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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Wedgewood Academic Center Wins Outstanding Project in Learning By Design

WAC
The newly constructed Wedgewood Academic Center won a 2015 Outstanding Project Award in the prestigious magazine, Learning By Design. The building was blindly judged by a nationally appointed panel of architects and educational facility specialists. Earl Swensson Associates of Nashville, Tennessee was the primary architectural firm for the the building.

Award submittals are judged on six criteria: Innovation, Community Need, Interior Design, Sustainability, Functional Design and 21st Century Learning. Projects that exemplify contemporary standards and contain design attributes one might emulate in a new space design are recognized as Outstanding. Comments from the judges on the Center included, “Nicely integrates into built context of the existing campus…Achieves its mission as an elegant and stately building, inside and out…Clever integration of green (seeking the highest level LEED certification, Platinum) elements in a traditional design…Seems to work well as a campus hub.”

Learning by Design is published biannually and recognizes the nation’s preeminent architectural firms by featuring outstanding pre-K to 12 and college or university projects. The magazine circulates to more than 50,000 leaders in all levels of education across the country.

Click here to see the feature on page 78 of the online edition of Learning By Design.

 

Randolph Wins 2015 Anthropology and Sociology Student Presentation Award

Anna Randolph
Senior Alpha Chi member Anna Randolph’s research won this year’s overall Anthropology and Sociology Student Presentation Award at the 2015 Alpha Chi Honors Society National Convention. Student presentations are the centerpiece of every Alpha Chi Convention, and an award is given to a student in each of the 28 disciplines.

Randolph’s project, entitled “Cultural Appropriation in URBN Incorporated 2014 Lookbooks: Erasing Cultures, Making Trends,” was conducted with senior sociology student Courtney Bright as a part of Dr. Andi Stepnick’s Visual Sociology course. The research focuses on a sociological approach to understanding cultural appropriation in the fashion industry, particularly in the context of the multinational lifestyle corporation, Urban Incorporated.

According to the Alpha Chi judges form, this award is given to a student that demonstrates exceptional “focus and organization of the presentation, depth and complexity of the treatment, use of research materials, engagement with the audience and contribution to scholarship in the field.”

Gustke Receives National Endowment of Humanities Grant

Charmion GustkeBelmont English Department Lecturer Charmion Gustke recently received a grant from the National Endowment of the Humanities to participate in the Summer Institute “Transcendentalism and Reform in the Age of Emerson, Thoreau, and Fuller” in Concord, Massachusetts.

Gustke will be one of 25 scholars participating in the two-week program focusing on antislavery, women’s rights and the treatment of Native Americans during the antebellum period. Project faculty will investigate how these critical efforts were informed by the historical and religious underpinnings of Transcendentalism’s reform agenda as a whole.

The Seminar will therefore explore Transcendentalists’ motivation to correct the inequities of America’s educational and religious institutions, their transatlantic relationships with social activists across the ocean, their burgeoning awareness of an environmental consciousness and their ability for merging the intellectual transformation in 19th Century science with their reform ethic.

Students Present at Economic Association Annual Meeting

COBASpencer Barnes and Andrew Kennedy, Belmont economics majors in Belmont’s College of Business, recently attended and presented their paper, co-authored by fellow Belmont student Gaëlle Deslandes, entitled “Viva La Gini Revolution: An Empirical Consideration of a Maximum Wage Policy to Help Battle Income Inequality” at the Issues in Political Economy (IPE) 22nd Undergraduate Research Conference in Economics.  The 2015 conference was recently held at the Eastern Economic Association Annual Meetings in New York City. The conference brings together undergraduates from across the country to present and share their research with peers. Students also serve as session chairs and discussants.

In their paper, the students used data from the March 2013 U.S. Consumer Population Survey to examine the potential effect of a maximum wage on wage inequality. They also explored how current measures of the Gini coefficient in the U.S. compares with other nations during historic revolutionary periods.

Their findings revealed that while income inequality is an important factor for revolutions, the role of government appears to be more influential in citizen revolts. The study also concluded that a maximum wage can be an effective tool for lowering income inequality. These results shed some light on non-conventional approaches to addressing income distribution and achieving socially desirable outcomes.

The students were accompanied  by Research Advisor and Faculty Member Dr. Colin Cannonier.

Curb College Hosts Law and Professionalism Clinic

CEMB Clinic LecturersBelmont’s Curb College of Entertainment and Music Business conducted its 4th Entertainment Law & Professionalism Clinic earlier this month. Originally implemented in 2009, the clinic was developed to expose Belmont students to the practice of professionalism while serving entertainment industry legal needs at no cost to participating students.

