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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Belmont Ethics Team Competes in Florida

Belmont recently competed in the Templeton Business Ethics Case Competition at Stetson University in DeLand, Florida. Sixteen universities were invited to present their financial, legal and ethical analysis about a national pharmaceutical company who sold the patent rights of a very profitable prescription drug to the St. Regis Mohawk Tribe in order to delay the introduction of generic drug competition.

Belmont’s team of Eric Rall, Amanda Portillo and Jon Casel won their initial Bracket Competition over Clemson University, Georgetown University and last year’s winner, the University of North Dakota. After competing in the second round, Belmont advanced to the Final Round where they were awarded fourth place overall.  The team was coached by Massey College of Business faculty Boyd Smith, Jennifer Fowler, Barry Padgett and Harold Fogelberg.

 

Simmons Moderates BSA Black History Month Entrepreneurship Panel

The Black Student Association (BSA) recently hosted Belmont’s Black History Month culminating event featuring successful entrepreneurs from all over Nashville. The event was developed and led by BSA, specifically under the leadership of Kayla Young, president, and Aminah VanArsdale, social events chair.

five entrepreneur guestsPage Turner (Egap Real Estate and Flip or Flop Nashville host), Harold Lercius (Lercius Fitness Studio), Mignon Francois (The Cupcake Collection), Emmanuel Reed (’12 and co-owner of Slim & Husky’s ) and Dr. Lakisha Simmons (Homework Suite – Student Planner App) engaged with the students about entrepreneurship.  The panelists also shared advice for Belmont’s budding entrepreneurs, encouraging them to get a mentor, start journaling and create repeatable processes.

A student in the audience asked the panelists how they balance their business and home life. “You only have one body, and you must take care of it on a daily basis so exercise is essential to a  balanced life” Lercius responded. Turner added, “Journaling and making sure I laugh each night helps me to relax and regroup.”

A future financial planner asked how to get clients for her new business. “Know your target audience and build trust with your tribe by offering them free advice and helpful resources, then through word of mouth, clients will come to you because you’ll have the reputation as the expert,” said Simmons. Francois added, “creating a positive customer experience will have them coming back again and again; our goal is to sprinkle each customers day with a bit of joy.” Reed explained that, at his company, “we want each customer to experience pizza, art and music. It’s a complete experience that customers keep coming back for.”

 

Belmont Celebrates Women’s History Month 2018

“Nevertheless, she persisted,” a phrase originally spoken by Senator Mitch McConnell in attempt to silence Senator Elizabeth Warren in Congress last year, has become a rallying cry for women across the country. March 1 kicks off Women’s History Month 2018, and Belmont is ready to celebrate. Dr. Sarah Blomeley, co-chair of the celebration, wrote, “During Women’s History Month 2018, we celebrate that persistence even as we recognize the intersecting forms of discrimination women have faced in the past and continue to face today. Now more than ever, it is imperative that we listen to women’s voices–voices from the past and present, voices from near and far, voices of the famous and unknown, voices that command national interest, and voices we’ve been conditioned to ignore.”

To complement this year’s theme of persistence, Blomeley and co-chair Dr. Amy Hodges Hamilton prepared a series of events to celebrate women and their persistence in the fight against all forms of discrimination. All events are free and open to the public.

Events include:

Thursday, March 1: 4-5 p.m. Join Dr. Sarah Blomeley and a group of undergraduate researchers in The Personal is Rhetorical: Women Persisting Throughout History.

Monday, March 12: 10-11 a.m. Women on the Margins Locally and Globally: A Path Toward Healing will discuss ways to empower women in different social contexts through faith, hope and healing.

Monday, March 19: 10-11 a.m. Join Dr. Shelby Longard and student leaders for an interactive, social-action based convocation in Nevertheless They Persisted: Belmont Students Working Toward Change

Friday, March 23: 10-11 a.m. Writing and Healing: a Path Toward Persistence will feature Dr. Amy Hodges Hamilton for a writing workshop about the theory and practice of writing and trauma

Monday, march 26: 10-11 a.m. Dr. Heather Finch will introduce students to women lost to history in What Was Her Name?

Tuesday, March 27: 7-8 p.m. The women of the Belmont University Dance Company will present The Passion: A Choreographed Reading

Thursday, April 5: 6:30 p.m. Belmont seeks to raise awareness about violence against students, to give students a voice in their own safety on campus and to provide easily accessible resources for violence prevention and student safety through a Take Back the Night march.

For more information about the celebration or the individual events, click here.

“When we believe that ours is the only story out there,” wrote Blomeley, “We feel powerless and afraid. One voice shouting against the wind does not travel very far. But when that lone voice joins a choir of others, it becomes impossible to ignore… Paying attention to voices from our past helps us understand the present and plan for the future. Let’s listen.”

