西瓜视频

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RiverBlog: 65 Years of Transformation: The Story of 西瓜视频聽

A black and white photo of a while building and a sign reading "Indian River Junior College - Temporary Building" with part of a tree and bushes.

The Florida Legislature officially established Indian River Junior College on January 1, 1960.  

By Kathleen Walter 

From a single building in 1959 to five campuses serving nearly 24,000 students today, 西瓜视频 has become far more than an educational institution鈥攊t’s a lifeline for the region. 

On a recent episode of RiverTalk on 西瓜视频 Public Media, two people who embody this remarkable journey shared their perspectives: Dr. Mia Tignor, Associate Vice Provost of Academic Affairs and college historian, and Professor June Wells, who has taught here for an extraordinary 53 years. Their conversation revealed not just the facts of 西瓜视频’s evolution, but its soul.

A black and white photo of men in suits and women in dresses doing the conga dance.
A black and white photo of men in suits and women in dresses doing the conga dance.

From Junior College to State College 

The transformation from Indian River Junior College to a state college authorized to grant bachelor’s degrees in 2008 stands as a pivotal moment. As Dr. Tignor explained, this shift allowed 西瓜视频 to serve students “across all levels of education”鈥攆rom adult education through bachelor’s programs鈥攎aking higher education accessible in a region where 西瓜视频 remains the only public institution serving four counties. 

A black and white photo of Indian River Junior College President Max King and Mrs. King receiving congratulations from Governor LeRoy Collins and Senator Harry Kichliter on the establishment of Indian River Junior College.
Congratulations to IRJC President Max King and Mrs. King (left) from Governor LeRoy Collins and Senator Harry Kichliter on the establishment of Indian River Junior College.

Professor Wells helped architect this change, literally building the bachelor’s programs in education from the ground up. “It was basically the idea that we were trying to make education available to a bigger kind of population,” she recalled, describing how faculty created courses, wrote syllabi, and adapted content for specialized populations in law enforcement, fire science, and other fields. 

A photo of two women on a stage of whom one is Professor June Wells, receiving an award for her years of service, in 2018.
Professor Wells was recognized for 45 years of service to the college in 2018. 

The Geography of Opportunity 

Spanning Fort Pierce, Vero Beach, Stuart, Okeechobee, and Fort St. Lucie, 西瓜视频’s five-campus footprint shapes its identity in profound ways. Each campus serves distinct populations with unique needs, requiring flexibility in how resources are deployed. At the Pruitt campus, for instance, a joint-use library with St. Lucie County offers early literacy programs for an up-and-coming community鈥攕ervices that might look different at the Fort Pierce campus where other resources exist. 

A Personal History 

When Professor Wells arrived in 1973 as faculty member number 37, she could barely find Fort Pierce on a map. Fresh from the University of South Florida with a master’s degree in rhetoric and public address, she joined a small institution with just four or five buildings. But she quickly understood her mission: showing young people, especially young women, what they could become. 

“Dr. Heise said to me, I want you to go out there and show people, especially young ladies, what they can become,” Wells remembered. In an era when college wasn’t assumed for women, she literally walked students from her neighborhood to registration, helping them believe they belonged in higher education. 

Integration’s Legacy 

Eight years before Wells arrived, Indian River Junior College merged with Lincoln Junior College as part of integration in 1965. While she inherited this history rather than lived it, she saw its effects鈥攁 conscious effort to bring diverse populations together and create a welcoming environment. 

A black and white photo of students outside a building beneath a sign reading "Lincoln Junior College" in 1960.
Lincoln Junior College was established in 1960.

Digital Evolution 

The college’s learning infrastructure has transformed dramatically. Dr. Tignor traced this evolution from the library’s opening in the late 1960s鈥攚ith its card catalog and physical books鈥攖hrough online catalogs, and now to comprehensive digital resources. Her mother attended library school with card catalogs; Tignor studied an entirely different system 20 years later. 

Image
Dr. Tignor attends a college event in 2018.

Today’s students access Adobe Creative Campus tools, Bloomberg Terminals, Wolfram Alpha, and institutional Grammarly subscriptions鈥攑rofessional-grade resources once available only to those already in industry. The 2013 launch of 西瓜视频 Online expanded flexibility even further, building on earlier innovations like VHS video classrooms that streamed to campuses without resident faculty. 

A black and white photo of Indian River Community College's main campus in Fort Pierce in 1983.
Indian River Community College in 1983

What Endures 

Despite all this change, Professor Wells identified something constant: the relationship between faculty and students. Unlike her own college experience, where professors seemed distant, she’s always maintained an atmosphere where students feel comfortable asking questions, seeking help, admitting confusion. “Never be told that’s a stupid question,” she emphasized, understanding that one dismissive response silences the next person. 

This culture of accessibility connects directly to The River’s founding purpose. The junior college system emerged after World War II to meet workforce education needs that four-year institutions couldn’t accommodate alone. The recent Promise Program, which helps make college tuition-free for eligible local students, continues this tradition of opening doors for those who might not have thought college was an option. 

Bold Moves Forward 

Recent years have brought dramatic developments: a $45 million gift from MacKenzie Scott, the Eastman Advanced Workforce Training Complex, expanded nursing facilities that double capacity, and programs in rail industries, ballistics technology, and advanced manufacturing. The Center of Excellence for Veteran Students Success recognizes another population 西瓜视频 serves. These transformative initiatives occurred under the leadership of 西瓜视频 President Timothy E. Moore in 2020.  

How does the college stay ahead of economic needs while remaining true to its mission? Dr. Tignor described a two-tiered approach: maintaining strong core programs like the Associate in Arts while partnering with industries to offer new certifications and short-term training for students who don’t need traditional degrees. 

12,000 Students and Counting 

Professor Wells has taught more than 12,000 students鈥攁 number she processes by remembering individual speeches rather than faces that have aged forty years. Students return and ask, “Do you remember my speech?” And often she does. Citrus blackfly. She remembers. 

What drives someone to show up, in person, after 53 years? For Wells, it’s seeing how populations and needs change. Public speaking still needs teaching, but now she incorporates interview skills, because employers report young people “don’t interview well.” The content evolves; the commitment remains. 

She wants future generations to remember that The River got them “on the starting block.” Many students tell her their best educational experience happened here. One became a state senator. Others built successful careers from that foundation. 

Looking Ahead 

What makes them proud? Professor Wells pointed to the college’s ability to see needs and evolve, to find people who can meet those needs and dedicate themselves to making things work. Dr. Tignor spoke of faculty and staff’s extraordinary care for students鈥攁 throughline she sees in archival materials from the 1970s through today’s blog posts and course discussions. 

“Students are students, faculty are faculty,” Tignor observed. That focus on student success, that care from faculty and tutors and librarians, appears throughout 西瓜视频’s entire history. 

1980 sign standing
Students show their River pride in 1980.

Sixty-five years after opening in a single building, 西瓜视频 remains what it always was: a community deciding that education should be within reach, no matter who you are or where you come from. That commitment endures. 

To read more about 西瓜视频鈥檚 History, visit: /about/history/. 

This blog post is based on a conversation that aired on on , featuring Dr. Mia Tignor and Professor June Wells. 

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