IMPORTANT NOTE: These are the archived stories for Belmont News & Achievements prior to June 26, 2023. To see current stories, click here.

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Global Honors Students Participate in the Clinton Global Initiative University

Belmont Global Honors students recently took part in the Clinton Global Initiative University (CGI U) at Vanderbilt University March 3-5. The CGI U is a program of the Clinton Foundation that brings together college students, university representatives, topic experts and celebrities to address some of the most pressing global issues of our time. 

Started by former President Bill Clinton, the CGI U is a project that seeks to engage and empower young people around the world to create positive change. 

This year’s theme was “Homecoming: Strengthening Community, Leadership and Action,” and its program was lined with aspiring leaders and global experts in business, public service and social impact. Students announced Commitments to Action—specific, measurable programs that address an urgent community challenge. They also had the opportunity to network with other students from around the country and learn about new initiatives designed to help solve global problems.

Noah Kammer presents at CGI U
Noah Kammer presents at CGI U

The Honors students, which included Alexis Susan Donofrio, Maya Englehorn, Eleri Hadaway, Noah Kammer and Ben Moran, were excited for the chance to work with their peers and leading professionals in various fields. Kammer, a freshman audio engineering student, made a commitment to create a non-profit called Copyright Protection and Understanding for New Creators (Copyright PUNC) that addresses the lack of available copyright information to music producing youth. “When I was younger and learning how to produce music, I needed to know information on copyright that would have saved me from facing restrictions on my online music accounts, burnout and having my creations stolen,” Kammer said. “Participating in CGI U feels like a step closer to making that a reality for current children learning to create music.”

Moran is a junior songwriting major who is passionate about improving literacy in Nashville. On CGI U’s Day of Action, Sunday, March 5, Moran volunteered alongside an executive from PENCIL—a nonprofit organization that links community resources to Metro Nashville Public Schools—who helped him make meaningful connections to literacy partners in search of volunteers, which Morgan is now helping generate and connect through Belmont. “The biggest thing that I learned was that the way to get power is just by asking people certain questions and inserting yourself into certain conversations, being a part of it and taking initiative. That’s something that never really clicked to me before. Now I’m just really excited to keep asking those questions to people and pushing it along and not giving up.” 

Moran and Hadaway are officers in Belmont University Volunteers for Literacy (BUVL) group, which is planning its 21st Annual Family Literacy Day Saturday, April 1, 2023 at E.S. Rose Park. Find more information about how to register and volunteer.

Participating in the CGI U conference was just the beginning for these students who will complete a year of programming toward their commitments. “The CGI U program is planned to continue for another year after this weekend where we will complete asynchronous modules related to our projects,” Kammer said. “We will also get assigned a mentor that will help us with our Commitment to Action. After completing the program, we will then receive monthly newsletters with contacts of foundations willing to provide funding to our projects.”

This year’s conference, the first in-person CGI U since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, has been hosted on previous campuses, including University of Chicago, University of Miami and more. Featured speakers and participants this year included Pete Buttigieg, U.S. Secretary of Transportation; John Cooper, Mayor of Nashville; Melissa Diamond, founder, A Global Voice for Autism; Pashtana Dorani, executive director, LEARN Afghanistan; Allyson Felix, five-time Olympian and co-founder of Saysh; as well as President Clinton, Secretary Clinton, Chelsea Clinton and many others. 

Learn more about Belmont Global Honors here.

Watkins College of Art Students Win Multiple Local ADDY Awards

Nine students within the Watkins College of Art—Bella Pace, Bella Stern, Celine Sanderson, Ally Zylstra, Grace Swing, Caleigh Furyk, Sophie Elizondo, Zack Ford and Ella Virostek— received awards at the 58th Annual Nashville American Advertising Awards on February 25th, 2023. The event is designed to showcase the work of and bridge the gap between student and professional designers.

With over 150 total entries from seven colleges, Ally Zylstra and Grace Swing both received the Gold Award and Judges Choice for their work, with Bella Pace receiving the Gold Award as well as Best in Show. 

“My inspiration for the project came from all the books I read as a kid that were filled with magical creatures and explored the unknown,” said Pace. “It feels great to know that other people enjoy my work. As a transfer student to Watkins, it’s been an incredible place for me to learn and grow as an artist. The design instructors have really pushed me to be my best.”