This year’s celebration of Women’s History Month is co-chaired by Drs. Blomeley and Hodges Hamilton, with co-sponsorship from University Ministries, the Office of Campus Security, the Office of the University Counsel, the Department of Theatre and Dance, the College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences and Counseling Services

College of Sciences and Mathematics Hosts 13th Annual Environmental Science Lecture with Dr. Karen Seto

Karen Seto HeadshotBelmont’s College of Sciences and Mathematics Environmental Science Program recently hosted Dr. Karen Seto from Yale University for the 13th Annual Environmental Science Lecture. Her talk was entitled “Urbanization Trends in China and India: Environmental Opportunities and Challenges.” Seto is the Frederick C. Hixon Professor of Geography and Urbanization Science, Senior Associate Dean for Research and Director of Doctoral Studies at the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies.

An urban and land change scientist, the overarching objective of her research is to understand how urbanization will affect the planet. Her research uses a combination of satellite remote sensing, socioeconomic and biophysical data, field research and modeling methods to characterize urban land-use, understand the drivers of urban land-use change, forecast urban expansion and assess the large-scale environmental consequences of urban expansion. She has pioneered methods to reconstruct land-use dynamics with satellite data and forecast the expansion of urban areas.

Seto was one of two coordinating lead authors for the urban chapter of the “IPCC Working Group III Fifth Assessment Report,” and has served on many U.S. National Research Council Committees including the recent NRC Committee on Pathways to Urban Sustainability. From 2000 to 2008, she was on the faculty at Stanford University where she held joint appointments in the Woods Institute for the Environment and the School of Earth Sciences. She is an Aldo Leopold Leadership Fellow, an elected fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) and a member of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences. She has a PhD in Geography from Boston University.

Heard Published in Frontiers of Biogeography Journal

Matthew Heard head shotDr. Matthew Heard, assistant professor of biology, recently had a research article accepted for publication in the Frontiers of Biogeography Journal, the scientific journal of the International Biogeography Society. The article is entitled “Disease biogeography: spatial and temporal analyses of infectious disease burden at the country-level scale provides new insights and challenges.”

Frontiers of Biogeography is an international scientific journal that publishes novel articles about topics at the interface of biology and geography.

Tri-Beta Plant Sale Raises Student Programming Funds

Students sit at a table during the Tri-Beta Plant saleThis year’s Tri-Beta plant sale, a fundraising put on by Belmont’s Beta Beta Beta (Tri-Beta) Biological Society, raised about $500 to support students programming including field trips and projects.

Tri-Beta is a society for students dedicated to improving the understanding and appreciation of biology. The Mu Theta Chapter of Tri-Beta at Belmont University was established April 9, 1988.  Since then, membership has promoted the study of biology through various activities such as presentations, fun field trips, trips to scientific meetings and social events for students.

Tri-Beta provides leadership opportunities for students, informs them about current developments in biology and helps them prepare for employment. Dr. Steve Murphree serves as the faculty advisor for this organization.

NSTA Participates in the Adventure Science Center’s Engineering Day

Members of the Belmont National Science Teachers Association (NSTA) participated in the Adventure Science Center’s Engineering Day on Saturday, February 24 and led demonstration for the guests around the theme “Chemical Engineering & Going Green.” The group described how sodium lauryl sulfate (SLS) found in some shampoos, detergents and cleaning substances can be toxic at high concentrations and how less toxic alternatives can be found.

To do this, group leaders showed the “foamy” properties of SLS compared to the lemon water that they made, and then asked the children to make a hypothesis about which one would work better. They then let the participants choose which mess they wanted to clean up (options like syrup, honey, chocolate syrup, makeup and jelly) and allowed them to conduct their own experiment with lemon water while they cleaned with the SLS. Then they asked them if their results supported or disproved the hypothesis of which cleaned better.

The NSTA members wanted to show that the lemon water cleaned just as well as the SLS and is healthier for users and the environment. The NSTA members that helped with the demonstrations were Aaron Rice, Avery Daniels, Chris Burdette, Shannon Kelly, Rachel Hongo, Tori Hongo and Mary Barber.

Guinn Featured as Black History Month Mathematician

Michelle Guinn HeadshotDr. Michelle Craddock Guinn, associate professor of mathematics, is the featured mathematician on the Black History Month 2018 Honorees Mathematically Gifted and Black page posted on The Network of Minorities in Mathematical Sciences website.

Guinn joined the Department of Mathematics and Computer Science at Belmont University in the fall of 2013. The entire article can be read here.

Veteran Success Team Hosts Veteran Empowerment Training for Faculty and Staff

Belmont University’s Veteran Success Team recently hosted two Veteran Empowerment Training sessions for faculty and staff across campus. Since the Post-9/11 GI Bill, which provides additional opportunities for veterans to earn a college degree, campuses across the country have seen a dramatic influx of veterans seeking educational opportunities. Belmont’s student population has been no different.

