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 Sets Stage for Unlikely Collaborations: Health Care and the Arts

A woman gets bronchitis every spring. The only thing that helps is a steroid and a z-pack, or so she thinks. She finally decides to go to the clinic and learns that, unfortunately, she has been dealing with an undiagnosed case of asthma. After asking some questions about symptoms and medical history, her nurse tells her this is a chronic disease that is important to manage correctly and begins working on her treatment plan. 

This situation isn’t happening in one of Nashville’s many healthcare facilities; it’s happening on the second floor of the Inman Health Sciences building – part of Belmont University’s new health care theater course being piloted this spring. The woman needing help is a student actor, being cared for by a Belmont graduate nursing student—all part of a mutually beneficial simulation.  

Health Care Theater Course 

As Belmont graduate nursing students train to be family nurse practitioners in clinical settings, they are required to see “patients” in a simulation setting where the professor will watch through a one-way glass window to assess their diagnosis. This requires finding actors to play the roles of the patient, and although Belmont students have served in this role a handful of times before, there was a need for a more reliable pipeline for collaboration.

A couple years ago, Associate Professor and Chair of Belmont’s Theatre and Dance Department Brent Maddox had a conversation with Dr. Beth Hallmark, associate professor and director of simulation in Belmont’s School of Nursing, with the idea to get Belmont’s theater students involved more consistently with the simulations. That conversation would also set the wheels in motion of a new interdisciplinary connection at Belmont between health and the arts.  

woman looking through simulation lab window at actor patient
Health Care Theatre class conducting a simulation

Co-taught by Nursing Associate Professor Dr. Erin Shankel and Adjunct Instructor Laura Skaug, who works as the senior standardized patient educator at Vanderbilt University Medical Center’s simulation center, the course was launched this spring as a solution to that challenge, allowing theater students to get credit for participating in required simulations for the nursing students. 

“The theater students are strengthening their improvisation skills in those experiences and giving the nursing students some pretty real-life situations to face too,” explained Maddox. “Once the theater student moves beyond the script, the nursing student doesn’t know where the actor is going to go, where they’ll take it, what questions they may ask. It’s great experience for the nursing student because the whole thing is meant to feel as real and honest as possible, as they’ll have to learn to improvise with patients in real life too.” 

The faculty pointed out the class isn’t theater as one normally thinks of it. While there is a theatrical component to this training, there is also the standardized component where all the actors are working from the same script and background materials and must approach the improvisation cautiously as not to give false medical information.  

“We are trying to evaluate our students back-to-back just like a test: we want to give everyone the same test and the same material to see where everyone is at this point in our program,” explained Shankel. “We can’t do that in a real clinical setting because no two patients are alike, which is why these simulations are so important. Our actors really have to understand the character they are playing to the point that they can answer detailed medical questions, know the reactions to make and how to describe and show their symptoms.” 

Interdisciplinary Approach Across Campus 

students at round table
Graduate nursing students debrief after simulation

This health care and theater collaboration has unexpectedly developed into something more across campus, Maddox said. 

“It seems like it’s taken off into a whole new chapter,” he explained. “It’s turned into this whole interdisciplinary approach to arts and health at Belmont, which we didn’t foresee with our initial vision.” 

Belmont’s programs have engaged in various collaborations this spring that tap into multiple disciplines to create unique and diverse learning experiences that a single discipline emphasis doesn’t afford.  

A recent Music Therapy songwriting group brought an elderly community member’s lyrics to life. Occupational therapy faculty have been speaking to classes in the School of Music about physical and mental wellness of performers, preventing injury and ergonomics specific to musicians and their instruments. And, a Belmont faculty member is currently spearheading a fundraising effort toward purchasing MP3 players for the TriStar Centennial Medical Center that will provide infants in the NICU with appropriate, pre-recorded music at a safe volume.  

Music Therapy and Jazzmin 

Dr. Alejandra Ferrer, coordinator of the Music Therapy program, supervises a practicum in the Women and Children’s Hospital on a weekly basis.

“As a music therapist, I recognize and support the use of music to soothe and calm a baby, and I also recognize that there are evidence-based practices for the type of music that should be played for NICU babies to maximize benefits and minimize harm,” she said.  

Ferrer had the idea to donate equipment that would play appropriate music for the infants at a safe volume, automatically shutting off after the recommended amount of time. She set up an AngeLink fundraiser to gather donations for the equipment, with a goal of 30 speaker systems for the 60-bed unit so babies are able to keep the equipment through their discharge date. 

students recording music
Students record music for music therapy project

In talking with Kathryn Paradise in Belmont’s School of Music about the project, a natural collaboration was formed. Paradise asked if Jazzmin, the student ensemble she directs, could partner with her in these efforts and record the lullabies for the MP3 players.  