The local awards ceremony marks the beginning of the three-tier annual competition that occurs nationwide. These students will go on to the district Addys with other winners from their local respective regions. The district results will determine who proceeds to the national Addy level.

“Our design students always do well at the local Addys and last year several went on to win at the national level,” said Doug Regen Watkins College of Art professor. “Being recognized with 2 Judges Choice awards in addition to Best of Show really underscores the level of work these students are producing.”

Grace Swing’s winning design, Gold Award and Judges Choice

The full list of winners and their respective awards can be found here:

  • Bella Pace —Gold Award and Best of Show — Cryptids Are Real zine design
  • Bella Stern — Gold Award — Milan Fashion Week event materials
  • Celine Sanderson — Gold Award — How to Survive a Horror Movie zine design
  • Ally Zylstra —Gold Award and Judges Choice — Jam Box packaging
  • Grace Swing —Gold Award and Judges Choice — Frist Gala event materials
  • Caleigh Furyk — Silver Award — Fake Your Own Death zine design
  • Sophie Elizondo — Silver Award — Reading is Cool poster design
  • Zack Ford —Silver Award — Illustration series
  • Ella Virostek —Silver Award — Magazine spread design
Ally Zylstra’s winning design, Gold Award and Judges Choice

Frist College of Medicine Names Dr. Morgan Wills Associate Dean, Clinical Education

Dr. Morgan Wills has been named Associate Dean of Clinical Education for Belmont University’s Frist College of Medicine and will also serve as an associate professor of internal medicine. 

Dr. Wills earned his bachelor’s degree from Princeton University before moving to Nashville to attend medical school at Vanderbilt University where he later completed a residency in internal medicine. Years later, he earned a master’s in marketplace theology from Regent College in Vancouver, B.C.  

In his new role as a member of the College’s leadership team, Dr. Wills will build, cultivate and maintain relationships with clinical affiliates; lead planning, implementation and oversight of the medical student clinical education experience; and serve as a resource for clinical affiliate faculty recruitment and development. 

Wills will serve as an integral part of the College’s LCME (Liaison Committee on Medical Education) Oversight Committee, preparing for the College’s upcoming LCME site visit and ensuring compliance with accreditation requirements.  

“I am inspired by the foundation that has been laid by the dynamic Frist College of Medicine team and look forward to continuing to build out our curriculum and student experience,” said Dr. Wills.    

Most recently, Dr. Wills served as president and CEO of Siloam Health, a faith-based, multi-site nonprofit health center serving Nashville’s uninsured. He became Siloam’s first staff physician in 2000 and in his role as CEO, Wills oversaw an interdisciplinary team of 65 staff who cared for roughly 6,500 uninsured patients annually, 94% of whom are foreign-born immigrants or refugees coming from more than 70 countries. Dr. Wills has also served as a longtime and award-winning clinical faculty at Vanderbilt, overseeing education programs at Siloam that have trained hundreds of future physicians and other health professionals in the art and practice of whole-person care for the underserved.

“We are thrilled to welcome Dr. Wills to Frist College of Medicine and are grateful for the expertise he brings to our team through his work at Siloam and training of health professionals in the clinical setting,” said Dr. Anderson Spickard, interim dean of the Frist College of Medicine. “For much of his career, Dr. Wills has been tangibly living out the University’s vision of championing the pursuit of life abundant for all people through his work with Siloam. He will play an important role as we seek to embrace, engage and serve our neighbors through our work.” 

Dr. Wills will begin his faculty role on March 31 and assume his associate dean role on May 1 when Dr. Reuben Bueno, who has served in the role since 2021, leaves to begin his clinical practice in plastic surgery, hand surgery, and burn surgery at HCA TriStar Skyline Medical Center.

Belmont Office of Leadership Development Hosts Leadership Development Event: Social Change & ME

More than 120 Belmont student leaders participated in Social Change & ME on Feb. 20-22. The event is an overview of socially responsible leadership offered by the Belmont Office of Leadership Development (BOLD).

The guiding principles for the experience revolve around the three pillars of social change: I Change, We Change and World Change. Students joined together over four days to discuss what real world change looks like beginning with how individuals change to impact world change.

