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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Students Present Research on Colon Cancer Cells

Working with Dr. Amy Ham, associate professor in pharmaceutical, social and administrative science in the College of Pharmacy, two pairs of students from the past two years have shed light on the proteomic profiles of exosomes from colon cancer cells. Exosomes are extracellular vesicles that act in cell-cell communication and are involved in the progression and metastasis of colon cancer cells. 

Libby Nunn, senior biology major, and Nancy Sharkawy, junior neuroscience major, completed this work for the 2018-19 year. In June, Nunn presented a poster entitled “Comparison of Sample Digestion and Fractionation Methods for Protein Biomarker Discovery in Exosomes” at the 67th Annual American Society for Mass Spectrometry Conference on Mass Spectrometry and Allied Topics in Atlanta, Georgia. 

Karina Glushchak, senior neuroscience major, and Aditi Bush, B.S. in Neuroscience, 2019, worked on the project during the 2017-2018 academic year. Glushchak presented a poster on more preliminary data from this same project at the 66th Annual ASMS conference in June of 2018 in San Diego, California. The conference was attended by more than 6,500 scientists from around the world and included approximately 3,000 papers presented as posters and talks.

Both years, the Belmont students participated in an undergraduate research competition at the conference, which included an additional presentation of their work. 

Dr. Diaz-Cruz Elected to Association of Biochemistry Educators Board

Dr. Edgar Diaz-Cruz, associate professor in pharmaceutical, social and administrative sciences in the College of Pharmacy, has been elected to the Board of Directors of the Association of Biochemistry Educators.

The 7th International Conference of the Association of Biochemistry Educators was held May 5-9 in Tucson, Arizona. Dr. Diaz-Cruz also presented a podium and poster presentation entitled “Using Biochemistry to Educate Students on the Causal Link between Social Epigenetics and Health Disparities.” 

Dr. Diaz-Cruz also has recently published two manuscripts. “If Cultural Sensitivity Is Not Enough to Reduce Health Disparities, What Will Pharmacy Education Do Next?” was published in Currents in Pharmacy Teaching and Learning. In collaboration with Dr. Chris Barton in the Department of Biology and others, Dr. Diaz-Cruz was the co-author on “Enoxacin and Epigallocatechin Gallate (EGCG) Act Synergistically to Inhibit the Growth of Cervical Cancer Cells in Culture,’ published in Molecules.

Belmont Celebrates August 2019 Commencement

Belmont University celebrated its summer commencement ceremony for both undergraduate and graduate students on Friday, August 9 at 5 p.m. in the Curb Event Center.

University President Dr. Bob Fisher presided over the event and English Professor Dr. Amy Hodges Hamilton presented the commencement address. Hamilton is the 2018-19 Presidential Faculty Achievement Award recipient, a title awarded for the outstanding contributions she has made to student success. Belmont awarded 116 bachelor’s, 134 master’s and 45 doctoral for a total of 295 degrees.

Graduating students crossed the stage confidently as they looked towards the University’s most recent “First Destination Rate,” a measure that indicates the percentage of graduate who secure employment, enroll in graduate school or enlist in military service within six months of graduation. This year, Belmont’s rate is 94 percent, a rate significantly higher than the national average.

Michaels Presents at Higher Education International Round Table at Oxford

Dr. Natalie Michaels, professor of occupational therapy, represented Belmont University by presenting her research on Language Variation in Multiple Choice Testing at the Higher Education International Round Table Symposium at Oxford University in July.  Her research, done in collaboration with Timothy Stewart, Ron Barredo, Debbie Edmondson, Edilberto Raynes and Elizabeth Kunnu, focuses on the way students interpret the language utilized during multiple-choice tests, and how this interpretation affects their answers

This conference was held at the Harris Manchester College in the University of Oxford, Oxford, England. Harris Manchester College is one of the 38 colleges that make up the University of Oxford, and those presenting can stay in one of the college dorms. All meals are also served on the campus.

Membership in the Round Table is by invitation only. The International Round Table Symposium is an international organization created to promote education and the discussion of various topics “that enrich the human experience and enhance the human condition… in a think-tank atmosphere.” Presenters from all over the world meet to present their research. After each presentation, there is an opportunity for a hearty discussion with difficult questions and intellectual repartee. The presenters also received a tour of Oxford, which is an area rich in educational history.

