STADIO and building educators of the future
Education is one of the most important long-term investments any country can make, but the demands placed on educators are changing quickly. Classrooms are evolving, student needs are shifting, and the skills required of teachers today go far beyond subject knowledge alone. That is the context for this episode of Meet the Management.
In this conversation, Kia Jacklin sits down with Dr Abraham de Villiers from STADIO Higher Education to explore a timely question: what does the educator of the future look like? The discussion speaks to a broader shift in education, where teacher development increasingly needs to balance academic rigour with adaptability, innovation, and real classroom relevance.
Rather than treating teacher training as a static process, this episode opens up a wider conversation about the future of education itself, and about how institutions prepare educators for a world that is changing faster than traditional models were designed for.

About the guest
Dr Abraham de Villiers is Head of School: Education at STADIO Higher Education. That makes him a strong voice for this conversation, because his role sits directly within the space where future teachers are trained, supported, and prepared for the realities of the classroom.
His perspective is especially relevant because the question of what makes a strong educator today is no longer only about curriculum delivery. It is about how teachers respond to changing learner needs, integrate new approaches, and remain effective in a system under pressure to deliver both access and quality. In a role focused on education leadership, he brings a view shaped by both academic expectations and the practical demands of preparing students for professional teaching environments.
That makes this more than a conversation about qualifications. It becomes a conversation about what kind of teaching mindset, capability, and leadership the future will require.
Why this conversation matters
This conversation matters because education systems are under growing pressure to do more than transfer knowledge. They are expected to support critical thinking, adaptability, inclusion, digital fluency, and better student outcomes — all of which place greater demands on the educators at the centre of the system.
That is part of what makes the idea of the “educator of the future” so important. It suggests that teacher development cannot remain fixed while the world around it changes. STADIO’s broader public positioning repeatedly emphasises relevance, responsiveness, innovation, transformation, and effectiveness, which aligns closely with this discussion.
It also matters in the South African context, where widening access to higher education and improving success outcomes remain closely connected to the quality of teacher preparation. Any serious conversation about the future of education has to include the people being trained to lead classrooms in that future.
In this episode
This episode explores what future-focused teacher development should really involve. It looks at the qualities educators need in a changing world, the pressures facing the profession, and the role higher education institutions play in preparing graduates for more than just formal entry into the field.
It is also a conversation about relevance. As education evolves, strong teaching increasingly depends on more than knowledge alone. It requires flexibility, confidence, practical preparedness, and a willingness to engage with new ways of thinking about learning and student success.
The episode invites a broader reflection on what schools, institutions, and education leaders should be building toward now if they want tomorrow’s educators to be effective, resilient, and genuinely equipped for the realities ahead.
Watch the full episode to hear Dr Abraham de Villiers, in conversation with Kia Jacklin, unpack what the educator of the future might look like and why that question matters now more than ever.

About STADIO
STADIO Higher Education is a registered private higher education institution offering accredited qualifications through both contact and distance learning. On its website, STADIO positions itself around widening access to higher education while supporting relevance, student success, and workplace readiness across its schools.
That broader positioning matters in the context of this episode because the future of educator training depends not only on academic content, but on how institutions design learning for accessibility, relevance, and professional application. STADIO’s public messaging around innovation, responsiveness, and student-centredness reflects the same themes that sit beneath this conversation.
In that sense, this episode is not only about one role or one institution. It is about the wider challenge of preparing educators who can meet the demands of a changing world, and the kind of higher education environment needed to make that possible.


