Jolaine Maritz
Jolaine Maritz. PHOTO: Supplied

JOHANNESBURG – Jolaine Maritz, a 2025 Heronbridge College matriculant from Fourways achieved ten distinctions and a 95% average in the Independent Examinations Board (IEB) final examinations, making her one of South Africa’s most outstanding academic performers this year.

She has also been named the Curro National Award winner after ranking first amongst students from the ten top IEB schools across the Curro Group.

The Curro National Award, which recognises exceptional academic achievement across all Curro schools in South Africa and Namibia, represents the pinnacle of scholastic excellence within the group’s educational network.

Maritz’s results earned her IEB Outstanding Achievement recognition and placed her in the top 1% nationally across six subjects, including English Home Language, Afrikaans First Additional Language, History, Life Sciences, Physical Sciences, and Life Orientation.

Scholarship pursuit for US biomedical pathway

Despite her exceptional results, Maritz now faces a challenge familiar to many top South African learners: securing the financial means to access tertiary education at the institution of her choice.

As an international applicant, she is actively pursuing substantial scholarship and financial aid to access a pre-medical undergraduate study pathway in the United States, with a proposed academic focus on biomimetics and bioethics. These are fields that integrate biological science, medical innovation, and ethical responsibility.

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The pathway represents not just academic ambition, but a strategic response to what she has witnessed firsthand in her community work.

From rural chess programmes to healthcare innovation

What sets Maritz apart is her seven-year track record of community impact that has shaped her future ambitions.

In 2018, she co-founded and led the youth development initiative Jogi Chess Evolution, delivering chess-based cognitive development programmes to children in rural children’s homes. The programmes has reached thousands of learners in under-resourced communities across the country.

Through Jogi Designs, she has contributed to the design and distribution of medical kits and essential supplies to children’s homes with limited access to healthcare resources – work that exposed her directly to systemic healthcare gaps at community level.

This experience, she says, has directly informed both her academic interests and her determination to pursue medicine.

Delivering healthcare where needed most

Maritz’s main goal is to apply medical science in settings where access to care is limited, supporting sustainable healthcare solutions in high-need communities.

Guided by the Nguni proverb “umuntu ngumuntu ngabantu” (a person is a person through other people), she views personal success as a responsibility to uplift others, with ambitions that extend beyond studying abroad to working where healthcare gaps are greatest.

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