By Victor Olubiye
Teaching is often evaluated through grades, examination results, and certificates. Yet the true value of education is not always immediately visible. Sometimes, its most powerful reward comes years later, revealed in a moment of unexpected recognition.
Over the years, I have taught many students, each with their own dreams, fears, and ambitions. Most pass through the classroom quietly and move on with their lives. But every once in a while, a former student reappears and reminds you that teaching is not just a job, but a lasting investment in human lives.
One such encounter recently brought this truth sharply into focus and reaffirmed why the impact of a teacher can never be fully measured within the four walls of a classroom.
Like many educators, I have spent years standing before students, delivering lessons, marking scripts, offering corrections, encouragement, and sometimes discipline. Often, teachers never truly know which words or actions will leave a lasting impression. We simply show up, do the work, and hope that something sticks.
In 2020, I taught a young lady during my early years in the classroom. She was diligent, respectful, and determined to succeed. She paid attention, asked questions, and put in the effort required to excel. With time, she passed her internal school examinations and later succeeded in her external exams as well. When she moved on, I wished her well, as teachers often do, without imagining that our paths would cross again.
Recently, while walking past a group of university students engaged in lively conversation, I overheard a familiar story. One young woman was explaining how a secondary school teacher had guided her academic journey and helped shape her success. As she spoke, her friends reacted with disbelief.
“How could a young guy like that teach you?” they asked, laughing and questioning her account.
Their reaction made me pause. I slowed my steps, curious but unsure. Then, in a sudden turn of events, the young woman noticed me.
What happened next left me speechless. In broad daylight, she knelt before me as a sign of respect and gratitude. Shocked and deeply humbled, I immediately helped her up, unwilling to draw attention or cause embarrassment.
At first, I struggled to recognize her. Time has a way of changing faces. But when she mentioned her name and the secondary school she attended, everything became clear. That school was the very institution where I began my teaching career. In that moment, memory returned vividly. She was my student.
We spoke briefly, exchanged phone numbers, and shared a few moments that felt far longer than they actually were. She expressed gratitude for the guidance and encouragement I had given her during her school days. She offered a modest financial token, but far more meaningful were her words of appreciation and motivation, words that strengthened my resolve as an educator.
That encounter reinforced something I have always believed. The true impact of a teacher is rarely immediate, and it is never limited to grades alone.
Studies in educational psychology consistently show that mentorship, encouragement, and personal attention play a crucial role in shaping students’ confidence, resilience, and long term success. Teachers plant seeds that may lie dormant for years before finally taking root. Sometimes, those seeds bloom long after the final lesson has been taught and the classroom left behind.
Seeing a former student thriving, confident, and grateful was living proof of this reality. It was a reminder that teaching extends far beyond lesson plans and curricula. It is about nurturing potential, building character, and offering guidance at critical moments in a young person’s life.
That day, I was reminded that teaching is a profession unlike any other. It can be exhausting, demanding, and often underappreciated. Yet its rewards, when they appear, are deeply fulfilling.
Examination results fade. Certificates gather dust. School records are archived and forgotten. But the memory of a teacher who believed in a student, offered direction, and cared enough to guide them endures.
Teaching is not just about shaping minds. It is about shaping lives. And sometimes, the most meaningful reward arrives unexpectedly, years later, when a former student pauses in the middle of their own journey to say, “You made a difference.”
That day, I did not just receive gratitude. I received confirmation that the work matters.









































































EduTimes Africa, a product of Education Times Africa, is a magazine publication that aims to lend its support to close the yawning gap in Africa's educational development.