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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Alumna Sanford Named “Rookie of the Year” by Tennessee Art Education Association

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The Tennessee Art Education Association recently named 2014 alumna Emily Sanford as their 2015-2016 “Rookie of the Year,” for her excellent work as a first-year art educator at Glengarry Elementary. The award is given to recognize excellence in professional accomplishment and service by an art educator.

Sanford graduated from Belmont with honors in December 2014 and was hired at the school in January. A release from the district says she has helped create a strong art classroom that helps her students express their voice. It further stated, “Ms. Sanford exemplifies the highly qualified individuals who are in the field of art education today: leaders, teachers, students, scholars and advocates who give their best to the profession.”

TAEA is a nonprofit organization whose mission is to advance quality visual arts education and membership includes elementary, middle level and high school art teachers in Tennessee.

Metro Council Presents 125th Anniversary Proclamation

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Councilmember Burkley Allen celebrates Belmont’s 125th Anniversary and 125 hours of service with proclamation presentation

At a celebration of Belmont’s 125 Hours of Service Week on Friday, Nov. 13, Councilmember Burkley Allen, of Metro Nashville’s 18th District, presented Vice President of Development and External Relations Dr. Perry Moulds with a proclamation to recognize Belmont’s 125th anniversary.

To attendees who participated in the week’s activities Dr. Moulds said, “Is it a great day to be at Belmont, or what? It is such a blessing to be at a university like this and be among folks like you who choose to give of themselves like this.”

Allen addressed the crowd by reading the proclamation and detailing Belmont’s rich history, beginning as Belmont College for Young Women and ending with the Belmont University celebrated today.

The proclamation closes by saying, “We, the signatories hereunder, being Members of the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County, do hereby join in the celebration of [Belmont’s] 125 years of academic excellence and empowering lives of purpose.”

 

Thorndike and Pinter Lead Innovative Courses in the Honors Core Panel

Honors Program Director Jonathan Thorndike and Teaching Center Director and Professor of Mathematics Mike Pinter recently led a panel discussion on “Innovative Math and Science Courses in the Honors Core” at the National Association of African-American Honors Programs Convention at the Opryland Convention center.

Pinter has been a faculty member at Belmont  since 1989 and previously served as associate dean for the School of Sciences and interim dean for the College of Arts and Sciences. In addition to regularly teaching general education mathematics courses and upper-level combinatorics course, Pinter teaches in the Honors Program and teaches a first-year seminar course focusing on issues related to limitations (including disabilities). His curriculum interests include quantitative reasoning across the curriculum, discrete mathematics and the pedagogy of mathematics instruction. He is a past winner of Belmont’s  Chaney Distinguished Professor Award and Carnegie Foundation CASE Tennessee Professor of the Year.

JT and MP Led DiscussionJonathan Thorndike is Honors Program director and has been a professor at Belmont since 1998. He served on the National Council of Alpha Chi Honor Scholarship Society as the secretary-treasurer of the Southeast region from 2003-2012. He teaches interdisciplinary courses in the Humanities sequence including Classical Civilizations, The Age of Exploration (16th-17th centuries), Discovery and Revolution (18th-19th centuries) and Topics in the 20th and 21st Centuries. He also teaches a study abroad course at King’s College-London on C. S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tolkien and the Inklings. He is past winner of Belmont’s Presidential Faculty Achievement Award.

Belmont’s Honors Program includes a core curriculum that uniquely integrates mathematics and science analytics courses into the humanities curriculum.  Rather than introductory courses to be avoided, Belmont’s “Analytics: Math” and “Analytics: Science” courses are four-credit experiences that combine the best of innovative pedagogy, active learning, problem solving and a lab component. Analytics addresses important goals of the National Collegiate Honors Council, such as providing highly-reputed standards and models of excellence for students and faculty across the campus, and they serve as a laboratory within which faculty feel welcome to experiment with new subjects, approaches and pedagogies.

