Who doesn’t know Singing Contests nowadays?
In (approximately) 2004, it firstly started in Indonesian TV stations and has
been mushrooming till today. Not only in Pop genre, now even there is a booming
Dangdut Singing Contest.
Some people thinks that such shows are very
good, for they widely open chances to those whose voice is beautiful to have a
good career and to enrich Indonesian musical industry. While the opposite one
assumes that such shows are not really promising, for the “products” can only
survive just for a little time after the celebration. That is what also happens
with teaching graduates. What I found funny was that suddenly my brain (I
didn’t know why) automatically analogized these two phenomena.
I live in Central Java. In this
province only, there are so many universities which lay teaching graduates,
whether from a department of a university or from a university which is
specialized for teachers-to be. In a year, a university can graduate thousands
of students for about three times. Then don’t forget to multiply them by the
number of universities. The result? Yeah, there would be “uncountable” teaching
graduates!
Back to the analogy I said. We can analogy
that four year in learning the teaching material is as the “quarantine times”.
Students are taught of how to be a good teacher, how to make good students, how
to make a fun class, and so forth. After that is the final project session that
can be analogized as the “final show” that followed by the graduation.
Graduation held and taddaa… Flowers, congratulation texts, and snapshots are
coming!
But what
happens next? Where are they going? Yeah, teaching graduates are then busy
looking for a job, looking for a school which is willing to hire them. Salary—or wage, I think to call it wage is better—is
the next-number thing. A friend of mine even told me, “Go ahead looking for a school even if you aren’t paid! The most
important thing, you’ll get the certification later!” Wow, what a
statement! How come a person work without being paid? How long will it be until
the certification comes? Don’t we need some pennies to save our life?
Unfortunately the capacity between school
and the applier is really really not balance, everyone knows that, does know
that. Those who finally find a place is the lucky ones, while the rest are the
“eliminated” ones, just like the contestants in singing contest who easy come,
easy go. I don’t say that the lucky one is the best one in their field, or the
opposite as well. I said this is the case of lucky-unlucky. The final decisions
for the “rest” of teaching graduates are finally only two: choose to be a
disguised unemployment by busying their own selves, or choose to look for
another job. The second option means that the materials learned along college
won’t be used in many ways. The worse thing, some enterprises don’t hire
teaching graduates, which I don’t know why.
There was a talk show on TV which moved my
heart yesterday, Hitam Putih, which presented
an actual story about a teaching graduate of Physic Department of a university
in Yogyakarta. The girl namely Sutriyani,
finally chose to sell herbs around. She told that she had already enrolled for
jobs for many times, but the result is nil. Then
that she is. It doesn’t mean selling herbs
is a bad work, no. But we see that this job
has no relation with her educational background. This is a reality, and I don’t
blame anything or anyone for this case in this writing. There are so many of
us, teaching graduates, who easy come and easy go just like the contestants of
singing contests.
After watching Hitam Putih, I said to a friend of mine, “I’m anxious if I will be the next guest in this talk show.”
Hahaha. I vote for u mam to be the next guest.
BalasHapusi told u mam. I got from my friend, "University didnt give u a score or whatever letter, but it gave u a morale learn, how to be a human".
Superb, Sadam! You can say that again!
BalasHapusBut Im sure you meant it "later" right?
Thanks a lot! ^^