“Of course, I said, ‘yes,’ and now Jazzmin has recorded suitable, appropriate lullabies following the guidelines we have given them,” Ferrer gushed. “So, these babies will be listening to our Belmont students on their MP3s, all with language designed to promote language development, auditory discrimination and following the guidelines of using musical elements with a premature population.” 

Arts and Health Summit 

Associate Dean of the College of Music and Performing Arts Dr. Jane Duncan said a lot of the recent interdisciplinary approach at Belmont has been predicated on the creation of Belmont’s new College of Medicine (which will have its own simulation center) and looking for ways to expand those cross-campus relationships between colleagues in CMPA and in the health sciences. A small working group was convened to take on that charge.  

In March, the University held its first ever Arts and Health Summit, which featured six industry professionals who presented about their careers combining arts and health in various ways. Panelists included a hand therapist, an alumna who now works as a travelling drama therapist, the founder of a company that provides wearable technology for healthcare simulation education, the CEO of Hearts Need Arts—creative support for patients and caregivers, and the chair of music at Brenau University who teaches a similar course on arts in health care. 

“We wanted to host these seminars to inspire those working in or who hope to work in the leading industries of the Nashville area – Arts and Health – to collaborate with one another. We hope the panels offered unique perspectives for our students on new ways to utilize their talents and strengths while engaging their passions,” Duncan explained. “We want to be sure we are educating our students as fully as possible in the many, many ways that what they are studying here is going to impact their lives and other people’s lives when they graduate.” 

panel on stage
Left to right: Amy Cowperthwait, Richard Wilmore, Barbara Steinhaus, Sarah Edwards, Noelle M Austin and Dr. Jane Duncan speaking at Belmont’s inaugural Arts & Health Summit

Summit attendees were also invited to have lunch to continue discussing ways in which those in these industries can continue amplifying holistic approaches to health. “We know the great work our music therapists are doing. We know the creation of the healthcare theater class was great. What else can we pursue?” said Duncan. “What kind of God-sized dreams could we have about this?” 

Looking Forward 

Maddox hopes Belmont will soon have an entire program devoted to students who want to go into art and health related careers, devoting curriculum to training those in the arts to support training of health care providers and beyond. Studying the arts can be about producing entertainment, but it can also lead to really purposeful, meaningful experiences like simulation opportunities. 

“We are seeing more and more research that integrating arts with health care and health services is starting to become the norm because it’s a therapeutic approach to the healing process of patients,” Maddox said. “We are excited about next steps and certainly want to maintain the momentum in our interdisciplinary approach as we develop new programs that would build on that idea.”  

Duncan added, “Because Belmont is Belmont and we have outstanding programs in the arts and in health sciences, and because we are in ‘Music City’ where the number one industry happens to be health care, it makes really good sense to us,” Duncan explained. “We have had folks from all across campus come together to spark conversations and we are now looking at what’s possible for our next steps. I feel very excited about the conversations we are having.” 

Students Across Campus Present Research Findings at BURS 2023

If you took an hour to peek into the Belmont Undergraduate Research Symposium (BURS) presentations that spanned the day on April 19, 2023, here’s what you might have found:  

Chemistry students talking about their semester-long projects, such as Muhammad Malik who experimented with methods of extracting betel oil from betel leaves using a new, greener process and found positive results. 

O’More College of Architecture and Design students displaying their renderings for a Nashville Trail of Tears Memorial, such as Emily Schiedemeyer who designed a curved museum that celebrated the Cherokee people and their culture, or Jason Thomas who used his design to feature moments of respite and Corten beams that would create overwhelming sounds before visitors entered the central, soundproof “Astilla’s Room.” 

Theater students talking about forms of theater they have spent the semester researching deeply, such as Katie Fraley sharing about the “theater of the oppressed,” which creates empathy and acts as a catalyst for social change, or Mary Graham’s project on Antonin Artaud, who’s mental health, drug addiction and shock therapy led to his work in the “theater of cruelty.”  

Meanwhile, many presentations were simultaneously occurring from students in other disciplines across campus. This year boasted about 400 student presentations from across five colleges, including the areas of political science, biology, music, social media management, physics, communication studies, history and more. BURS is an opportunity for students from all areas of the University to present the outcomes of their work from the year.   

Assistant Dean for Undergraduate Research & Pre-Health Advising Dr. Beth Bowman oversees BURS and described it as “an incredible celebration of our student’s artistic, creative and scholarly work.”  

