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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Mathematics and Computer Science Majors Participate in Regional Competition

A group of six Belmont mathematics and computer science majors and minors recently competed in the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) International Collegiate Programming Contest (ICPC). The 2015 Mid-Central Regional contest was held at Tennessee Technological University with a total of 25 participating teams. The contest represents the geographic area of Missouri, Arkansas, Illinois (including the Greater Chicago Metropolitan Area in Indiana), Kentucky and Tennessee.

During the competition, teams of three students represented their universities in multiple events. Volunteer coaches prepare their teams with intense training and instruction in algorithms, programming and teamwork strategy. The contest fosters creativity, teamwork and innovation in building new software programs and enables students to test their ability to perform under pressure. Teams of three university students are pitted against eight or more real-world problems and given a five-hour deadline. Huddled around a single computer, competitors race against the clock in a battle of logic, strategy and mental endurance.

Belmont’s two teams consisted of Chris O’Brien, James Dickenson, Michael Kranzlein, Katie Kruzan, Luke Johnson and Chandler Capps.  Dr. Bill Hooper serves as the team coach.

Dr. Ronnie Littlejohn Named 2015 Tennessee Professor of the Year

Belmont professors selected six times since 2000 for statewide honor

Belmont’s Dr. Ronnie Littlejohn, professor of philosophy and director of the University’s Asian Studies program, was named today as the 2015 Tennessee Professor of the Year, an award selection determined by The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching and the Council for Advancement and Support of Education (CASE). Dr. Littlejohn, who is currently in Washington, D.C. for special ceremonies to receive his award, was selected from more than 300 top professors in the United States. Belmont will be holding its own celebration to honor Dr. Littlejohn on Dec. 1 from 2:30-4:30 p.m. in the Massey Board Room on the fourth floor of the Belmont’s Massey Business Center.

Belmont University Provost Dr. Thomas Burns said, “Belmont strives to be a leader among teaching universities, and Ronnie’s achievements and passion for his work exemplify that commitment. An innovator in the classroom, a dedicated mentor to students and an inspiration to his colleagues, his selection as Tennessee Professor of the Year places him on a platform to be nationally recognized for the excellence we’ve been privileged to see on this campus for 30-plus years.”

The author of six books, Littlejohn received his B.A., master’s and Ph.D. from Baylor University and has conducted post-doctoral work at several institutions including Harvard and Notre Dame. Littlejohn joined the Belmont faculty in 1984 to help begin a philosophy department and served as its chair for 20 years (1993-2013). He also designed the Belmont Honors Program (serving as its first director from 1985-88) as well as the interdisciplinary Asian Studies program, which he continues to oversee. In fact, Littlejohn was Tennessee’s co-director of the National Consortium for Teaching about Asia (NCTA) from 2007-2011. He has also taught Asian philosophical and religious beliefs for Air Force officers of the Pacific Command (PACOM) Theater of Special Operations Forces (2011), and he has led workshops to enhance the teaching of Asia at more than a dozen universities. Littlejohn’s current work is in Comparative Philosophy, especially classical Confucianism and Daoism. He has many teaching awards to his credit, including the Award for Innovative Excellence in Teaching presented by the International Conference on Teaching and Learning (2003).

Dr. Bryce Sullivan, dean of Belmont’s College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences, said, “Dr. Littlejohn is without question among the top teachers I have had the pleasure of serving with in my long academic career. His love of learning, exuberance for teaching, deep appreciation of liberal arts education and concern for the welfare of his students and colleagues are among the many reasons he is in my pantheon of teachers. He mobilizes his students and seeks to make them both passionate about the many questions that arise from our global interactions, and he also helps them explore what we do not know about the vast ways in which people flourish as humans. The word philosophy means, of course, the love of learning, and Dr. Littlejohn fits that definition perfectly as a teacher and scholar.”

An array of colleagues and former students offered recommendations on behalf of Dr. Littlejohn, and the following quotes are just a few sampled excerpts that help detail why he was selected as Tennessee’s Professor of the Year:

“Now it is one thing to say that a teacher inspired you enough to take their course, but it is another entirely to say that in the second semester of your junior year, a teacher sparked a fire for learning within you that caused you to earn a second degree come graduation day… however, his mentoring did not end the day that I left Belmont’s campus, and neither did the major impact he has had on my life. I chose to continue my education in the field that he had inspired me to pursue and am currently living in China, where I am a Master student on a full-ride Chinese Government Scholarship, a scholarship for which he wrote me a recommendation. I will be graduating in June with a Master of Law in Chinese Politics and Diplomacy, and he has already been contacting me about my future plans and how he can help.”