Dr. Michaels’ presentation in Oxford was extremely well received, and she received requests to perform research in collaboration with professors from three other universities during the symposium.

Alumnus Willis’ Choir Featured on Today.com with Carrie Underwood

Alumnus Franklin Willis was recently featured on the CMA Foundation website and Today.com for his work with the Andrew Jackson Elementary Eagle Honor Choir. As the choir’s founder and director, Willis specializes in providing music instruction that will empower and engage all children to achieve their best.

Earlier this year the Choir posted a video of its version of Carrie Underwood’s “The Champion,” attracting the attention of the CMA Foundation, which invited the choir to perform at this summer’s CMA Festival. When the group was rehearsing for their CMA Fest appearance, Underwood herself stopped by to encourage the young people, and the CMA Foundation captured the visit in a heart-warming video.

Willis, who has won numerous accolades for his work in music education, graduated from Belmont in 2012 with a Master of Education in Nonprofit Leadership.

Brown-Gaines Receives Nashville Emerging Leader’s Education Award

Dr. Tisha Brown-Gaines, assistant professor of computer science, won the Nashville Emerging Leader’s Education Award at the 13th annual NELA ceremony on August 1.

The Nashville Emerging Leader’s Award is an initiative of the Nashville Chamber, which recognizes Middle Tennessee’s young professionals (YP) under the age of 40 for significant accomplishments in their chosen career field, as well as their commitment and contribution to their respective communities.

Brown-Gaines Wins NELA Award

On the list of winners, the Nashville Post writes, “Brown-Gaines is a former McNair, Mississippi Space Grant Consortium, LSMAMP-Bridge to the Doctorate, DOE Mickey Leland Energy and Southern Regional Education Broad Fellow who currently serves as the faculty representative for the National Center for Women and Information Technology. In this role, she engages with students, faculty and administrators at Belmont to help promote and increase participation of girls and women in computing. This includes providing mentorship to students who are interested in computing and contributing to the NCWIT goals of improving diversity and inclusion in computing. In addition to partnering with Belmont, Gaines actively engages within the community to provide resources that will assist in changing the local conditions that create barriers to attracting and graduating women in post-secondary computing.”

Brown-Gaines said she feels blessed and honored to be recognized by the Nashville Chamber for the 2019 Nashville Emerging Leadership Award in Education. “I am committed to providing opportunities for young women and men interested in STEM fields, specifically computer science here at Belmont and within the greater Nashville community,” she said.

NELA Award Ceremony

The annual NELA ceremony recognized five finalists in 14 industry classifications from a pool of more than 900 nominees. Each NELAs candidate is evaluated in three areas: professional achievement, demonstrated leadership and community impact. Together, the finalists are involved in supporting and leading more than 400 Middle TN nonprofits.

YP Nashville is presented by Lipscomb University’s Pfeffer Graduate School of Business. The awards are sponsored by Atiba, Bradley, Lightning 100 and Nashville Post.

Staff and Alumna Nominated for IBMA Awards

Director of Curb College Academic Advising Tina Dishman, with her band Sister Sadie, received two nominations for the International Bluegrass Music Association 2019 Awards: Vocal Group of the Year and Album of the Year for “Sister Sadie – II.”

Alumna Kristen Scott Benson is also nominated for Banjo Player of the Year.

The nominees were announced Wednesday, as voted by the association’s professional members and committee members. The awards will be given out Thursday, Sept. 26, during IBMA’s World of Bluegrass conference in Raleigh, North Carolina. Sister Sadie has the honor of performing at the ceremony, as well. View a list of nominees here.

Tickets for the 30th annual awards show are available to the public here and the show will be broadcast live on Facebook and on Sirius XM’s Bluegrass Junction channel starting at 7:30 p.m. ET.

Sister Sadie will be making its third appearance at the Grand Ole Opry on August 16.

Alumnus Achenjang Releases Book on Meditation

Roland Achenjang, a 2015 alumnus of Belmont’s MBA in Healthcare Management, will release his first book, “Who and Why You Are: All You Need to Remember,” on August 21 through Amazon. The e-book is currently available for pre-order.

Roland began meditating to cope with the stress of being both a business school student and the sole overnight clinical pharmacist at a large hospital in Nashville. As a result, his life transformed from a fear-based experience to one filled with creative expressions.

In “Who and Why You Are: All You Need to Remember,” Achenjang discusses his passion for helping others remember, experience and express what he says is the ultimate benefit to effective meditating – bliss.