Because the process of transitioning from military to civilian life can pose challengers for all service members, veterans and their families, the University’s Veteran Success Team, part of Interdisciplinary Studies and Global Education, continues to provide support to this campus group. As Belmont’s veteran population has grown to more than 155 undergraduate and graduate student veterans, the Team understands the importance of ensuring faculty and staff are fully equipped to serve student veterans.

This week’s training sessions provided information on how to welcome student veterans to campus, build trust, ease the transition and properly advise/mentor students. They were led by Tennessee Department of Veteran Services Veteran Education Coordinator for Middle Tennessee Chris Fears. He feels strongly about the importance of equipping faculty and staff to empower student veterans and said, “It’s a great time to be a student, and it’s a great time to be a veteran. Neither of those are more true than right here in Tennessee. Military veterans are proven to be the best students in our classrooms with a few strategic pieces of transitional support. Supporting veterans in higher education is the best thing we can do to set them up for success in the next chapter of their lives.”

Robbie Tyrney, president of Belmont’s Student Veterans of America chapter known as Bruin Vets, supports faculty and staff training and other programming provided by the Team. “Our Veteran Success Team continues to go above and beyond to ensure our veterans have the resources and support they need while pursuing academic success at Belmont University,” Tyrney said. “By hosting the Veteran Empowerment Training, our Veteran Success Team shows their commitment to excellence in supporting Belmont’s growing veteran population. The Bruin Vets would like to thank our Veteran Success Team for their continued support and Chris Fears for providing this valuable training opportunity.”

The Veteran Success Team works to ensure student veterans are welcomed and equipped for success at Belmont. They provide help with academic resources, transitioning to campus life and career readiness. Their efforts were recently recognized, as Belmont was ranked No. 3 in the South for Best Colleges for Veterans on U.S. News & World Report’s 2018 edition of America’s Best Colleges.

Belmont Chorale Hosts “Souls of Seoul” Choir for Joint Concert

Belmont Chorale, led by Conductor and Professor in the School of Music Dr. Jeffrey Ames, hosted a joint concert with “Souls of Seoul,” a semi-professional choir from Seoul, South Korea, on Tuesday, February 20. Led by Jihoon Park, the Souls of Seoul choir, known as SOS and with a tagline of ‘Saving our Souls,’ is made up of 47 traveling vocalists.

Ames and Park met in 2016 when they were selected to participate in the American Choral Directors Association’s International Conductors Exchange Program. As part of the program, Park visited the US in March 2016 for two weeks and spent time in Los Angeles and Nashville, participating in conferences, facilitating workshops and hosting lectures for Belmont students. Months later, in July, Ames visited South Korea for two weeks and spent time working alongside Park and SOS.

Ames (left) and Park (right) pose for a photo in front of members of both their choirsIn the time since, Ames said he and Park have developed quite a friendship–one he would describe as familial. “We are brothers,” Ames said. “We are kindred spirits. Our families have become close, even though we’re 7,000 miles away. Thanks to technology, we talk once a week and share holidays. My life has been deeply enriched through Jihoon and his choirs. It’s truly a ministry between ourselves and our ensembles, because once you meet someone of kindred spirits, they’re family. And we are.”

Tuesday night’s joint performance included individual performances by both choirs, as well as combined pieces. The night ended with Park introducing SOS’s goodbye song to Belmont Chorale, a piece they sang in English and then finished in Korean. Chorale completed the event by singing an Irish blessing that was first read aloud in Korean by Belmont student musician Christine Chong.

“Before I knew it, I turned around and both choirs were holding hands and swaying to the music,” Ames said. “It was truly, truly touching. So many people have since sent me messages saying how special the night was for them to watch. It was such a blessing to us all.”

As student musicians, it’s incredibly valuable to have the chance to sing alongside seasoned, talented musicians, Ames said. And this opportunity was filled with such musicians. “As writers like to read great stories, it’s so powerful for musicians to perform with those who have a quality product–and both of these choirs produce high quality products. It builds your own musicianship, it builds your respect for other high quality performers and it leaves you in awe.”

Senior Liberal Studies student and Chorale Member Shantal Francis said the best part of singing alongside SOS was the energy they brought to the performance. “Their passion for music was immeasurable and they were so unified,” Francis said. “You could truly tell they were a team. We all went along for this journey that filled the room with love, depth and beautiful music.”

Beyond her musical experiences, Francis said she’s looking towards a career working with international nonprofit organizations after graduation, and the opportunity to engage with professionals from another country was incredibly meaningful. “This experience makes you realize that there is a common foundation among people,” she said. “I don’t speak Korean and many of the members of SOS did not speak English, but that just did not matter. When you have a common goal, in this case, a musical exchange and inspiriting one another, you can find ways to cross cultural borders.”