Tara Rochelle Clance, Master Candidate Fudan University

“Dr. Littlejohn doesn’t just teach undergraduates; he uses his class to touch and ultimately transform their lives. Again and again, I’ve encountered people who took his class twenty years ago and still remember the books they read, the discussions they had and the singular presence in the front of the room. Part of the reason for the impact Ronnie has on students is his personality and disposition: he is funny, charming, highly personable and (unusual especially among philosophers) utterly without pretension.”

Dr. Noel Boyle, associate professor of philosophy

“The story of Dr. Ronnie Littlejohn and a vocation of scholarly teaching and learning is one of continuing expansion or intellectual space and pathways for an institution and its faculty, for higher education and its global connections. But it stays rooted in the classroom, because Ronnie himself stays rooted there—knowing that these larger transformations he has helped foster are only meaningful if that student—third one, back row, slouched over—can latch onto her own questions, connect them to the questions and issues of his time and of humanity, and move from that question into her own quest for growth and understanding.”

—Dr. Marcia McDonald, professor of English

Belmont University professors represent six of the past 16 Tennessee Professors of the Year: 2000 winner the late Dr. Mike Awalt (Philosophy), 2001 winner Dr. David Julseth (Spanish), 2007 winner Dr. Pete Giordano (Psychology), 2008 winner Dr. John Gonas (Finance), 2012 winner Dr. Mike Pinter (Math) and Dr. Littlejohn this year.

CASE and the Carnegie Foundation have been partners in offering the U.S. Professors of the Year awards program since 1981. Additional support for the program is received from Phi Beta Kappa, which sponsors an evening congressional reception, the Professional and Organizational Development (POD) Network in Higher Education and other higher education associations.

This year, a state Professor of the Year was recognized in 35 states. CASE assembled two preliminary panels of judges comprised of deans and professors, education reporters and government and foundation representatives to select finalists. The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching then convened the third and final panel to select the winners. Dr. Littlejohn was selected from faculty members nominated by colleges and universities throughout the country.

About the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching
The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching is an independent policy and research center that supports needed transformations in American education through tighter connections between teaching practice, evidence of student learning, the communication and use of this evidence and structured opportunities to build knowledge.

About the Council for Advancement and Support of Education
Founded in 1974 with headquarters in Washington, D.C., with offices in London, Singapore and Mexico City, the Council for Advancement and Support of is a professional association serving educational institutions and the advancement professionals who work on their behalf in alumni relations, communications, development, marketing and allied areas.

Shin Presents at Symposium on Faith and Culture

Stephen ShinDr. Stephen Hankil Shin, assistant professor of sport science, recently presented in a colloquium sessions entitled “Global Perspectives on Sports” at the Baylor Symposium on Faith and Culture centered around “The Spirit of Sports.” Shin’s presentation discussed how church sponsored sport and recreational programs can help immigrant ethnic groups with church engagement.

Based on the context of acculturation theory and the relationships between churches and recreational programming, Shin discussed how these outreach programs can successfully work with immigrant groups who could potentially become church members. Additionally, recreational ministry and strategic plans were presented for further discussions and suggestions.

The Symposium sought to discover “the significance of sports in our lives, especially the ways that contemporary sports both support and compromise the cultivation of human excellence and our relationship with others and God.” Shin said his time at Baylor was incredibly fulfilling as he learned from other colleagues and participated in collaborative discussion.

“As an instructor at a student-centered Christian university, it was meaningful for me to meet with scholars and colleagues from other Christian schools, churches and organizations  to learn and experience how to achieve the mission of Christian commitment,” Shin said.

Gwaltney Honored as Alma Mater’s Outstanding Alumnus

Dean of the College of Theology and Christian Ministry Dr. Darrell Gwaltney was recently honored as an Outstanding Alumni for his alma mater, Missouri Baptist University. The award was part of the school’s 2015 Homecoming celebration and honored alumni who have made a significant impact throughout their community and society.

Honorees were selected by the Alumni Board of Governors and presented during the annual Homecoming Chapel.

Above photo obtained from Missouri Baptist University’s news website. 

 

Alumnus Recognized as Super Lawyer

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Wes Camden, a lawyer at Brooks Pierce and 2000 Belmont graduate, was recently recognized in the 2015 edition of “Super Lawyers Business Edition,” an annual guide to the nation’s top business law firms and attorneys.

Super Lawyers is a rating service of outstanding lawyers from more than 70 practice areas who have attained a high-degree of peer recognition and professional achievement. The selection process includes independent research, peer nominations and peer evaluations. “Super Lawyers Business Edition,” published annually, serves as the go-to guide for general counsel and executives responsible for making legal hiring decisions.

