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 Named on College Choice’s ‘Best Christian Colleges List’

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Belmont was recently named as number seven on College Choice’s “Best Christian Colleges” in 2015 list.

The list was assembled based on criteria college freshman said was most important when deciding what school to attend. These topics include “academic reputation, financial aid offerings, overall cost and success of graduates in the post-college job market.”

Under the Belmont profile, the list mentions the University’s No. 5 ranking among universities in the South according to U.S. News & World Report and calls Belmont one of the “Most Innovative” in the nation. A write up on the ranking from Newsmax mentions that, with more than 7,200 students and more growth to come, Belmont claims the title of “largest ecumenical Christian university in America.”

Higgins Receives Nursing Education Excellence Award

Dr. Leslie Higgins, professor of nursing and director of Belmont’s Graduate Studies in Nursing, was recently named as the recipient of the Tennessee Nurses Association (TNA) Nursing Excellence – Nursing Education Award. The Education Excellence award recognizes a nursing faculty who reflects outstanding performance in promoting and maintaining excellence in professional practice, mentorship and educational standards, and provides leadership to improve quality of care.

Serving as a nurse educator for 40 years, Dr. Higgins began with a joint appointment at Vanderbilt School of Nursing/Vanderbilt Medical Center and has continued to work with students since then. Her nominator said of her, “Leslie coined the phrase “the Belmont touch” to characterize a graduate program that is rigorous but student-centered. She acknowledges her high expectations for students, and sets a climate wherein students want to perform at their very best. She shows students how to think critically through her own use of this process. In conversation with Leslie, one can always see “the wheels turning” as she thinks through complex phenomena and encourages students to do the same. Her approach to nursing education is grounded in evidence-based practices, while emphasizing the art of nursing that attends to the whole person.”

Jazz String Quartet Performs at National Music Educators Conference

Jazz String QuartetThe Belmont University Jazz String Quartet performed at the 2015 National Association for Music Educators Conference at the Gaylord Opryland Resort and Convention Center in Nashville on October 25.  The Quartet was one of seven performing ensembles selected from a national pool of applicants.

The quartet is made up of Timothy Hayes and Aria Stiles, violin, Brett Shocker, viola and Timothy Kampen, cello and is coached by Tracy Silverman, Instructor of Commercial Violin.

Alpha Epsilon Delta Students Volunteer at Remote Area Medical

After hearing of Remote Area Medical (RAM) from Professor of Biology Dr. Nicholas Ragsdale, student Ambrose Rice was interested in getting members of Belmont’s Alpha Epsilon Delta (AED) Pre-Health Club to participate. With mobile clinics set up around the U.S., RAM serves to prevent pain and alleviate suffering by offering medical services such as check-ups, eye examinations, dental care and more at no charge. RAM’s standard of service combines high quality health care with compassion and cooperation from supporters, investors, practitioners and the organization’s many volunteers.

Belmont’s AED club brought 13 students to support the clinic in Henderson, Tennessee, arriving as early as 5 a.m. to begin. Students began their shifts by registering patients, some of which had waited days to be seen by a physician for the first time in years. From there, the group was split into teams who worked in the dental clinic, performed small examinations to prep patients for the optometrist and assisted with fluid disposal.

RAMThe AED group who participated included Monica Bond, Mohamed Darwish, Austin DeMaagd, Nelly Grigorian, Sherif Helmey, Kallan Hoover, Hope Kramer, Libby Ligon, Anna Margret McDonnell, Jasmine Niazi, Julisa Nunez, Brook Pugsley and Ambrose Rice. For the students, the opportunity was invaluable as they were able to experience service in the industry they are pursuing for future careers.

Julisa Nunez said, “Experiencing RAM really opened my eyes on the shortage of doctors that the United States has in rural areas. My favorite part of being a part of this experience was seeing the smiles and gratitude of patients who received care even though they had been in line a day before the clinic opened its doors. I also loved seeing so many healthcare professionals come together for the sole purpose of helping the patient. Being able to pursue my passion of helping people in need was fulfilled with this short trip and has motivated me and reinforced my desire to pursue medicine.”