“Our students’ education is not just built on the things they learn in the classroom, but their hands-on and discovery-focused experiences to dig into and wrestle with a topic,” Bowman said. “This year really highlighted that the ways in which our students work on these projects help them develop skills and critical thinking that will stay with them through their careers. It is such an honor to help highlight the incredible work of our talented students!”  

The keynote address for this year’s symposium was presented by Vanderbilt Associate Professor of Medicine, Health & Society and Anthropology Dr. Kenneth MacLeish. His talk, “Research Perspectives on Military Experience, Mental Health and U.S. War Making,” not only highlighted the complexities war’s impact to society and the individual, but also showcased that even areas considered to be “hard” science, like medicine, have far-reaching and complex implications on those afflicted physically or mentally. 

View a full list of this year’s presentations from the symposium and a photo gallery below. Photos were taken by Katie Stace.

Belmont Student Leadership Awards Recognize Everyday Champions  

More than 72 student leaders, staff and faculty members were recognized for their leadership and service at the 2023 Belmont Student Leadership Awards (BSLA), hosted by the Division of Student Formation on April 12.  

The event’s “Everyday Champions” theme was inspired by the university’s focus on being radical champions for all. The BSLA Committee shared, “the theme emphasizes our culture where every student can be a leader and we can all be champions. Leaders don’t need a formal title or particular status to have a positive impact on the world. Everyday champions show up, use their voice and lead with character, purpose, wisdom and a transformational mindset.”   

Each Belmont academic college, office and department highlighted the efforts and accomplishments of undergraduate and graduate students, along with select employee recognitions.     

Bruin Award 

Ten students were presented with the Bruin Award, the highest honor bestowed by the Division for Student Formation. The award recognizes junior and senior students who have exemplified Belmont’s aspirational aims by consistently engaging in campus life and demonstrating outstanding service to the campus community through significant participation in campus leadership. 

Bruin Award recipients: 

  • Lucy Battaglia 
  • Phoebe Connell 
  • Chasity Donald 
  • Justice Dudley 
  • Sondos El-Hulu 
  • DJ Needs 
  • Morgen Wilkes 
  • Kendal Cliburn 
  • Dallas Pritchard 
  • Nardien Sakik 

Emergent Leader Award 

The Emergent Leader Award recognizes up-and-coming leaders with freshman or sophomore status currently in leadership positions. Emergent leaders are awarded due to their significant contributions toward the flourishing of people and communities in their organization. 

Emergent Leader Award recipients: 

  • Nick Benefield 
  • Addison Janowaik 
  • Brett Payne 
  • Caelyn Rolle 
  • Olivia Upton 

Aspiring Leader Award 

The Aspiring Leader Award recognizes up-and-coming leaders with freshman or sophomore status not currently in leadership positions. Aspiring Leaders are awarded due to their demonstrated desire and potential to significantly contribute toward the flourishing of people and communities in their organization.  

Aspiring Leader Award recipients: 

  • Michal Tolman 
  • Meagan Boots 
  • Pacifique Niyomugabo 
  • Savannah Orris 
  • Mia Scherer 

 
Student Organization Member of the Year Award 

The Student Organization Member of the Year Award recognizes students who have exemplified a commitment to the values of the Belmont community through actively serving in their student organizations.  

Student Organization Member of the Year Award recipients: 

  • Carter Barnett, BUD Ministries 
  • Chasity Donald, Intervarsity 
  • Maddie McGovern, Kappa Alpha Theta 
  • Johnson Phung, Chess Club 
  • Nardien Sadik, Orthodox Chrisitan Campus Ministries 
  • Elizabeth Trbovic, Service Corps 

Additional student awards from the various offices across campus were also recognized.  

Residence Life Distinguished Service Award 

  • Samantha Urban 
  • Sydney Giles 
  • Marcus Knight 
  • Avery Ancelet 
  • DJ Needs 
  • Emma Leonard 

University Ministries Engaged Leader Award 

  • Hope Dennis 
  • Gretchen Henry 
  • Chasity Donald 
  • Sydney Mulcrone 

 Belmont College of Pharmacy: College Leadership Award 

  • Nancy Henin 

Office of Admissions: Student Worker of the Year  

  • Libby Godo 
  • Gabe Degraeve 

Office of Student Engagement – Student Government Association: Outstanding Senator 

  • Aaron Kleinschmidt 

Office of Service-Learning: Outstanding Leader in Community Engagement 

  • Eleri Hadaway 

Career & Professional Development: Professionalism Award  

  • Alex Ann Heim 
  • Evelyn Shrader 

Greek Life awards were also presented: 

  • Lindsey Edwards, Kappa Alpha Theta – Outstanding Chapter President of the Year 
  • Maddie Calder, Alpha Gamma Delta – Fraternity/sorority Member of the Year 
  • Charlotte Harrison, Phi Mu – Outstanding New Member of the Year 
  • Outstanding Chapter of the Year – Alpha Gamma Delta 

Student Organization of the Year Award 

The Student Organization of the Year Award recognizes the organization that most fully lives out leadership in service to others. 