Additional information about the guide’s methodology can be found here.

Simmons Receives Award for Published Article

Lakisha SimmonsAssistant Professor of Management Information Systems Dr. Lakisha Simmons recently received the Association for Educational Communications and Technology DDL Journal Article Award – Quantitative Based for an article she co-authored.

The article, entitled “Understanding transactional distance in web-based learning environments: An empirical study,” was published in the British Journal of Educational Technology and co-written with Xiaoxia Huang, Aruna Chandra and Concetta A. DePaolo.

For more information, click here.

 

Moot Court Team Wows at Regionals, Heads to National Competition

Belmont’s National Moot Court Competition team, comprised of students Jordan Kennamer, Tyler Sanders and Health Henley, placed 2nd in the University’s region at a recent competition in Oxford, Mississippi. As regional finalists, the team will advance to the national competition and travel to New York in February.

Winning 2nd place in the region places Belmont’s team above nine other participating schools in the rankings including Faulkner University, Loyola University, Cumberland University, Mississippi College, Louisiana State University, University of Mississippi, University of Memphis, Vanderbilt University and the University of Tennessee. The University of Alabama took the 1st place spot.

February’s event will be the first time Belmont’s team has competed in a National Moot Court Competition.

Missy Martin Makes Project Green Challenge Finals

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Sophomore Missy Martin is making her way through the ranks of The Project Green Challenge, an international 30-day eco challenge, hosted by non-profit Turning Green, inviting close to 4,000 students representing 422 campuses globally to complete challenges each day. According to an article on EcoWatch, “Its goal is to inform, inspire and mobilize, to create a global call to action for college and high school students inspiring the transition from conventional to conscious living.”

Missy Martin 2To be a finalist, Martin earned the most points out of any student. She completed an online exam and submitted the reflection video below. The first challenge is “green,” and it builds up to “greener,” “greenest” and sometimes “extra credit” depending on the day. There is a theme each day that goes with the challenges, and students start at the lowest “green” level and work their way up. As an individual moves up to each level, he or she can obtain more points. Judges at Turning Green look over the work and award points to those who have completed the challenges thoroughly and give prize packages to the top 10 “greener” and “greenest” submissions. 

Belmont finished 5th in the world, and individually, Martin placed first and will be part of the finals at the end of November. Martin is pursuing a double major in environmental science and social entrepreneurship with a minor and concentration in public relations and contemporary social issues, respectively. Missy Martin 3“The guidance and resources Turning Green provided me this month epitomizes the root of relationships, the budding of connections and the blooming of friendships in the global community by providing me the opportunity to engage in discussions and take action with local leaders, school administrators, peers, friends and family,” she said. To read more about Martin, her passions and how she became involved with the competition, read her finalist profile or view her PGC Portfolio.

The next step for selected finalists is to travel to San Francisco from November 18-23 for the PGC 2015 Finals, an eco summit where they will work with like-minded peers and esteemed eco leaders, while sharing their PGC experiences and compete become the PGC 2015 Champion. At the end of the summit, finalists perform a mock TED talk in California for a panel of judges and the chance to win the prize package valued at more than $12,000.

 

Beggs, Greene Receive ACCP Teaching and Learning Certificates

Drs. Ashton Beggs and Elisa Greene, assistant professors of pharmacy practice, recently received American College of Clinical Pharmacy Teaching and Learning Certificates.  This program, established in 2006, is an effort to assist in the recruitment, motivation and preparation of clinical educators who can inspire students to advance the profession of pharmacy.

Beggs and Greene attended two live meetings with interactive workshops focused on education in the didactic and experiential settings. Additionally, online courses were required throughout the year. To successfully complete the program, faculty members created an online formative portfolio to demonstrate teaching growth as a result of the program. This year, the program graduated 33 faculty members from across the country.

Ashton Beggs
Ashton Beggs
Elisa Greene
Elisa Greene

Belmont Mansion’s Restoration Efforts Profiled in the Tennessean

An article in the Tennessean, published Nov. 14, details the extensive steps taken to restore the Belmont Mansion to the way Adelicia and Joseph A.S. Acklen intended during the mid-19th century.

The Central Parlor is the current project, and as Mansion Executive Director Mark Brown told the Tennessean, “Meticulous research was necessary to discover the details of the room’s ornate décor.”

Nashville artist Phil Carroll is working to restore the trompe l’oeil cornice, the sky and clouds and the elaborate twining vine detected from research and investigations. When completed, the final steps of the restoration will include painting and faux-graining the woodwork and the baseboard, hanging wallpaper and laying down carpet. The project is projected to be completed by March.