 

 

 

 

Mathematics Major Passes Actuarial Exam

SavannahSavannah Halliday, junior mathematics major, recently passed the Actuarial Exam P/1, the first of a series of nine exams which are required for full status as an actuary. P/1 has a pass rate of less than 50 percent.

Advised by Dr. Daniel Biles, The Belmont Actuarial Students Society is an organization for students interested in pursuing the Actuarial profession.

Psychology Club, Psi Chi Volunteers at Cottage Cove

Members from Belmont’s Psychology Club and Psi Chi volunteered at Cottage Cove on Friday, October 23. Participating students included Kathryn Graeff, Bianca Flury, Katy Coffer, Candace Hearn, Diana Neculcea, Krystal Smith, Kayla Evans, Emily Boyd and Iris Chiang.

Cottage Cove provides an after-school program with an expanded program during the summer and school breaks. This program is offered fat no charge, by full scholarship, to more than 85 Nashville students each day. Their goal is to see children learn to rise above their circumstances, thrive and contribute to society. Cottage Cove’s programs exist to provide children with the keys necessary to unlock their future.

Niedzwiecki Presents at Ecology and Evolutionary Genetics Conference

John NiedzwieckiAssociate Professor of Biology Dr. John Niedzwiecki recently attended the 2015 South East Population Ecology and Evolutionary Genetics Conference (SEPEEG), hosted by the University of Georgia, at the Rock Eagle 4H Center in Eatonton, Georgia.

Attended by approximately 100 faculty, post-doctorates and graduate students from around the southeast, SEPEEG included research talks, posters and a keynote address. Niedzwiecki presented a talk entitled “Using Dystopian Fiction to Enhance Learning and Alleviate Fears of Evolution and Genetics” based on his work in Belmont’s Learning Communities with Dr. Wyeth Burgess of the English Department.

Faculty Present at World Council for Curriculum and Instruction Meeting

Associate Professor of Music Business Dr. Cheryl Slay Carr, Assistant Processof of Sport Science Dr. Marnie Vanden Noven and Professor of Mathematics and Director of the Teaching Center Dr. Mike Pinter recently presented a session entitled “The Difficulty of Talking About Diversity: Cultural Leadership Cohort Faculty” at the 2015 North American Chapter of the World Council for Curriculum and Instruction (NAC-WCCI) meeting.  NAC-WCCI’s 2015 theme was Creating Educational Environment that Embrace Diversity. 

The group’s presentation included information about the formation, development and ongoing plans for two Cultural Leadership Faculty Cohort groups at Belmont which include faculty members from six Belmont colleges.

Business Students Wow at International CIBER Competition

Belmont students from the College of Business recently participated in the 2015 CIBER Case Competition among six other universities including Florida State, San Diego State, Purdue, University of Vermont, University of Maryland and University of Connecticut. The team, made up of Parker Higgins, Evan Metcalf, Maggie Fincher and Jackie Tomlinson, worked on business cases with three students from universities around the world and had one day to complete and present the case.

Parker Higgins
Parker Higgins

Higgins (having only three teammates) successfully presented his case and wowed the judges, his fellow students and those in the audience. For the first time in CIBER’s history, Higgins swept three of four individual awards including Best Presenter, Best Q&A in the Preliminary Round and Best Presenter in the Final Round and led his team to win the overall case competition.

After his presentation, Higgins was offered a job by a judge who works for PricewaterhouseCoopers an any preferred location. Higgens said, “The CIBER case competition was an essential event in my development as a student and a young professional. The competition embodied all of the practical requirements to be a successful business professional: travel, team-building, working with people from all over the world, globally-minded business strategy formulation, and making new connections/friendships.  Diligence and hard work, despite unfortunate odds, paid off in this case and this has cemented the idea that there is nothing one can’t accomplish if he puts his head down and works hard.”