Belmont staff, graduate students and alumni facilitators guided attendees through activities that explored the seven values of socially responsible leadership that challenged them to engage in social discourse with peers and friends across disciplines. The students interacted through discussions and several hands-on activities.

“Through a focus on self-awareness for the betterment of our communities, we recognize many small actions make up the change we hope to see in the world,” BOLD Graduate Assistant Jonathan Martin said. “The objective being to encourage students that whether in a residence hall at Belmont, or in their chosen vocation, their individual voice and actions matter.”

With a focus on the University’s strategic pathway four of “reweaving the social fabric,” BOLD equips student leaders to understand that societal engagement requires inward reflection. “We are a community who radically champions a strong quality of life for all people, and we recognize that social change only comes through devotion to each of us doing our part,” Martin said. 

The BOLD office organizes over 300 campus-wide leadership development offerings each year with Social Change & ME continuing as the most attended event to date. Find upcoming BOLD opportunities on the BOLD webpage.

View more images from Social Change & ME. To connect with the Belmont Office of Leadership Development, please email BOLD@Belmont.edu.

Faculty Spotlight: Dr. Kevin Trowbridge

Meet Kevin S. Trowbridge, Ph.D., APR, who has worked at Belmont since 2011.

Where are you from?

I grew up about an hour north of Nashville in a rural community, known as Uno, in South Central Kentucky. An only child whose parents and extended family had always lived in the county, I was the first to leave home and go to college.

What do you do at Belmont?

After about 10 years of working in marketing and communications, I now have the privilege of helping young adults discover who they were created to be so they can do what they are called to do. I am an associate professor and chair of the Department of Public Relations; faculty advisor for Tower Creative Communications, our student-led agency; and, starting in the fall, I will be directing the M.S. in Strategic Communication & Leadership graduate program.

Tell us about your family.

My wife of nearly 22 years, Robyn, is an academic coach in Murfreesboro City Schools. We are doting parents of a two-year-old American Cocker Spaniel puppy named Hank.

What was the last book you read? What did you think?

At the recommendation of a colleague, last month I read Unoffendable: How Just One Change Can Make All of Life Better by Brant Hansen (2015, W. Publishing). The premise is simple, but powerful and timely. Hansen encourages readers to adopt a mindset of forgiveness, letting go of anger and offense, to live a more peaceful and joyful life. It’s a message many of us need to heed especially since we tend to be offended by anything that contradicts our personal values, beliefs or opinions.

What are you currently watching? What do you think?

Does TikTok count? Seriously, my list of streaming favorites and our DVR has a never-ending supply of shows. But I just watched “Alaska Daily,” which returned last Thursday night on ABC. It’s a fascinating drama, which premiered last fall, about a high-profile investigative report who has relocated to Alaska. Hoping for a second season.

What is something interesting someone could find on your desk or in your office?

I’m a huge fan of Potato Heads and LEGO bricks. At one point I had more than 60 spuds in my office, but I decided to redecorate during the pandemic. Still, I’m hoping to build one or two new LEGO sets during spring break. We’ll see if they make their way to campus or stay in my home office.

Do you have a secret talent?

It’s a different one. Technological intuition. I’ve always marveled at technology—first analog and then digital—and had an aptitude for understanding how it worked and imaging ways we could use it (vs. being used by it). From my family’s first answering machine, cordless phone and VCR to personal computers, mobile devices and now AR, VR and AI. Technology just makes sense to me. And, I didn’t realize it was a talent or know it had a name until about 10 years ago.

What could you give a 30-minute presentation about with no advance preparation? AKA – what are you an expert on?

Strategic communication planning, i.e., aligning goals, objectives, strategies and tactics with a brand’s (or organization’s) mission. As Antoine de Saint-Exupéry wrote in Le Petit Prince, “A goal without a plan is just a wish.” And “good planning and hard work lead to prosperity” (Proverbs 21:5).

What is the most interesting thing you are working on right now?

Experimenting with AI (especially generative text) and imagining how it can be used ethically and efficiently in strategic communication and education.

Do you have a favorite thing about working at Belmont?

The opportunity to imagine, innovate and inspire.

What song would you say best sums you up? This is Belmont, after all!

“Atlas: Five” by Sleeping at Last

Staff Spotlight: Dave Jaeger

Meet Dave Jaeger, Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist in Belmont Counseling Services. Originally from Minneapolis, MN, Dave has worked at Belmont for 6 years.