‘125 Hours of Service’ Concludes Week of Giving Back to the Community

More than 600 students, faculty, staff and alumni contribute to round-the-clock, week-long volunteer project

With Maddox Grand Atrium packed with students, faculty and staff decked out in gray “Serve Somebody” T-shirts, the unprecedented “125 Hours of Service” project came to an end with Bruiser cheering throughout the final minute-long countdown before noon. What began Sunday morning at 7 a.m. with 20+ students serving breakfast at Room in the Inn concluded today on campus as volunteers wrote notes to place in their Operation Christmas Child boxes and gathered to watch the final minutes tick off the 125 hours of service. Throughout the week, Bruins of all ages have served at numerous sites across the city, including ThriftSmart, Martha O’Bryan Center, Nashville Rescue Mission, Second Harvest, Tennessee Voices for Children, Cheekwood and many others (images from throughout the week can be seen on the Tagboard and Belmont’s SmugMug gallery).

tn voices of children-103-X2 thriftsmart-120-X2The event, which was organized as part of the University’s 125th Anniversary Celebration, saw more than 600 individuals volunteering for 744 slots at 26 different local nonprofits as well as other charitable efforts. Shifts ranged in length from an hour to 14 hours hosting Room in the Inn overnight, and together the Belmont community contributed more than 1,706 volunteer hours in the five-day span.

Belmont President Dr. Bob Fisher said, “I always tell our incoming students that their greatest privilege in life is to have the resources and abilities to serve someone else. I couldn’t be any more proud of our community in the way they have lived out the Belmont mission ‘to engage and transform the world’ this week as we’ve served Nashville for 125 consecutive hours.”

freedoms promise-100-X2 knitting project-100-X2Senior music therapy major Sally Ann Jones, a native of Blue Ridge, Georgia, volunteered along with her SAI sorority at the local veteran’s hospital. “I thought the idea of serving for 125 hours straight was so creative when I first heard about it in August! I love that Belmont constantly gives back to the community. This was a fabulous outlet to show Nashville that Belmont is thankful to call this city home and is evidenced by us taking action. SAI often does ‘musicales’ in chapter meetings, sometimes extending these to members of the Belmont community or by holding them in local nursing homes. Upon hearing about #Serve125 and realizing that it fell over Veteran’s Day, we thought this would be a perfect opportunity to include our veterans in our next musicale! We brought many different patriotic songs to play and sing in individual patient rooms and hallways. By the end of our couple of hours, however, many veterans were requesting for us to play Hank Williams and Loretta Lynn. So we did! Even though it wasn’t what we originally planned, it was how the veterans wanted to be served that day, and that’s what it all came down to in the first place.”

final project and closing event-142-X2Belmont’s Office of Service Learning, led by Director Tim Stewart, played a pivotal role in helping organize the entire #Serve125 event. In addition to meeting regularly with the planning team, Stewart and his student staff–Ali Humbrecht, Jesse Peck and Alisha Gatchel–also entered the details of each project in the GetConnected online system, ensuring the entire event flowed smoothly.

Humbrecht, a freshman and native of Willow Grove, Pennsylvania, juggles her work with Service Learning with her studies in the Honors program, focusing on political communication and German. Still, she managed to participate in four projects this week working with the Nashville Rescue Mission, SGA’s Christmas card project, the Edgehill Community Garden and Operation Christmas Child. “I think that community service is incredibly important. Giving back to one’s community can give you a whole new perspective on your life or community as well as an opportunity to meet people you wouldn’t have met before, experience things you couldn’t outside of service and  memories to last a lifetime… I think of Belmont’s 125 Hours of Service as the ideal way to celebrate this anniversary. While throwing a party would have been fun, it would not have shown the community what Belmont is really about – empowering men and women to engage and transform the world with intelligence, compassion, courage and faith. These hours show our community how grateful we are for all that they have done for us over 125 years, and they are the best way to give back to our neighbors.”

