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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Recent Belmont Graduate Earns Sponsorship from Ford

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Singer/songwriter Paulina JayneSinger songwriter Paulina Jayne, who graduated from Belmont University in May, has recently been granted a sponsorship from Ford Motor Company. Ford Driving Skills for Life program has signed Jayne as a celebrity sponsor where she will promote the program and safe driving through video and public service announcements.

The sponsorship from Ford does not only focus on Jayne as an artist, but involves her management team as well. Jayne is managed by Girl King Co. where she works with other recent Belmont graduates Tess Davies and Stevie Palmer to build her brand and music career. After pitching Jayne’s music and their plans for the future to Ford, the group went through a lengthy process before finally signing their sponsorship. Ford landed on Jayne and Girl King Co. because of their talents and their representation of the innovative and empowering thinking Ford Motor Company embodies. Ford appreciated the way they conducted themselves and their business as a management firm.

Jayne was born and raised in Detroit, also known as “Motor City,” giving her a connection to Ford and their cars. She is excited to get the opportunity to work with Ford Motor Company and to spread messages about safe driving.

Jayne also recently became the celebrity ambassador for the national nonprofit organization Miss Amazing which helps to empower girls and women who have disabilities.

Physical Therapy Students Get Involved with AbleYouth, Create a Legacy of Service

Rising second-year Belmont Physical Therapy students, Lauren Addison, Beau Kovach, Hannah Burkhart, Alex Tucker, Bella Zizzi and Katelyn Thies devoted part of their summer break to finding ways to get involved in the Middle Tennessee area. The class, as a whole, agreed in their first year on the importance of getting involved and giving back to the surrounding communities. Physical Therapy itself is a service profession and while the coursework of the program can be demanding, the class agreed it was important to find time to stay true to the service aspect as well.

Associate Professor of Physical Therapy Dr. Christi Williams reminds students within their first few weeks in the program, “It’s not about you, it’s about who you were put here to serve.” The now second year class has bought into this idea. There are several service events built into the program already, but these students wanted to find ways to serve even beyond those in which they were already participating.  To do this, a new position within the class was established, the community service chair, and student Lauren Addison quickly volunteered to fill this role given her passion for service activities and mission trips.

One organization that the students became involved in this summer is AbleYouth, an organization that works with children who are wheelchair bound to teaching them the skills needed to become as independent as possible while giving them the opportunity to come together for days of fun games and sports. The physical therapy students served on AbleYouth’s Super Sports Saturday, where large groups of kids come together to play games, outdoor activities and sports. The PT students have found that they enjoy playing and working with the children just as much, if not more, than the children enjoy them being there. An ongoing relationship has formed with the AbleYouth program, and Addison plans to encourage continued involvement between Belmont and the organization.

The second-year class continues to look for other ways to get involved and serve in the Middle TN area. While it is important to them to serve and give back to the community, their hope is also to encourage the new first-year class and other upcoming classes to find a way to leave their mark in the community by serving others.  Addison commented, “Even if the other classes find different organizations to serve with, the most important part is not where you serve, or who you serve, just that you serve somehow.”

Cusic-Penned ‘Minnie Pearl’ Musical to Debut in September

Don Cusic“Minnie Pearl: All the News from Grinder’s Switch,” a musical written by Professor of Music Business Dr. Don Cusic, will debut at the Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre on September 7, 8 and 9. The website describes the show as “…a musical extravaganza that is sure to leave a smile on your face and a song in your heart. Take a toe-tapping trip down memory lane with Sarah Cannon as she recounts how Cousin Minnie came to be. For country music fans both old and young, this is a heartfelt tribute to Sarah Cannon and Minnie Pearl featuring all new music and a script by Don Cusic the biographer of country music luminaries like Roger Miller and Eddy Arnold.”

Cusic has also written a musical timeline of Nashville, titled “Nashville Sound,” that will be released October 1, and he will be speaking at the Southern Festival of Books, at the Tennessee Historical Society, the Fiftyforward group in Bellevue and during a Convocation at Belmont in October.

Rolling Stone’s ’10 New Country Artists to Know’ Includes Songwriting Alumna

Rolling Stone recently debuted an article featuring “10 New Country Artists You Need to Know,” a list that included Belmont songwriting alumna Emily Hackett.

