By Innovative Learning Solutions
Women are certainly no longer content with being confined to jobs traditionally associated with their gender, rather, they are stepping into roles previously occupied by men.
Audrey Thabile is one such a woman. She is a driver tester at South Africa’s largest truck driving academy, in Boksburg Gauteng. She is also fully involved with testing of drivers as the driving academy expands from a focus on Code-8 to Code-14 drivers.
Armed with her Code-14 license; Professional Driving Permit (PDP) and Dangerous Goods Permit having completed driver training at Innovative Learning Solutions (ILS) in 2020, she was subsequently found to be such a remarkable candidate that she was hired to join their training team. Thabile is the man… ahem… the woman for the job! Thabile says she is ready to prove her worth by grooming a mostly male audience to tackle the challenges of the road.
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“I love trucks. It’s been that way since I was young. When I came across Innovative Learning Solutions’ Introduction to Advanced Driving Techniques course, I knew I had to sign up for it. The training was exactly what I needed because I had already conducted my Code-14 training and testing with the three-axle truck and the ILS programme uses a Volvo Superlink which requires more skill to handle. Trucking companies want drivers who are competent in the Superlink, and a competency certificate proves you know what you are doing,” says Thabile.
“Audrey Thabile was Innovative Learning Solutions’ first female driver training candidate, we are glad to have had our first female trucker successfully complete her training at ILS. We are expanding our offering to offer more women the skills they need in logistics whether as controllers, planners or logistics managers, we cover the skills you need for this in-demand industry. We look forward to seeing more women equip themselves with the necessary skills to master working in the field whether manoeuvring a Superlink truck or working in FMCG and logistics industry, traditionally considered a male-dominated industry,” says Arnoux Maré, ILS founder and CEO of Innovative Solutions Group.
Thabile continues, “Having acquired the certification that deems me competent in alley docking and straight reverse in these heavy-duty trucks, and now as a driver tester, these skills have helped me build a future for my children with a job in the trucking industry.”
She says beyond the social limitations most women face, another reason not many women are drivers rests on old mindsets of driving being a man’s job. “Driving is gender-neutral. It is not reserved for a specific sex but many studies have proven that women generally are safer drivers than men, yet there are fewer of us driving professionally,” Thabile adds.
Since Thabile’s appointment, another lady, Sindisiwe Evelyn Kunene who applied for a temporary cleaning role so impressed the company that she has now been given the opportunity to join a three-month development programme to increase her computer and admin skills in order for her to become member of the company’s admin and sales team.
The roles for women in logistics vary and women can certainly employ a variety of talents in the industry, for example, ILS also employs an occupational health nurse with the required experience to brief and teach drivers about conditions that typically may affect them including high blood pressure, healthy eating due to the risk of diabetes and other related matters that often result in ‘unfit’ health checks when they are seeking employment or those conducted by their employers.
“With more women carving their mark in logistics and driving, I am confident the industry will reach parity. Our job at Innovative Learning Solutions is to make sure we minimise any stumbling blocks in the path for women in logistics by providing them with the opportunity to upskill themselves and make them better and safer drivers,” concludes Maré.