How did moving from Minneapolis shape you? I lived Minneapolis in for the first 28 years of my life. Each year I slowly became more and more adversed to the weather. By 28, the cold had broken me forever. However, before I was in Minneapolis I lived in a smaller town up north, and it created a deep desire to explore the world. 

What are you doing when you’re not at work? I love woodworking and have now built a fairly large wood shop at my house and create furniture, skateboards, bookshelves, rocking chairs and more. I am currently building a record cabinet with tambour sliding doors made out of recycled skateboards. I just finished making a chess set out of recycled skateboards, as well.

Where is your favorite restaurant to go in Nashville? I love all of Sean Brock’s restaurants and really enjoy a place with good apps, cozy spaces and a really cool atmosphere. Currently really enjoying Lockeland Table’s Community Hour.  

What are you currently watching? Currently we are watching re runs of the Amazing Race and I have somehow or another found myself into a few WWII documentaries.  

Do you have a secret talent? Well, not sure if it is a talent, more a developing ideology. As I have grown up, I am realizing that many things I pay professionals a lot of money for, I can do myself. So, I have built my own shed, I do almost all my own vehicle repairs, I have remodeled a good chunk of our house, and may build us a in-ground pool!  

What is one thing you could not go a day without? I have a fairly deep love for my dog Rey (named from Star Wars). She brings me an incredible amount of joy. Even though she often steals my socks and eats my dinner off the counter when I turn away, she is the most special thing in the world to me outside of my wife Grace.

What is a goal you have for this year? Right now myself and Sam Simpkins (University Photographer) are halfway through training for a half marathon in April.    

Do you have a favorite thing about working at Belmont? I have been a part of working at many schools and I know many people say this…but for me it is deeply true. The students here are some of the most creative, engaging, genuine and all around interesting people I have encountered. Every day I look at my case load or new clients and a truly get excited about getting to meet them and hear their story.  

Belmont Hosts Music-Filled Celebration in Honor of 50 Years of Jazz 

Fifty years ago, the first jazz band at Belmont got its start: Jazz Band I. As Belmont’s reputation for excellence in music education has grown the past fifty years, the vibrant jazz community on campus has grown as well. Today, Belmont boasts multiple jazz ensembles, dedicated professional jazz faculty and a plethora of successful jazz musician alumni.  

The jazz community gathered Feb. 24 – 25 for a campus celebration in honor of the 50th Anniversary of Jazz Band I. The weekend featured incredible performances from jazz alumni, students, faculty and leading jazz artist and saxophone legend Chris Potter, as well as a masterclass with Potter. 

Some of the main distinctive opportunities of the weekend were the chance for alumni to serve as mentors to current students hoping to pursue their love of jazz professionally after graduation and for students to get the chance to play with Potter.  

Junior AJ Huang said the weekend was a surreal experience. “Chris Potter is one of my heroes and someone I’ve looked up to for a long time, so getting to learn from him and play with him was a dream come true! I’m really proud of how much jazz at Belmont has developed over the past few years, and I can’t wait to keep striving for greatness with the amazing musicians and wonderful friends I’ve made in my time here so far,” he said. 

Huang was able to trade with Chris Potter. During the rehearsal before the show, Huang was nervous about the “blazing fast, intricate lines” Potter was playing that he felt he had no chance of picking up on. However, during the actual show, Potter assessed where Huang was at and played where he could follow along. “His playing gave mine so much more energy. He’s truly a masterful musician who is able to lift others up around him with everything he does,” said Huang. “This experience taught me what it means to really have full command over your instrument and to have a deeper understanding of music as a whole. We think about music in similar ways, he’s just way more advanced than me, which was encouraging and a sign to keep on working! Jazz weekend reminded me why I love doing what I do so much, and solidified my aspirations and drive to become the best musician I can be even more.”

student playing with Chris Potter
Students and alumni play during A Night of Jazz with Chris Potter.

Alumni enjoyed the chance to return to campus and relive some of their favorite memories with the jazz community on campus.

Double alumna Natalie Layne (2020, commercial music, piano, songwriting emphasis and 2022, commercial music, piano, performance emphasis) came to Belmont not having studied jazz but said her time working with jazz professors changed her career as she makes jazz-influenced music to this day.  

