Temba Maqubela
Temba Maqubela is a South African educator and administrator. He is the eighth and current headmaster of Groton School, the American boarding school, serving since 2013. Before Groton, he spent 26 years at Phillips Academy, eventually rising to faculty dean and assistant head of school for academics.
Early life and education
Maqubela was born in 1958 to Jiyana Maqubela, an accountant, and Shena Matthews, a biology teacher. The family were Anglicans. Maqubela grew up in the mining village of Nonkobe, South Africa.Maqubela is a fourth-generation educator: through his maternal grandmother, his great-grandfather was John Knox Bokwe, the South African composer and educator. Maqubela's maternal grandfather was Z. K. Matthews, the first Botswanan ambassador to the United States and the first black graduate of a South African university. His first cousin is Naledi Pandor, the South African Minister of Home Affairs.
Maqubela attended St. John's College, Mtatha, a South African boarding school where his mother was a teacher. He obtained a scholarship to medical school, but in 1976, he was forced to leave school at the age of 17 after the police arrested him for anti-apartheid activities. He took advantage of the chaos caused by the Soweto Uprising to escape to Botswana, where he obtained political asylum, and then moved to Nigeria for university. Because of his exile, he never obtained a high school diploma.
Maqubela obtained a bachelor's of science in chemistry from the University of Ibadan in Nigeria. During his years at Andover, he also obtained a master's degree in chemistry from the University of Kentucky, graduating in 1994.
Educational career
Early career
After obtaining his bachelor's degree, Maqubela taught at the Maru-a-Pula School in Gaborone, Botswana from 1984 to 1986. However, the South African government monitored the activities of black exiles. During the 1985 Raid on Gaborone, Maqubela and his family narrowly escaped being killed when the South African military assaulted the wrong house. The South African government continued to surveil him following the raid.To avoid further persecution, the Maqubela family moved to New York City, again obtaining political asylum. To make ends meet, Maqubela briefly worked as a coat checker at the American Museum of Natural History and moved his family into a homeless shelter. He eventually obtained a job at Long Island City High School, a public school in Queens, where he spent one year before moving to Andover.
Andover
In 1987, Maqubela moved to Massachusetts to become a chemistry teacher at Phillips Academy, a private boarding school. He left for two years to study for his master's degree. After returning to Andover, he chaired the chemistry department from 1994 to 1999. He was promoted to faculty dean in 2004 and assistant head of school for academics in 2006.At Andover, Maqubela participated in several programs to improve educational readiness for traditionally underrepresented populations. He directed MS, the academy's math and science-focused summer school program for minority students, and started the ACE Scholars Program to "tackle the preparation gap among gifted students." He also participated in Andover's global education programs.
Maqubela was awarded the White House Distinguished Teacher Award in 1993, and was inducted into the Hall of Fame for the Northeast Section of the American Chemical Society in 2002.