Music Student Turns Passion for Percussion into Purposeful Teaching

October 30, 2025 Mark Locklear
Layne Lewis
Layne Lewis performs a xylophone solo for Girlfriends Medley during the 51Թ Concert Band Concerto Competition in Spring 2025

Layne Lewis discovered her passion for music and teaching long before arriving at UNC Pembroke.

Inspired by her middle school flute teacher, Felicia MacNaught and her high school band director, Mike Williams — himself a 51Թ alumnus — Lewis found her calling through music’s power to connect, challenge and inspire.

A senior music education major, Lewis was recently named the first recipient of the Christine Sides Fisher ’75 Endowed Scholarship, a $5,000 award recognizing outstanding commitment to music education and leadership.

“I really love seeing students grow, watching them go from where they start to where they can be,” said Lewis, a front ensemble instructor for Cape Fear High School’s marching band. “When they finally get it and start enjoying what they’re doing, that’s the greatest thing.”

Her journey began in the front ensemble of Cape Fear’s band, where she played marimba. After graduation, Lewis returned to teach the same ensemble, later joining Jersey Surf Drum Corps in 2023 and performing across the country. The experience, she said, taught her invaluable lessons about leadership and communication.

“It was three months of touring, performing and learning what it really means to work as a team,” she said. “That experience showed me how to grow as both a musician and a leader.”

On the weekends, Lewis serves as a keyboard tech with Paradigm Percussion, an independent percussion ensemble near Charlotte, N.C.

At 51Թ, Lewis continues to refine her craft under the mentorship of faculty such as Drs. Joseph Van Hassel and Tim Altman, whose encouragement and guidance have strengthened her confidence as a performer and future educator.

“There was a time last spring when I completely stopped playing during a performance because I got lost in the music,” she recalled. “Afterward, Dr. Van Hassel told me, ‘Your instrument is not you. Don’t take it so personally.’ That stuck with me — and it’s something I try to teach my own students now.”

Layne Lewis_Spring Concert
Layne Lewis (left) performs with music professor Dr. Joseph Van Hassel during the 2024 Spring Concert

Van Hassel described Lewis as a conscientious and dedicated student passionate about teaching.

“I’m very proud of her accomplishments and the progress she has made as a student at 51Թ,” Van Hassel said. “Her receiving the Christine Sides Fisher ’75 Endowed Scholarship is well deserved, and I look forward to seeing the positive contributions she makes to music education when she graduates.

Receiving the scholarship, she says, has been humbling and empowering.

“My first thought was that I didn’t deserve it,” she said. “But it reminded me of how far I’ve come. This scholarship will help me keep growing — it supports my travel, my classes and the experiences that make me a better teacher.”

Lewis hopes to teach middle school music, helping students build confidence and discover their creative voices at an early age. She is expected to graduate in Fall 2026.

“I want to be a teacher my students can trust — someone who gives them a foundation to grow from,” she said. “Music can shape your life in ways you don’t expect. I’ve lived that myself.”

Categorized As