Slay Carr Presents at National Conference

Cheryl Slay CarrAssociate Professor of Music Business Dr. Cheryl Slay Carr recently presented “The Pedagogy of Diversity in the Entertainment Industry: Teaching the Business of Jazz” at the annual conference of the National Association of African American Honors Programs.

Alumnus Wins Milken Educator Award

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Belmont alumnus Misty Ayres-Miranda of the Nashville School of the Arts was recently recognized with the Milken Educator Award which includes $25,000 for her outstanding work in education.

This award is only given to up to 40 educators and recognizes Ayres-Miranda’s work and service to her school including her creation of the Literary Arts Conservatory, a venue for teens to express themselves creatively through poetry and the spoken word.

For more information, click here

Hawley Delivers Acoustics Instruction in Song

Scott HawleyAt the 170th Acoustical Society of America meeting in Jacksonville, FL held Nov, 2-6, Belmont Associate Professor of Physics and Songwriter Dr. Scott Hawley shared one of his science education songs.  In his song “Baby in Hertz (Simple Harmonic Motion),” the chorus consists of spelling out an equation for oscillation (as a mathematical homage to R&B songs such as “R-E-S-P-E-C-T.”)

Hawley notes, “Simple Harmonic Motion is a fundamental paradigm for understanding a variety of phenomena not only in acoustics, but throughout physics.” Accordingly, the lyrics of the 2nd verse of the song point out, “This phenomenon’s so universal, I can’t overemphasize it: Any force, for small displacements, you can prob’ly linearize it!”

ECO Club Hosts Richland Creek Clean-up

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Belmont’s Environment and Conservation (ECO) Club and Environmental Science program hosted a clean-up for their adopted section of Richland Creek on Saturday, Oct. 17. Adopted in the fall of 2013 through an environmental science course service learning project, the adoption requires at least one clean-up event and two trash removal events to be hosted each year.

Volunteers spent two hours picking up trash out of the creek. After the work was completed, ECO Club Co-President Lindsay Millward led a conversation about water pollution and the importance respecting our environment.

Students Work Alongside Industry’s Best

Belmont’s Rock Showcase, held in the Curb Event Center on Saturday, Nov. 7, provided unique opportunities for student producers to work among some of the industry’s top talent. Two Parnelli Award winning system techs from Sound Image (the 2015 Parnelli Award for Sound Company of the Year) including Andrew Dowling (Tom Petty, Maroon 5) and Jim “Fish” Miller (Enrique Iglesias) worked alongside students and served as techs for the shows.

Rock ShowcaseDowling and Miller brought Eastern Acoustic Works ANYA adaptive array system, the most current, expensive and advanced large-format PA system on the market. Additionally, Dowling came to Lecturer of Audio Engineering Technology Scott Munsell’s course prior to the event to explain the technology.

Baldridge Celebrates Career Successes

Lecturer of Audio Engineering Technology Joe Baldridge has recently celebrated a number of career successes including a personal first with the recording of the No. 1 “John Cougar, John Deere, John 3:16” for artist Keith Urban. The song was Urban’s 19th No. 1 and set a record for the most radio plays in one week in Mediabase history.

Joe BaldridgeBaldridge has been busy in the studio with recent projects including:

  • Working with producer Dann Huff for The Band Perry’s third studio album, “Heart and Beat,” scheduled to release this Christmas
  • Recording Chris Tomlin’s “Adore: Christmas Songs of Worship” recently released for Sixsteps and producer Ed Cash at Ocean Way Nashville, assisted by Belmont graduate Joshua Ditty
  • Recording Chris Tomlin’s new single, “Good, Good Father” with Ross Copperman at Ocean Way Nashville, assisted by Ditty
  • Recording Eli Young Band, assisted by Belmont graduate Jasper Lemaster and Drake White for Copperman and Jeremy Stover
  • Recording Urban’s new single “Break On Me”
  • Working on four new songs for Urban’s upcoming 2016 album “Ripcord.” Sessions were assisted by Ditty and Chris Miller at Ocean Way Nashville and featured a band consisting of Matt Chamberlain, Pino Palladino and Charlie Judge