“I can’t exaggerate its effects on the way I’ve been able to move forward with music,” Layne said. “It was such a blast to see friends from my time at school, plus musicians that I work with in the industry that I didn’t even know went to Belmont! What a beautiful night of music and honoring the professors that have built the program.” 

Max Dvorin, 2018 alumnus and current masters student in Belmont’s Multiple Woodwind Degree program, served as the assistant director of the alumni concert. “My favorite part of the event was being able to see and play with musicians that I have not seen in years,” he said. “Another cool moment was realizing how many great alumni are killing it in the music scene. I didn’t realize some of the musicians in town were alumni until that night. We are all connected though Belmont, which is truly amazing.”

Another alumna, Hannah Anders (2007, commercial voice), is currently a touring southern rock artist and master vocal coach. She quoted her husband talking about the event saying, ‘What a rare and beautiful gift to have the opportunity to re-live such a great time in your life at an age when you can really appreciate it.’  

“Truer words could not have been spoken about this event,” she continued. “I think that we all anticipated that the event would be fun and nostalgic, but I don’t think any of us were prepared for how meaningful and beautiful it would be to come back together in the place where we met, to see the growth of our beautiful school and to see each other again after so long. All a little older, a little busier, a little more responsible, but still at our core, the same people who fell in love with our passion for music and for the people who guided and led us at Belmont. It was like being transported back into a little precious time capsule. It was the salve my soul didn’t know it needed. I will cherish this experience forever.”  

View photos from the weekend in the following galleries: 

  • Friday Night Concert featuring returning Jazz Alumni | Gallery 
  • A Night of Jazz with Chris Potter | Gallery 

Belmont Moot Court Teams Named Regional Champions and Semifinalists in National Appellate Advocacy Competition 

Belmont University’s moot court teams traveled to Brooklyn, New York for the National Appellate Advocacy Competition (NAAC) sponsored by the American Bar Association on Feb. 16-17. The two Belmont teams competed against 32 teams from a range of schools nationwide including Wayne State, Pepperdine, Texas A&M and Seton Hall, among others.  

Samantha McCaleb, named 8th Best Advocate in the region, Frank Toub and Carli Tuttle were Belmont’s regional semifinalist team.   

Belmont’s regional champion team consisted of Katelyn Barham, Madeline Gilmore, and Alex Schramkowski, who was named the No. 1 Best Advocate in the region for the second year in a row. 

The regional champion team will travel to Washington, D.C. for the national finals in April. This is Belmont’s seventh year to compete in the NAAC competition, as well as its seventh straight year to be regional champions and advance to nationals.   

“This team is the only complete team to win back-to-back regional championships,” moot court coach and Belmont College of Law faculty Amy Moore said. “This is the first year we have been able to return to in-person competitions– through it all we have grown and thrived, and I am so proud of each one of them.” 

The moot court teams were supported by former champions and alumni who gave insight and advice and watched rounds. Erik Halvorson, a 2022 Belmont Law alumnus and adjunct faculty member, served as an assistant coach for the team this year. 

Women Who Tell Our Stories: Panel

Belmont’s Women’s History Month festivities kicked off Wednesday, March 1 with a panel event highlighting female storytellers on our campus. The national theme—“Celebrating the Women Who Tell Our Stories”— anchors the events Belmont will host throughout the month-long celebration.  

Four faculty members from various areas of campus participated in a panel discussion moderated by Ileia Hook, Belmont alumna and associate vice president for strategic venues and events. The panelists discussed how they each discerned their gifts and chose a specific medium for storytelling; why storytelling is important; challenges they’ve faced and overcome; and wisdom for students. Dr. Angela Yoon opened and closed the panel with song, her primary storytelling medium.  


Dr. Sybril Brown, known by all as “Dr. Syb” is in her twentieth year as a journalism professor. She enjoys storytelling through social media, oral tradition, music and conversations with strangers. Before teaching, she worked as a journalist telling others’ stories and found purpose in giving a voice to those who didn’t have one. “Storytelling has always been part of me,” she said. “I’m nosey as all get out, but I want the facts. I’m not a gossip for the sake of gossip. I want to find the truth.”  

