Twenty-Nine Years in Education: The Inner Journey of an English Teacher
I graduated with a TESL degree from Universiti Malaya, carrying with me the idealism of a young educator who believed wholeheartedly that education could transform lives.
On 16 September 1997, I began my teaching career at SMK Majakir in Papar, Sabah. I was young, energetic, and filled with conviction. Lesson plans were carefully crafted. Communicative activities were thoughtfully designed. I wanted my students not only to learn English, but to believe they were capable of mastering it.
The Early Years: Idealism and Hope (1997–2001)
I believed that teaching English was not merely about grammar and essays. It was about building confidence. It was about giving rural students access to opportunities beyond their immediate environment.
Those first four years shaped my identity as a teacher. I was driven by purpose and sustained by hope.
Adjustment and Reality: A New Environment (2001–2004)
Here, I began to understand the broader realities of the education system. Teaching was no longer confined to classroom instruction. There were performance targets, examination pressures, documentation, meetings, and administrative responsibilities.
The theories I had learned at university met the complexities of real-world schooling. My idealism remained, but it was now tempered by experience.
Two Decades of Endurance: Commitment and Quiet Fatigue (2004–2025)
During this period, I witnessed profound changes in education. I saw the shift from chalkboards to digital platforms, from traditional textbooks to online learning systems. I taught multiple generations of students, each distinct from the last.
As an English teacher, I frequently encountered students who perceived the subject as difficult or intimidating. Many lacked confidence. Some struggled with basic proficiency. Every year, I began anew with optimism, hoping to ignite interest and resilience.
Yet over time, a subtle weariness emerged.
The workload evolved. Administrative tasks multiplied. Documentation, online data entry, meetings, audits, and co-curricular responsibilities increasingly competed with instructional time. At times, I found myself wondering whether I was teaching students or managing paperwork.
The repetition of syllabi year after year, coupled with constant systemic changes, gradually took its toll. The passion did not disappear abruptly; it faded quietly.
Leadership and Distance from the Classroom (2025–Present)
However, the promotion also shifted my role. I now coordinate language teachers, attend more meetings, and serve as a bridge between administration and staff. My responsibilities expanded, but my time in the classroom decreased.
Ironically, the higher I rose in position, the further I felt from the very space that once gave me the greatest sense of fulfillment — standing before a class and witnessing a student finally understand a complex sentence structure.
Why Has the Passion Faded?
This realization was not rooted in incompetence or regret. Rather, it stemmed from prolonged emotional investment. Teaching demands more than intellectual effort; it requires emotional presence, patience, and resilience. Over time, continuous giving without sufficient renewal can lead to quiet burnout.
Education systems evolve. Expectations rise. Student behavior shifts. Technology advances. Yet the human capacity to give endlessly without replenishment has limits.
I also find myself at a stage of life where reflection comes naturally. Questions arise:
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Am I still making a meaningful impact?
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Has the system changed as much as I once hoped?
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Who am I beyond the identity of a teacher?
These are not signs of weakness, but of introspection.
A Season of Reinterpretation
I have taught thousands of students. Some may not remember the grammar rules I emphasized. But perhaps they remember encouragement, patience, or a teacher who believed in their potential.
Teaching has never been merely a profession for me. It has been a life’s work.
Today, the fire may not blaze as it did in 1997. Yet the embers remain.
And perhaps this stage of my journey is not about rekindling the same youthful flame, but about redefining what it means to serve — with wisdom, balance, and renewed purpose.
After twenty-nine years in education, I have learned that passion evolves. And sometimes, what feels like fading is simply the beginning of deeper understanding.















9 Comments
Linda baru berkhidmat 13 tahun..tapi, ada masa..dah jemu dan bosan dengan kerja yang sama.. moga kita terus bersemangat..tak lama dah nak pencen..
ReplyDeleteBukan tenaga pengajar, tapi dah ada dalam institusi pendidikan tinggi dah 14 tahun. Kadang tu rasa semangat tu pudar juga. Tapi kita fikir, ini mungkin butiran tasbih kita. Sebab kerja itu ibadah. Tapi tu la, lain orang lain caranya, kan?
ReplyDeleteHebat sungguh pengalaman hidupnya, uncle. Semoga panjang umur, dikurniakan kesihatan dan dipermudahkan setiap langkahnya ya uncle. Amiiin.
ReplyDeleteyour students were lucky to have you... whether they realised it or not...
ReplyDeletenostalgia pengalaman catatkan kenangannya jadikan naskhah warisan
ReplyDeletebetul tu bila terlalu lama hadap environment yg sama ditambah dgn workloaded yg semakin btambah tiap hari tanpa ada ganjaran tambahan mmg membuatkan lagi lah jadi bosan..
ReplyDeleteJasa guru yang mana mungkin dapat dibalas oleh semua anak didik juga keluarga mereka. Pengalaman dan kenangan yang akan kekal di hati. Moga sentiasa diberkati Allah.
ReplyDeleteWorkload seorang guru yang tiba-tiba perlu jadi "group administrator", perlu jadi kerani. Semoga Allah merahmati semua insan yang bergelar guru
ReplyDeletebesar sungguh pahala Abam Kie...jadi pahala jariah...alhamdulillah
ReplyDeleteThanks for leaving your comment. Please come again. I will visit your blog soon.