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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Cannonier Quoted in Harvard Business Review’s Daily Stat

Cannonier-colinAssistant Professor of Economics Dr. Colin Cannonier was recently quoted in Harvard Business Review’s The Daily Stat, a daily electronic newsletter that provides quick facts and figures in an easily digestible format.

Cannonier provided information in HBR’s coverage of the U.S.’s Family Leave Act in The Daily Stat’s article “Family Leave Act in U.S. Increases Women’s Probability of Giving Birth.” Cannonier provided statistics on the frequency of births among women who are eligible under the Family and Medical Leave Act, versus those who aren’t.

For more information, click here.

 

Belmont University Hosts First Nashforward Mayoral Debate

mayoral-102Belmont University and The Tennessean, with broadcast partner WSMV-TV, presented the first of two Nashforward debates, the city’s premiere Mayoral Debate Series, on Thursday, May 21 in Belmont’s Massey Performing Arts Center.

Held in front of a packed crowd of close to 1,000 attendees, the debate featured all seven candidates currently vying for Nashville’s open mayoral seat: Megan Barry, Charles Robert Bone, David Fox, Bill Freeman, Howard Gentry, Jeremy Kane and Linda Eskind Rebrovick. Candidates addressed a variety of topics including leadership experience and style, crisis management and platform stances to ensure voters are well-informed on the issues facing Nashville as they head to the polls in August.

The Nashforward Series also included an opportunity for seven Belmont students to work alongside Tennessean Engagement Editor and event moderator David Plazas to write profiles on each candidate after reviewing a recent interview. Viewing the candidate’s platform with a millennial’s perspective in mind, the student profilers asked questions representing Nashville’s growing millennial population.

Dr. John Gonas Honored Through Establishment of Endowed Scholarship at Baccalaureate Service

baccalaureate-spring-2015-140Every spring, Belmont hosts its annual Baccalaureate Service to celebrate graduates and their families. While this year’s event started and ended just as it always does, the experience during Friday’s ceremony for Associate Professor of Finance Dr. John Gonas was very different.

Brennon Mobley, a senior student set to graduate at the next day’s commencement ceremony and a student-leader on Gonas’s Enactus team, was the 4th speaker at the event and told the story of how he came to Belmont, largely due to a meeting with Gonas during his junior year of high school. Following the Nashville flood of 2010, the pair met while clearing carpet out of a neighbor’s home and began talking about Belmont.

Gonas described an idea that eventually led to Spring Back Recycling, a nonprofit organization that recycles the inners of mattresses through the employment of previously incarcerated men. Mobley was interested. “[Dr. Gonas] told me that if I came to Belmont, I could be a part of a group of students that would help him launch it. I knew nothing about mattresses…What value could I possibly add? Those facts didn’t seem to matter to [Gonas]. He recognized my value within,” Mobley said.

Five years later, Spring Back Recycling has locations in five states and has recycled over 3 million pounds of used mattresses. The organization empowers disenfranchised men and provides the opportunity to “spring back” into society recognizing their value, the same value Mobley said Gonas saw in him.

Massey College of Business Partners with Foundations Recovery Network for Continuing Education

Fall-Campus-Life-2013-105The Belmont University Jack C. Massey College of Business is partnering with Foundations Recovery Network, the leader in behavioral healthcare events, to create a track of learning that will become a part of the organization’s ongoing conference offerings across the country.

Lee Pepper, Foundations Recovery Network’s chief marketing officer, said, “Foundations Recovery Network is always looking to increase the number of opportunities for professional development within the behavioral health industry, and we have always offered continuing education for clinical professionals at our national conferences. We’re now proud to be partnering with Belmont University’s Jack C. Massey College of Business to provide an accredited business certificate tailored specifically for our industry.”

Pat Raines, dean of the Jack C. Massey College of Business, added, “We are proud to create innovative learning opportunities for our partners in Middle Tennessee. Our partnership with Foundations Recovery Network reflects our mission to be engaged with the communities we serve through value-added relationships. It’s a win-win relationship for us, helping others in their network by bringing business skills development workshops to their national conferences, having impact on the national recovery community.”

As the behavioral health industry grows, Belmont will offer attendees of Foundations Recovery Network conferences business certificate training in key areas such as ethics, entrepreneurship, operations and strategy. The Foundations Recovery Network series of learning will offer 36 hours of educational training in various certificate tracks, and upon completion of 18 hours, students will receive the Foundations Recovery Network/Jack C. Massey College of Business certificate and continuing education units (CEUs).

The first track on ethics will be led by Harold Fogelberg and will start this summer at the “Innovations in Behavioral Healthcare” conference in Nashville June 22-23. The next series will be offered during the “Moments of Change” gathering in West Palm Beach, Florida Sept. 28 – Oct. 1, 2015.

Belmont University Named a College of Distinction

College-of-Tennessee-DistinctionBelmont University was again named among the nation’s Colleges of Distinction for providing innovative, teacher-centered undergraduate education and preparing graduates for real-world success. Based on the opinions of guidance counselors, educators and admissions professionals, the website and college guide profiles more than 220 of America’s best bets in higher education honors colleges that excel in four areas of undergraduate education: engaged students, great teaching, vibrant learning communities and successful outcomes.