Cover of "Who and Why You Are"

[The book] “reveals timeless, universal truths you need to remember to appreciate why you act the way you do and why you perceive your life experiences the way you do,” said Achenjang. “By recognizing and understanding these universal truths, you can break free from the endless, self-imposed, creative limitations impeding you from living a purposeful life, expressing joy and experiencing bliss while here on Earth.”

Born and raised in Cameroon before relocating with his family to the United States in 2000, Achenjang has always been facscinated with finding, or remembering, meanings and purposes to life on Earth.

Find out more on www.rolandachenjang.com.

Best-Selling Author Malcolm Gladwell to Speak on New Book ‘Talking to Strangers’ at Belmont Oct. 22

Fresh on the heels of a new book release,  “Talking to Strangers : What We Should Know about the People We Don’t Know,” best-selling author Malcolm Gladwell will bring his unique perspective and thought-provoking insights to Belmont University this fall.

Named one of the 100 most influential people by Time magazine and one of Foreign Policy’s top 100 Global Thinkers, Gladwell is a staff writer at The New Yorker and hosts the podcasts Revisionist History and Broken Record. His first new book in six years, “Talking to Strangers: What We Should Know about the People We Don’t Know” (Little, Brown; September 10, 2019) offers an incisive and powerful examination of our interactions with strangers—and why they often go so terribly wrong. In this classically Gladwellian intellectual adventure, he starts by asking a question: “What happens when we have to deal with the unfamiliar?”

Jill Robinson, director of external relations and Executive Learning Networks for Belmont’s Jack C. Massey College of Business, said, “We are excited to host Malcolm Gladwell for the second time on Belmont’s campus as part of our Executive Learning Network fall programming. The Fall Leadership Breakfast was created to bring the highest level national speakers to the greater Nashville community, and Malcolm Gladwell represents one of the most prolific and talented storytellers in the business. Executives are still talking about his presentation two years ago with his release of ‘David and Goliath,’ and now with this new release of ‘Talking to Strangers,’ we are grateful his team and Parnassus Books reached out to us and requested to present again as part of the Executive Learning Network series of learning events.” 

Gladwell’s appearance at Belmont is supported by partnerships with Parnassus Books and EO Nashville.

Niki Coffman, Parnassus events director, said, “Parnassus is ecstatic to once again partner with the Executive Learning Network to bring Malcolm Gladwell to Nashville. We are delighted to work closely with ELN to provide a fantastic opportunity to present this remarkable program to the community.”

Book cover

As Gladwell sets out to show us in his new book, strangers are not easy. He leads us on a provocative journey through history, psychology, and the most scandalous stories plucked from the news. He examines how spies could go undetected in the U.S. intelligence community for years and ponders why Neville Chamberlain thought he could trust Adolf Hitler. He asks: How can we tell whether a person is lying? In probing the deceptions of Bernie Madoff, the trial of Amanda Knox, the suicide of Sylvia Plath, the Jerry Sandusky pedophilia scandal at Penn State, and the death of Sandra Bland, he throws into doubt our conception of these and other stories we thought we knew so well.

This program is a presentation from Belmont’s Jack C. Massey College of Business Executive Learning Network, a thriving network of more than 350 business executives with the purpose of bringing together senior leaders of Nashville’s best-run companies in a setting where they can learn from each other. EO Nashville is the program’s community sponsor.

Tuesday, October 22, 2019
Massey Performing Arts Center at
Belmont University
6:45 a.m.
: Registration and Coffee
7 a.m.: Doors Open
7:30 a.m.: Malcolm Gladwell Presentation
Parking: Curb Event Center Garage (Building No. 39 on the campus map)
Cost: $35, which includes presentation, new book and light breakfast hors d’oeurves prior to the event.

Tickets for the event will go on sale at 10 a.m. Monday, August 5 and can be purchased here.

Belmont Again Named a ‘Best College Value’ by Kiplinger Personal Finance

Belmont University was recently named to Kiplinger’s Personal Finance’s Best College Values for 2019 annual ranking. Introduced in 1998, the rankings combine public schools, private universities and private liberal arts colleges into a single, comprehensive list. The analysis is based on objective measurements of academic quality and affordability.

To arrive at its best value rankings, Kiplinger’s begins with data on nearly 1,200 public and private four-year schools and then narrows the list based on measures of academic quality. Then each school is ranked using cost and financial aid measures.