This year’s clinic was staffed by CEMB Lecturers Drs. John Ouellette and Vincent Peppe, Assistant Professor of Music Business Dr. David Maddox and Associate Professor of Music Business Dr. Cheryl Slay Carr. The Clinic is operated through a partnership with the Tennessee Volunteer Lawyers & Professionals for the Arts, an arm of the Arts & Business Council of Greater Nashville led by Executive Director Casey Summar.

This year’s clinic also afforded a select group of Belmont Law and undergraduate students the opportunity to participate as non-clients by shadowing clinic attorneys or supporting the administrative functions of the clinic.  A companion professionalism convocation/seminar was offered by Dr. Slay Carr, who conceptualized the clinic to educate students on professionalism within the entertainment sector and instruct students on how to select and meet with attorneys and other business professionals.

Pedagogical insights from the Clinical Project are captured in an article by Slay Carr published in The Journal of The Music & Entertainment Industry Educators Association.

Doctor of Nursing Practice Students Attend Student Summit

policy-summit-2015Four doctor of nursing practice (DNP) students attended the AACN Student Policy Summit held in Washington, DC March 22-24. The students were immersed in program sessions focused on the federal policy process and nursing’s role in professional advocacy. 

As part of the summit, participants made visits to Capitol Hill with Associate Dean of Nursing Dr. Martha Buckner, meeting with legislative staff of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pension committees.

Student Jennifer Jaramillo said, “The policy summit was such an amazing opportunity to advocate for nurses in Tennessee and across the nation. Building a network with other nursing leaders was an invaluable experience that will enrich our future practices. Advocacy and policy play a major role in our nursing practice and the future of our profession.”

Pictured are DNP students Jennifer Jaramillo, Kathryn Dambrino, Danielle Voss, and Kristen Allen as they wait for a meeting in Senator Bob Corker’s office.

Belmont PRSSA Hosts Regional Conference ‘NASHvantage’

NASHvantage Student Directors with PR advisor Dr. Bonnie Riechert and keynote speaker Kelly Davis, APR (center)
NASHvantage Student Directors with PR advisor Dr. Bonnie Riechert and keynote speaker Kelly Davis, APR (center)

Belmont’s Public Relations Student Society of America (PRSSA) chapter hosted their second regional conference, “NASHvantage: Entertainment PR Beyond the Music Industry,” the weekend of March 20-22. The conference brought more than 200 students and young professionals from around the country to network and learn about Nashville’s growing public relations field.

The conference was led and directed entirely by Belmont students. Pictured (left) is Director of Logistics Mary Anna Davis, Regional Conference Director Makenzie Albracht, Director of Hospitality Aryn Van Dyke, Director of Promotions and Creative Arielle Schrader and Director of Finance Nicole Smart. Other student volunteers from the Public Relations Department formed the committees and served as extra hands necessary to execute the conference successfully.

“NASHvantage’s success directly reflects the passion and dedication of the directors and Belmont PRSSA. We spent six months planning this conference and seeing it come to life was definitely the highlight of my college career,” said Davis.

Occupational Therapy Students Participate in Day on the Hill

Belmont-OT2On March 3, more than 50 Belmont Occupational Therapy Doctorate (OTD) students attended Tennessee Occupational Therapy Association’s (TNOTA) Day on the Hill.

The students joined a group of 120 other students and practitioners from across the state, forming the largest organized representation to date for TNOTA Day on the Hill.

The group was led by Belmont Professor of Occupational Therapy Dr. Hachtel and John Williams, TNOTA’s state lobbyist who provided an orientation regarding pertinent bills potentially affecting the profession on the state legislature’s docket this session.

After the orientation, the students met with Health Committee members to discuss the role of occupational therapy and how specific bills affect services provided to the legislator’s constituents. Additionally, Belmont OTD students helped staff TNOTA’s booth at Legislative Plaza to promote the profession to all state government officials.

Gustke Published in ‘Cather Studies 11’

Charmion GustkeBelmont English Department Lecturer Charmion Gustke recently wrote an article entitled “The Trafficking of Mrs. Forrester: Prostitution and Willa Cather’s A Lost Lady” that will appear in “Cather Studies 11: Willa Cather and Modernist Crux,” a collection of essays published by the University of Nebraska Press.

Gustke’s article explores the exchange and objectification of Cather’s illusive Mrs. Forrester in light of the rise of prostitution in Denver in the early 1900’s and the subsequent social outcry against “the white slave trade.”

Students Present at History Honor Society Regional Conference

History Honor SocietyMembers of Belmont University’s Xi-Alpha Chapter of Phi Alpha Theta (History Honor Society) recently presented papers at the organization’s 2015 Tennessee Regional Conference held at Austin Peay State University.

The participants, Kaytlynn Lowhorn, Cassia Kisshauer, Braxton Fralick and Erin Weber, presented original historical research on topics in American History. The students were accompanied by Xi-Alpha Chapter Faculty Advisor Drs. Cynthia Bisson and Douglas Bisson.