For Hackett, country music wasn’t always on her radar. Growing up with a father who was a rock music critic, the music she was exposed to was much different than the music she releases now. Rolling Stone compares her music to the likes of country music female greats Shania Twain, Martina McBride and Faith Hill. Her pop-country style allows her to push the boundary of where modern country music is going.

Originally from Georgia, Hackett moved to Nashville to attend Belmont University and soon after, began to call country music her own. After winning Belk’s Modern Southern Music Showcase in 2014, Hackett has since had the opportunity to open for Lady Antebellum, Luke Bryan, Jason Aldean and Rascal Flatts. Hakcett’s EP “By the Sun” will be released later in the year.

Student, Alumna Join Keith Urban on Stage at Bridgestone Arena

Over eight months ago, current music business major Ashley Ryan was called up on stage by Keith Urban to unveil his Nashville tour date. After learning that Ryan attends Belmont, Urban asked her to sing a song with him. Since then, Ryan has been waiting to do it all again, but this time on a much bigger stage in Nashville, Bridgestone Arena.

In January, Ryan and Urban sang his song “Without You” together on stage at a free preview event announcing his tour. After their duet, Urban asked Ryan if she would join him onstage to sing the song again at the Nashville show of his “Graffiti U” world tour. Excited about the chance to fulfill her dream of performing live in Nashville, Ryan agreed.

On August 24, Ryan joined Urban on stage to do a reprise of his song, “Without You.” Ryan spent the last months preparing for her moment by “non-stop listening to the song” and singing along to make sure she sang it just right.

Ryan was one of many special guests that night, including Carrie Underwood, Nicole Kidman and Reese Witherspoon, among others. Belmont 2016 commercial music alumna Kassi Ashton also made an appearance to sing “Drop Top,” a song she recorded with Urban. Ashton signed a record deal last year with UMG Nashville and Interscope Records.

Ryan is excited to begin to do more with her singing career and thanks Urban for the extra motivation.  She was in awe of her experiences with Urban, saying that he is a down to earth guy and that it was “an honor to be on stage with someone that you’ve looked up to your whole life.”

Li Delivers Keynote Address at Xuchang University’s Faculty Professional Program

Associate Professor of Asian Studies & Chinese Language Dr. Qingjun (Joan) Li was invited to be a keynote speaker by Xuchang University, Henan Province, China earlier this summer. The talk was given for the 2018 Faculty Professional Program of the School of Foreign Languages.

Li addressed the faculty on the topic of “Thoreau’s Embrace of Daoist Ideology in His Political Writing” and examined how Daoism influenced Thoreau’s discontent with civil society and its pressures toward conformity evidences in both Walden and in the earlier essay “Resistance to Civil Government.” The talk generated multiple questions and discussions among the professors of literature and language.

Tarr, Carei Present at International Hearing Aid Conference

Dr. Eric Tarr, assistant professor of Audio Engineering Technology (AET) and Braden Carei, AET and Computer Science student, presented at the 2018 International Hearing Aid Conference in Tahoe City, California August 15-19. Their poster, titled “Real-Time Simulation of Hearing Loss and Auditory Prostheses,” demonstrated an iOS mobile app which models hearing aid processing for perceptual research experiments.

The app is called the Impaired Hearing Simulator (IHSIM) and is available in the iOS App Store. It has already been adopted by researchers at the University of Maryland for an experiment investigating the perception of speech under degraded listening conditions. The app was developed as part of the Belmont SURFs program. For his work, Carei was selected by the conference to receive a student travel scholarship.

Belmont Announces Public Health Nurse Residency Program, Partnership with Tennessee Department of Health

The first of its kind in Tennessee, residency program created in direct response to an increased need for public health nursing capacity across the state

Belmont University announced today the creation of a Public Health Nurse Residency Program in partnership with the Tennessee Department of Health. After completing an 8-week public health nursing orientation, new graduate nurse residents will obtain clinical experience in their assigned health department (Maury or Montgomery County) with the support of a trained nurse mentor.

Jenny Dudzinski, of the Tennessee Department of Health, speaks as Belmont and Tennessee Department of Health team up to offer two Public Health Nurse Residencies at Belmont University
Representatives from the State of Tennessee’s Public Health Department review this new opportunity with students on campus

Residents will also participate in additional education experiences reflective of the 8 domains of community and public health nursing competencies including analytical and assessment, policy development and program planning, communication, cultural competency, community division of practice, public health sciences, financial management and management and leadership and systems thinking. A variety of development opportunities will be offered in each domain including attending Nurse Leadership Team meetings, observing policymaking at the state level and completing online trainings from public health resources, among other things.