As an adult, she learned she was adopted and had to reckon with a different family history than one she had known her entire life. “For me, stories have evolved and are still evolving. It’s hard being the story and the storyteller,” she said. “The challenge is that everyone wants to tell me my story, ‘You be this, you be that.’” An overcomer, Dr. Syb is currently working on her memoir to tell her story in her own words.   


Victoria Banks is a songwriting instructor in Belmont’s Curb College, in her second year of teaching. New to the classroom, she brings with her a long career as a professional songwriter, having her songs recorded by the likes of Mickey Guyton, Carly Pearce, Lauren Alaina, The Shrines, Isaac Slade (of The Fray) and many more. In addition to songwriting, she writes blogs and co-hosts the storytelling podcast, “The Table Women.”  

Earning a degree in zoology, Banks said she tried to run from her calling. “I have a science side to my brain, but I found I was writing song lyrics across the margins of all my papers and exams. When I finished school where I had to choose to continue in science or pursue songwriting. I moved to Nashville—the epicenter of songwriting—and the rest is history!”  

Banks said it’s been a challenge working in the music industry—specifically country music—as a female songwriter. Label executives and radio stations have acted as gatekeepers, often suppressing the female perspective in a male-dominated genre. She said navigating space between what she wants to say and what other people want to hear is always a challenge.  

Even still, songwriting is inspirational because it takes an experience and looks at it from every possible angle, searching for lesson, moral, meaning and purpose. “Songs give people tools for understanding and a glimpse that we’re not alone.”  


Dr. Bonnie Smith Whitehouse, known to many as “Dr. Bonnie,” is a professor of English and director of Belmont’s Global Honors Program. She primarily tells stories through writing—books, letters and prayers—and sees herself first as a story listener. “I’ve always been drawn to stories on the margins; the stories that aren’t at the center of the narrative or the center of power,” she said. “I want to tell stories that haven’t been told, the ones lurking beneath the surface.”  

Whitehouse describes a liberation that comes with being the author of our own stories. “This is something I hope happens as our students move from first-year students to seniors; that by the time they walk across the graduation stage, they are authors of their lives, and don’t feel like someone else is telling them what their stories should be.” She nurtures self-authorship in others through her various books and projects, cultivating storytelling in others that she hopes trickles down generations.   

Dr. Bonnie has overcome challenges in her own work, particularly learning to release chasing perfectionism. “It’s been a real spiritual journey for me in understanding that I am a child of God and I’m a work in progress. The work that I do is part of God’s creation unfolding and there’s a perfection in that.”   


Dr. Angela Yoon is an assistant professor for classical voice and voice pedagogy; she tells stories through music, in both music and lyrics, and by teaching. Hearing stories of women who were trafficked, she was inspired to add voice to their stories through her gift: music. With an organization in St. Louis, she set stories of sex trafficking victims, marginalized youth, immigrants and refugees to song. The social justice concert “Songs of Hope: Unveiling Darkness” premiered at the Birmingham Museum of Art was played at Johns Hopkins and Carnegie Hall.  

Yoon seeks to make hard stories easier to consume. As consumers, topics she works with can be dismissed or ignored because they’re heavy. “I help to make those stories easier to understand by creating words and harmonies and melodies to tell the story.”  

The biggest challenge for Yoon has been a spiritual one. “Before I was in a place to share others’ stories, I had to heal from my own pain. The only reason I am where I am is because of God’s grace.” Faith has propelled her forward and she left students with parting words, “Love yourself; be generous and forgiving and remember this is not it for us as Christians.”  

Storytelling through Music Therapy

Each Monday and Wednesday morning, students from Belmont’s Music Therapy program walk to Morningside of Belmont—a retirement community just steps away from the Wilson Music Building—for music therapy sessions with residents.  

Music therapy can most easily be described as “music as science,” and uses music as a clinical intervention to work towards non-musical goals. With versatile application, music therapy can address everything from managing pain to enhancing communication, increasing motivation, self-regulation, maintaining independence and more.  

Recently, staff noticed a decline in attendance at Morningside’s music therapy sessions from residents with higher cognitive levels. “Our sessions were geared toward the lower end of cognition, which makes sense because we want everyone to be successful,” said Channing Shippen, Belmont music therapy instructor and clinical coordinator. “Some people need a bit more complexity to be fully engaged, so we created two separate groups.”  