Aside from the academic experience offered at the institutions selected, Colleges of Distinction are also chosen based on their first year program and experimental components of the curriculum. The organization believes institutions should be judged on what they are doing now and the development of their strategic plan, instead of their prestige historically.

Belmont will be profiled on the Colleges of Distinction website and in the official Colleges of Distinction eGuidebook,which will be available via online retailers and distributed free-of-charge to more than 40,000 high school and community college counselors.

Small Presents at American String Teachers Association National Conference

Achievers.Small_Assistant Professor of Music Elisabeth Small recently presented a session, “Shifting Strategies,” at the American String Teachers Association (ASTA) 2015  National Conference in Salt Lake City, Utah. The presentation focused on organizing the shifting process for string teachers and students to develop a comfort zone for fluid and reliable shifting. Small also explored ways to achieve confidence in shifting by examining and coordinating listening skills, left-hand logistics, bow planning and timing.

ASTA, founded more than 65 years ago, is a membership association for the national string community with approximately 8,000 members.

Murray Presents at Impact Investing and Center for Nonprofit Management Conferences

Haskell Murray

Assistant Professor in Belmont’s College of Business J. Haskell Murray recently presented at an impact investing conference sponsored by the University of Michigan and Morgan Lewis, a law firm. Immediately following that event, Murray presented at the Center for Nonprofit Management’s (CNM) Bridge to Excellence conference.

For more information on the impact investing conference click here.

Barton Presents at Biologists Conference

Chris BartonAssistant Professor of Biology Dr. Chris Barton recently presented in the Scholarship of Teaching Learning section at the 76th Annual Meeting of the Association of Southeastern Biologists in Chattanooga.  His presentation, “Using DNA Barcoding to Supplement Classical Taxonomic Methods in an Undergraduate Curriculum,” focused on the use of DNA barcoding, a molecular assay that uses DNA sequencing as a means to characterize plant and animal specimens that are otherwise difficult to identify. He also highlighted ways this technique can be incorporated into undergraduate science courses and research programs.

The Association of Southeastern Biologists (ASB)is the largest scientific professional organization in the southeastern U. S. with approximately 1400 members from 220 academic and 60 non-academic institutions. ASB’s mission is to promote biology through research and education and is supported each spring with an annual meeting where faculty and students (both graduates and undergraduates) present research in a friendly and collegial environment.

Alumna Trisha Yearwood Exhibit Coming To Country Music Hall of Fame

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JMK5229Alumna Trisha Yearwood, singer, entertainer, best-selling author and cooking show host, will soon be honored with a new exhibition at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, Trisha Yearwood: The Song Remembers WhenThe exhibition will open July 3 and run through December 2015.

The exhibit will include stage clothes, awards, photos, cooking items and other memorabilia from Yearwood’s personal collection, chronicling her life and career. Starting with her hometown of Monticello, Georgia, the exhibit will include major milestone’s in Yearwood’s life including her move to Nashville, graduation from Belmont and start to her career as a tour guide at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum and receptionist at a record company. The exhibit will end with her successful journey to becoming one of the best-selling female artists in country music history.

Yearwood’s many hit singles include “Walkaway Joe,” Wrong Side of Memphis” and “XXX’s and OOO’s (An American Girl),” among others.

Yearwood’s diverse career includes becoming a member of the Grand Ole Opry, authoring three New York Times best-selling cookbooks and hosting the Emmy-Award winning Food Network show, “Trisha’s Southern Kitchen.” Most recently, Yearwood has moved into a new marketing with the release of her new cookware line, Trisha’s Precious Metals, and her new line of furniture, The Trisha Yearwood Home Collection.

Dean Taylor Named 2015 Nashville Medical News Woman to Watch

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(L to R): Dr. Lorry Liotta-Kleinfeld (Occupational Therapy), Dr. Leslie J. Higgins (Nursing), Dr. Beth Hallmark (Nursing), Dr. Cathy Taylor (Nursing), Dr. Erin Shankel (Nursing), Dr. Renee Brown (Physical Therapy)

Dean and Professor of the Gordon E. Inman College of Health Sciences and Nursing Dr. Cathy Taylor was recently honored as one of Nashville Medical News’s 2015 Women to Watch. For the 10th year, Nashville Medical News has profiled a group of women in Middle Tennessee who are making a difference in the health care landscape of Nashville, Tennessee or beyond through their work as clinicians, public health officials, advocates, administrators, association executives or professionals.

Taylor has been working as the College of Health Sciences’s Dean since 2012, after serving as the assistant commissioner for the Tennessee Department of Health’s Bureau of Health Service Administration, an assistant professor at Vanderbilt University Nursing School of Nursing and the director of the Meharry-Vanderbilt Alliance Disease Management Program.

Dr. Taylor said she is grateful for the mentors and role models that have encouraged her throughout the career, and she greatly enjoys the opportunity to serve in a similar role for her students. “What an honor to be counted as part of this group of extraordinary women.  I am blessed to be able to do the work I love every day, surrounded by respected colleagues and exceptional students.”

For a full list of the 2015 Women to Watch honorees, click here.

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