  • Belmont’s Chess Club 

New Student Organization of the Year Award 
The New Student Organization of the Year Award recognizes an organization that was founded during the 2022-2023 academic year. The organization that receives this award will have demonstrated a commitment to Belmont’s mission statement and will have embraced hope and inclusivity while impacting the Belmont community through presence and involvement in student programs and activities. 

  • American Institute of Architecture Students (AIAS)  

Staff/ Faculty awards 

Two employee awards were presented. Advisor for the Belmont Film Society Nancy Roche received the Student Organization Advisor of the Year Award, and Beth Bowman received the Tower Award. 

Staff in the Belmont Office of Leadership Development (BOLD), Residence Life, University Ministries and the Office of Career and Professional Development collaborated on this event to celebrate the abundance of student leaders on campus and show appreciation to individuals by publicly presenting them with awards.    

View a gallery of pictures from the event here. 

Annual Greek Sing Event Raises Over $127K for St. Jude  

Members of Belmont’s Fraternity and Sorority Life (FSL) community raised $127,289 for St. Jude through their annual philanthropy event, Greek Sing, held in the Curb Event Center on Sunday, April 16. 

An annual talent showcase for Belmont’s Greek community, Greek Sing features original dances and lyrics prepared months in advance by chapter members. The fundraising total exceeded previous totals by more than $100,000.  

“Having Greek Sing back in the Curb was a huge inspiration to make it the best show possible,” Panhellenic Vice President of Philanthropy Allyne Miller said. “This was the first Greek Sing in the curb center since 2019. It was wonderful to work with Belmont in this way again and it really pushed me and my team to put on a show that was fit for the Curb.” 

For the first time, the event was professionally live-streamed, allowing friends and family members to see the live show and contribute to the fundraiser as it was happening. The competition component of the event was reimplemented after five years without it. As chapters battled against each other to see who might raise the most money for St. Jude, the groups set a new standard for Belmont’s FSL and remained true to the philanthropic nature of the event.  

“I could not be happier with the result of the event,” Miller added. “I am so proud of the Greek community and the work that they have put in. In my time at Belmont, I have never seen the student body come together in this way and knowing that I got to be a part of it is something I will treasure forever.” 

Phi Mu took the lead, raising over $37,200 by the end of the evening. Closely behind, Alpha Sigma Tau raised over $36,400 and Alpha Gamma Delta raised over $31,300. Kappa Alpha Theta won Judges’ Choice for their “Mission Impossible” inspired performance, Theta:007. All proceeds will go to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, the official philanthropy of Belmont’s Greek Life. 

Building Bridges for a Better World: Alumnus Luke Putney’s Foundation Sponsors Belmont Music Therapy Interns at Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital

Luke Putney – 2017 Music Performance graduate – is changing healthcare advocacy one musical instrument at a time. Having faced medical challenges his entire life, including blindness, tumors and brain surgeries, Putney decided to combine his passion for music with his desire to make the world a better place by opening his nonprofit Instrumental Horizons while attending college. Putney’s dream has come to life through his charity, which shares the joy of music by donating musical instruments and volunteer services to socioeconomically and medically challenged communities.

After seeing Belmont music therapy interns in action last year, Putney decided he wanted to build a bridge between Belmont and Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital in St. Petersburg, Florida. Through Instrumental Horizons, Putney has established scholarships to underwrite expenses for Belmont students who are working toward their music therapy degrees to intern at Johns Hopkins. He hopes these scholarships will offer Belmont students the opportunity to bring the joy and healing of music to patients at the hospital because as sad as it is, Putney said, “there isn’t enough music in hospitals.”

Putney recently made a visit to the hospital to donate a guitar. While Putney has donated several gifts to the hospital in the last several years, including “Pianomation” player piano technology for the grand piano in the hospital lobby, this recent gift was especially significant as it will be used by Belmont alumna Hannah Keglovits (‘22), who interned at the hospital last year and was recently hired as a full-time music therapist.

