatuba on the KwaZulu-Natal North Coast.
Her study examined marriage trends, including the ages at which people marry, the reasons marriages fail, and how individuals transition through life changes. โThis PhD journey began before I got married, and at that time, marriage was not even on my mind. But now, it feels like it prepared me for marriage,โ she shared.
Jescaโs research revealed significant findings, including that many girls under 18 are forced into marriage after becoming pregnant due to familial pressures and the stigma of pregnancy.
โThose less educated tend to marry and divorce earlier compared to those with higher education. Similarly, individuals with no income enter marriage quicker than those with more financial stability,โ she explained.
She also advised parents to focus on building their ๐ค๐ฉ๐ช๐ญ๐ฅrenโs careers to prevent situations where young people enter marriages prone to abuse under societal or financial pressures. Additionally, her research found that men remarry faster than women after losing a partner.
In the middle of her PhD journey, Jesca discovered she was pregnant. While adjusting to the news, she and her husband were further surprised to learn they were expecting twins.
โI didnโt know whether to be happy or worried, especially since our financial situation wasnโt great at the time. We had planned for one ๐๐๐๐ฆ, but suddenly, it was two. It took me two weeks to accept the situation and start planning for twins,โ she recalled.
Jesca said her identical twin boys, Nicholas and Xavier, were ๐๐จ๐ซ๐ง just as she was completing corrections to her thesis. Now a year later, the twins and their 3-year-old sister Yolanda all joined her during her graduation.
She expressed deep gratitude to her parents, her ๐ค๐ฉ๐ช๐ญ๐ฅrenโwho she described as her greatest inspirationโand her supervisors for being supportive.
โHaving twin boys while completing a PhD was not easy, but this journey has fueled my drive to inspire girls to pursue their academic dreams without hesitation, regardless of societal biases,โ she said.
As a dedicated researcher and lecturer with a passion for the mental health and well-being of women, Jesca is determined to encourage more young girls to take up mathematics and science.
Looking Forward, Jescaโs next steps include supervising theses and continuing to motivate the next generation of women to break barriers in academia and beyond.