The Monday group applies music therapy in a traditional sense with movement-based activities and singalongs to get residents active and stimulated by the music. The Wednesday group focuses on songwriting and gives space for participants to tell their own stories. As a new faculty member, Shippen was inspired by Belmont’s strategic pathways at faculty orientation—particularly storytelling—and how the craft can daily intersect with her work in music therapy.  

Between 10 and 15 residents participate in the weekly songwriting group, which highlights a different songwriter each session. Their time starts by listening to and singing songs by the featured artist that week to get the residents reminiscing about their experiences with the songwriter before moving into a group discussion.  

During a time when residents share personal stories and experiences, music therapy student facilitators pull keywords and phrases from conversation and write a few verses during their discussion. Sung over an extemporaneous melody, the group has co-written an original song by the end of each session.  

“We had a few residents who expressed more interest in songwriting, looking to explore it personally and more deeply, but who didn’t have an outlet to do so,” said Shippen. “Joe was one of those.”  

A lifelong Middle Tennessean, Morningside resident Joe has seen Nashville transform from a sleepy suburban town to a thriving metropolis throughout his life. The therapeutic intent of Joe’s songwriting sessions was to dialogue about his 94-year relationship with this city, from him living here and observing all the changes. Each week, Joe and the students would dive into a different subject, from landmarks to universities to feelings.  

Throughout seven months, Joe penned the song “It’s Not Out in the Country Anymore,” a 16-verse nod to his hometown. A retired lawyer, Joe even made sure to copyright his lyrics. 

“He would come back each week with a new verse, eager for feedback,” said Shippen. “It was very collaborative, but it’s really his words. With music therapy, Joe—in a sense—had a musical goal, but that wasn’t the heart of our sessions. It was about providing an opportunity for him to feel listened to and to self-express, to challenge him cognitively and offer space for discourse and elevated conversation.”  

Through Joe’s direction, the song was eventually put to music where he guided sound and notation. His dream to hear it by a live band was realized when Belmont’s Bluegrass Ensemble came to Morningside to perform the song for Joe and other residents. Described as incredibly witty and enthusiastic with a great sense of humor, Joe cares deeply and takes into consideration those around him. Shippen said he didn’t tell the other residents he wrote a song, likely because he didn’t want the accolades focused on him; he wanted the students to receive those.  

Belmont Bluegrass Ensemble with Morningside of Belmont resident Joe.

Performed by a guitar, a bass, a fiddle, a banjo and three singers, Joe beamed as the Ensemble brought his song to life. “This is spectacular, and it couldn’t have been better.” he said. “This has been a real inspiration and something I planned to do my entire life and it’s finally come to fruition.” 

The weekly songwriting group will likely continue for the foreseeable future, but Shippen stressed the importance of continually checking in with the people music therapists are serving. She teaches her students to ask questions often such as ‘Do my clients feel growth?’ or ‘Is this beneficial for them?’ She hopes to collaborate with more ensembles within the School of Music to bring songwriters’ songs to life in a full way, just as the Bluegrass Ensemble did with Joe.  

How does one become a music therapist?  

Shippen describes music therapy as one of the most complex degrees within the School of Music due to its interdisciplinary nature. Students take courses in the sciences—such as biology, anatomy and physiology, and psychology—in addition to general music courses, before diving into music therapy-specific courses. Before receiving their degree, students complete a 180-hour field experience (such as Morningside at Belmont), a 1200-hour internship and a 3-hour board certification exam.  

“Further licensure depends on the state,” said Shippen. Currently in Tennessee, there is a bill in the House Health Committee that, if signed into law, will require music therapists to be licensed to practice in Tennessee. Dr. Alejandra Ferrer, assistant professor of music recently testified before the House Health Subcommittee lobbying for the bill’s passage.  

Music therapists must be credentialed, but because they are not licensed in every state, credentials are not always recognized. If the Tennessee General Assembly passes the bill, required licensure would provide added job protection, and would aid in legality and insurance reimbursement. “Participation in music therapy is often based on privileges and an out-of-pocket expense,” Shippen said. “Being able to bill for insurance would increase our access for people who are really deserving.”  

Find out more information on Belmont’s music therapy program by visiting  www.belmont.edu/music