Beyond their time in clinicals, each resident will complete a team project to support primary prevention efforts through evidence-based practice. Each nurse residency position comes with a salary that will be paid throughout the duration of the program.

Dean of the College of Health Sciences and Nursing Dr. Cathy Taylor said, “This residency program, the first of its kind in the state and one of only a handful in the country, has been years in the making. These new graduates will have invaluable opportunities to impact the health of Tennesseans and become future leaders in the field. We’re so grateful to be working alongside our state partners to provide this important program.

Ellis Speaks on Diversity, Inclusion and Finding Purpose

Diversity and inclusion took on new urgency for Belmont students, faculty and staff as they heard Aerial Ellis discuss culture, communication, change and community Monday night. “Imagine a world where everyone’s ideas are valued – where risks are taken to support high-potential, dynamic leaders as they realize their dreams and solve problems within their communities,” she said.

She described diversity as the measure, and inclusion as the mechanism, for achieving such a world. She challenged the students to “not just ask ‘why,’ but instead ask ‘why not?’” She said members of Generation Z (born 1996-2010) are well equipped to make positive changes in society. “You’re savvy,  you’re creative, you’re pioneering, you’re bold, you’re collaborative, you’re all these things.”

Aerial Ellis poses with the PRSSA leadership teamA public relations faculty member at Lipscomb University and the author of The Original Millennial: Lessons in Leadership for the Millennial Generation, Ellis defined diversity as “the broad range of similarities and differences including, but not limited to race, gender, age, religion, ethnicity, sexual orientation, disabilities, abilities and points of view that exist within our colleges, communities, companies, organizations, customers and suppliers.” She defined inclusion as “providing equal opportunity to all people to fully engage themselves in creating an environment and a cultural attitude whereby everyone and every group fits, feels accepted, has value and can contribute to society.”

Ellis emphasized the roles of passion and purpose, describing passion as something that can inspire, lead to and fuel someone’s purpose. She said her passion at age 14 for starting her own manicure business led to her purpose of entrepreneurship, and social entrepreneurship “can solve problems by disrupting the system.”

What can people do to help change society in a positive direction? “Check your bias,” she said.  “What are you holding that allows you to foster stereotypes in your mind? Check your privileges. Check your access. What resources to you have? Check your influences. What can I say? And do? Finally, check your purpose, something that is innately and deeply connected to my core. Passion can lead me to purpose.”

Ellis spoke to a standing-room-only crowd in the convocation cosponsored by Belmont Public Relations Student Society of America and the Belmont State of Mind Initiative for Diversity and Inclusion. Belmont PRSSA is one of more than 300 Chapters in the national student organization supported by the Public Relations Society of America, which offers professional development and  networking opportunities. The Belmont State of Mind Initiative for Diversity and Inclusion will sponsor Diversity Week on campus Oct. 1-5.

Thousands Attend Fourth Annual ‘Battle of the Belmont Bands and Family Fun Festival’

Battle of the Belmont Bands & Family Fun FestivalBelmont started the 2018-19 academic year with the fourth annual “Battle of the Belmont Bands and Family Fun Festival” on Saturday, a family-friendly music festival held on and around the Lawn. Alumni, faculty and staff brought their kids out to the patio in front of McWhorter Hall at 4:30 p.m. for activities that included face painting, balloon animals, illusionist performances and bouncing around in inflatable toys. Several alumni also participated in a vendor fair, bringing their books, food, clothing, jewelry and other crafts to campus.

Live music kicked off on the main stage at 6 p.m. with a concert featuring exclusively student and alumni talent.

The annual “Battle of the Belmont Bands” contest, put together as part of the Curb College of Entertainment and Music Business’ Showcase Series, allowed student bands to compete in front of a panel of industry experts in the audience to determine a winner. Those judges are organized by Musician’s Corner, the annual concert series in Centennial Park to promote emerging artists, which then invites the winner to perform at an upcoming concert. Student bands participating included Andrew Douglas, Grace Gonzalez, McCall & Katareen, Patrick Murphy, Slurp and No Coast, which was deemed the evening’s winner.

Battle of the Belmont Bands & Family Fun FestivalThe event concluded with a headlining performance from alumni group Dynamo, a nationally touring band whose music fuses jazz, rock and funk with elements of soul and R&B. Click here to see additional photos from this year’s event.