The digital magazine for faculty, staff, students and friends of Pensacola State College
August 20, 2020
The 2020 fall semester began on a hot summer Monday for Pensacola State College students. But it was a different “First Day of School” than the College has ever experienced before.

Students were still scurrying across PSC campuses and centers, but not as many as would on a traditional opening fall semester day.

That’s because for the first time in the College’s 72-year history, there are more online classes being offered than face-to-face classes. This semester, less than 20 percent of all classes are being offered face-to-face, compared with 77 percent last year. There were no online classes offered when the College opened as Pensacola Junior College in 1948.

Fewer on-campus students weren’t the only visible differences. Everyone in every class and in every common area wore a face mask on in an effort to stymie the spread of COVID-19. Signs were posted everywhere urging proper social distancing and occupancy limits. Disinfectant and cleaning supplies were available in every classroom.

“We’ve done everything we can to ensure that the main ingredients for safety are there. We didn’t reinvent the wheel," said PSC President Ed Meadows about the preparations made for the fall semester because of the COVID-19 pandemic. "The protocols and procedures we have installed have been vetted by professionals and have been used elsewhere. And we’re hopeful that everyone who comes on campus will respect those safety guidelines.”

Troy Moon looks at the preparations and the current safety standards in place at the College.

PSC employee Greg Oliver, from left, is pictured with Trane team members Steve Johnson, Evan Helinski and Ken Jankowski during the 2019 Day of Clays fundraiser. The 2020 event is set for Oct. 3 at the Santa Rosa Shooting Center in Pace.
When Marissa Greene enrolled in Pensacola State College in Fall 2019, a scholarship helped pay for her education.

“I had received a Pell Grant that covered some of the tuition, but the scholarship covered the rest of my classes, fees and all of the materials I needed,” said the 2018 Pine Forest High graduate.

Greene is one of the many PSC students who are able to continue their educations thanks to the generosity of donors and fundraisers. This fall, the PSC Foundation is preparing for its only live event – the Day of Clays ─ set for Saturday, Oct. 3, at the Santa Rosa Shooting Center in Pace.

Presented by Trane, the sporting clays event starts its registration at 7:30 a.m. with an 8:45 a.m. safety orientation and 9 a.m. start. Proceeds from the event support PSC students and programs through the Fund for Excellence.

Kenneth Phillips is back at Pensacola State to face the music
PSC alumnus is new Performing Arts Director

When Pensacola State guitar instructor Joe Stallings formed the College’s first guitar ensemble in 1983, Kenny Phillips was a member.

Now, 37 years later, Kenneth Phillips is back at the College and though the surroundings are familiar, the job is brand new. Phillips is now the head of the Pensacola State College Performing Arts Department.

“It’s a little weird that I’m now my former guitar teacher’s department head," said Phillips, who recently left his position as Chairperson of Music at Palm Beach Atlantic University, where he was also a music instructor. “We got to talk a bit the other day and do a little reminiscing. It was nice.”

Phillips is doing a lot of reminiscing just days into his new position.

“Two doors down I took music theory," Phillips said from his office. “I’ve been on the stage here. I sat in this very office as a student, but on the other side of the desk. I’ve got a lot of great memories here. Coming back to Pensacola is a blessing for me and my wife.” (His wife, Elizabeth, is also a music teacher and has already started her new position as the Choral Director at Escambia High School).

Phillips has a doctorate in Music Education from Temple University, a Master of Music Education degree from the University of Southern Mississippi and a Bachelor of Arts degree from Mobile College, in addition to the Associate in Arts degree he earned at Pensacola State College, which was Pensacola Junior College when he attended.

He succeeds former Performing Arts Department Head Don Snowden, who retired this summer after spending 33 years at the College.

“I was already gone when he started here," Phillips said of Snowden. “But I knew about Don Snowden even before that, when he was teaching (in Baldwin County, Alabama). There’s a strong tradition here at PSC and the Performing Arts Department has a great reputation in town. It’s a respected department and an important part of the amazing arts scene in Pensacola.”

Phillips came to PSC as a voice student and studied piano and guitar. He sang in church choirs and choruses at area schools including Pleasant Grove Elementary, Warrington Middle and Escambia High schools. He also played baritone horn in the Escambia High School Marching Band.

“I’ve always enjoyed singing but I knew I was not going to be a professional singer," he said. “I love teaching. At Temple, I learned so much about teaching and how we learn music. You study the process of what’s going on in the brain when you’re making these musical connections.”

Phillips hopes to add more features to the PSC Performing Arts Department, which offers associate degrees in music and theater.

“We have been successful as a traditional music school, but we want to expand the offerings," Phillips said. “We would like to look into commercial music and music production.”

He wants to appeal to songwriters and musicians who might not be in traditional bands or choruses, but still have a desire to create music.

“It could be reaching out to the girl at church who is writing praise songs," he said. “Or the kid who learned guitar from his best friend and has been practicing in his room. We can’t do it all overnight, but we can do so incrementally. Eventually, we’d like to provide more opportunities to those students who have commercial desires.”

Stallings was only in his second year of teaching when Phillips came to the College as a student.

“I don’t remember a whole lot except that he was a pretty good student," Stallings said. “We’ve had a chance to talk since he started his new positions here and he made a good impression. It was a comfortable discussion. But the poor guy just started Monday, so it’s kind of early to say much more than that. My professional feeling is that he’s going to do a good job.”

-- Troy Moon
MaKenzie Johnson and Abigail Bott hand out snacks to passing motorists on the Pensacola campus. (Photo by Troy Moon)
Hey PSC Student Activities! You had us at ‘free snacks’
The Archies “Sugar, Sugar” was playing from a portable radio on Wednesday at the Pensacola State College M.J. Menge Bell Tower on the Pensacola campus. It was a perfect, albeit dated, song for the occasion. (Students, ask your grandparents about The Archies.)

Because sugary candy, along with bags of cookies, chips and even bottled water were being handed out to students driving by the M.J. Menge Bell Tower by members of the PSC Office of Student Engagement and Leadership, also known as “Student Activities.” 

“We want students to relax and have fun and be engaged," said MaKenzie Johnson, coordinator of Student Engagement and Leadership. “We want them to feel appreciated, so we’re just here to support them and give them free snacks today.” 

All the snacks, including the water, were in plastic baggies and were packaged by people wearing disposable gloves and face masks. And when Johnson and her assistant, Abigail Bott, were handing the baggies out to passing motorists, they were wearing gloves and masks as well. 

The snack giveaway is just one example of Student Activities presence at the College. Other events on a packed calendar include weekly cooking demonstrations, trivia contests, math and writing labs and even drive-in movies on the Pensacola campus. 

“Most of the stuff we do is virtual," Johnson said. “I’d say 99 percent.”

Most of the activities can be found by following @pscpirateslife on Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, TikTok, and PSC Student Activities on YouTube.

But the movies will be shown in the parking lot of the Lou Ross Center, Building 3, on the Pensacola campus. Those who attend the drive-in movies are urged to bring their own food and beverages, and blankets or chairs if they don’t want to remain in their vehicles. (Each vehicle will get two spots.) The next PSC drive-in movie is the screening of “Just Mercy” set for 7:30 p.m. Aug. 27.

“We know it’s tough times for students," Johnson said. “We just want to make it a little less stressful and get the students more engaged.” 

-- Troy Moon