For more information on CIBER Case Competition, click here.

Belmont ‘Welcomes Home’ First African American Graduate

Dr. Fannie Hewlett inspires students, faculty, staff, alumni in her return to campus

“When I’m stuck and I’ve done all I can do, I always turn to the Master,” Dr. Fannie Hewlett, Belmont College’s first African American graduate, said at a convocation held in her honor during the University’s 2015 Diversity Week. To celebrate Belmont’s diversity efforts and further the campus’ 125th Anniversary, the University’s Welcome Home Team invited Dr. Hewlett to campus to share her story with faculty, staff, students and alumni.

Growing up in Bay Minette, Alabama, Hewlett lived on a red dirt road where mail was delivered a mile away from her house to Rural Route Box 3. While in high school, Alabama Governor George Wallace started the William Lowndes Yancey State Junior College in her hometown and Hewlett, with a group of her friends, enrolled. It was there that Hewlett said she developed a love for psychology, largely due to the commitment and dedication of her inspirational teachers.

Dr Fannie HewlettAfter graduating from junior college, Hewlett said her next step was unclear. So she turned to the Master and waited. Belmont College, some 420 miles away, sent a brochure that landed in her Rural Route Box 3 mailbox, making her decision more clear. “God told me it was time,” Hewlett said. “This is where I was supposed to be at that time. He knew that, and the rest is history. This is my story.”

Though she had no money and no car, Hewlett worked with the College to secure funds for her education and found a family friend who was traveling through Alabama to provide her transportation. There was only one thing left – “I just had to figure out where Nashville was.”

After arriving on campus, Hewlett said there were two things that immediately stuck out – beautiful gazebos and a welcoming spirit. “I never felt that I was unwelcome,” Hewlett said. “I never felt that they were just bringing me here because they needed that face to say to the world ‘Hey, look at us!’ I always felt that Belmont was welcoming me into the family.” After graduating from the College in 1970, Hewlett went on to obtain her Master’s Degree from Fisk University, her Doctorate from the University of Tennessee at Knoxville and pursued a rich career in higher education that ultimately led to her most recent position as interim president at Chattanooga State Community College.

Despite a career full of success and accolades, Hewlett still looks to Belmont as one of the most formative and valuable opportunities of her life. “Being [here] has been one of the heights of my experiences. I couldn’t have asked for a better place to be,” Hewlett said. “The people I have met here are the people who have helped me to become what I have become today. For that, I am eternally grateful.”

Taking an opportunity to give advice to audience members, Hewlett emphasized the importance of Dr. Fannie Hewlett 3passion, resilience and a deeply rooted faith in God. “Surround yourself with your faith. Surround yourself with God. As God is leading you, get yourself out of the way. Carry him with you always so when you fall down, you know he is going to pick you up,” she said.

Following her presentation, Hewlett was presented with a signed copy of Belmont’s recently published history book, From Here to Anywhere: Belmont University from 1890 – 2015, and the declaration of the establishment of the Dr. Fannie Hewlett Leadership Award. Scheduled to be presented to both an undergraduate and graduate student in the spring, the award is intended to celebrate diversity by recognizing courage, leadership and contribution to the creation of inclusion at Belmont.

Hewlett concluded her time on campus by encouraging members of the Belmont community to remain involved in the Belmont story. “I could not have asked for anything better at this stage in my life and career,” Hewlett said. “The history of Belmont is so rich, and it is continuing to evolve. You all are becoming part of that history. So, kudos to you. It is wonderful that you are going to become part of such a rich history that keeps growing.”

Belmont’s 2015 Diversity Week continues with Celebrate Diversity, an event featuring spoken word, live music and dance on Thurs., Oct. 29 at 6 p.m. in the Beaman Student Life Center. The week’s final convocation will be presented by local artist James Threalkill who will celebrate Belmont’s 125 anniversary by taking tiles created by members of the Belmont community and forming a collaborative mosaic art installation piece.

To view a video of Dr. Hewlett’s presentation, click here.