“One of the goals I have for Instrumental Horizons is to share the joy of music with people in medically challenging situations,” said Putney. “I want to provide musical instruments and support music therapy in a place like Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital, because by doing this, I believe we can bring hope and improve the lives of some very special children.”

Through Instrumental Horizons, Putney is providing opportunities for students and patients which might otherwise never be possible, and in doing so, is spreading the message which drove him to start his nonprofit to begin with: everyone deserves to share in the joy of music. Putney has been recognized for his philanthropic work by The Associated Press, Nashville Scene, The Tennessean and many more.

Belmont University and Nashville State Community College Announce Transfer Connection Scholarship Program for Graduating Nashville State Students

Belmont University and Nashville State Community College today announced a newly formed scholarship for Nashville State students. The newly created Bridges to Belmont – Nashville State Transfer Connection program will provide five graduating Nashville State students with a $15,000 scholarship toward a bachelor’s degree from Belmont University.  

This new initiative will further expand the University’s Bridges to Belmont Pathway Programs which provide access to Belmont for a variety of students across the city. This expansion will open doors for Nashville State graduates who are interested in pursuing a bachelor’s degree. 

As part of this new initiative, Belmont will provide academic and mentoring support and assistance to eligible students during their first two years at Nashville State. Additionally, students will receive programming, mentoring, advising and access to Belmont Faculty Scholars during their tenure at both intuitions.

Belmont President Dr. Greg Jones said, “This new and exciting partnership with Nashville State reflects Belmont’s dedication to collaborative bridge building across a variety of institutions who are focused on developing accessible paths to education. I am grateful for the opportunity to further Belmont’s partnership with Nashville State as we seek to make a significant impact in the lives of students across our city.” 

As a part of the partnership, Nashville State will form an on-campus group to support students who are interested in pursuing this scholarship by providing enrichment activities and hosting events to create community. This student group will provide peer mentoring opportunities for students at both Belmont and Nashville State.

“Nashville State has a bold new vision to increase economic mobility for the communities we serve by preparing students to start a career or successfully transfer to great institutions like Belmont University,” said Nashville State President Dr. Shanna L. Jackson. “We are excited that they are committed to strengthening our shared community by building on the benefits that Nashville GRAD and Nashville Flex provide to our students from Davidson County and extending that bridge of opportunity from Nashville State to Belmont.”

To be considered for this scholarship opportunity, students must:

  • Be a currently enrolled Nashville State student who plans to graduate in Spring 2023 or Summer 2023
  • Be on track to complete a degree program from Nashville State by Spring 2023 or Summer 2023
  • Have a cumulative GPA of 2.75 or higher
  • Have participated in one of two Nashville State programs — Nashville GRAD or Nashville Flex—or be an MNPS alumni 
  • Be a first-time transfer student who plans to enroll at Belmont in the Fall 2023 semester  
  • Complete the scholarship interest form

The deadline for priority consideration is May 15, 2023. Interested students may apply at https://bit.ly/NSCCtoBelmont

Belmont University Celebrates Topping Out of Thomas F. Frist, Jr. College of Medicine Building

Belmont University hosted a topping out ceremony yesterday, April 12, placing the final beam for the under-construction Frist College of Medicine facility, estimated to be complete in spring 2024. The College is named in honor of health care icon Dr. Thomas F. Frist, Jr., former Air Force surgeon, physician and co-founder of HCA Healthcare. 

“Belmont’s entrepreneurial and innovative spirit—like Dr. Frist’s—is forward-looking and will shape future health care leaders who are nimble and able to thrive among changing technologies,” said Belmont President Dr. Greg Jones at the event. “Establishing the Frist College of Medicine is Belmont’s way of providing a tangible solution to our nation’s impending physician shortage. Pending accreditation, we hope to welcome our inaugural class in July 2024.”

The six-story, 246,000-square-foot facility includes a state-of-the-art 50,000-square-foot Simulation Center—one of the most comprehensive in the nation—which will utilize virtual and augmented reality as part of its simulated offerings. Within Belmont’s health care corridor, one block from the Gordon E. Inman Center and McWhorter Hall, the facility has been designed to create a fully interdisciplinary educational experience, allowing students in existing programs to work alongside aspiring MDs—just as they would in a clinical setting.

Topping Out Ceremony and Placement of the Final Beam on the Thomas F. Frist, Jr. College of Medicine building at Belmont University in Nashville, April 12, 2023.

Currently under “Candidate status,” the College will welcome representatives from its accrediting body, the Liaison Committee on Medical Education (LCME), for a site visit this summer, signaling significant progress in the accreditation process.

“What a joy it is to be here at such an exciting day for Frist College of Medicine as we raise the final beam. This is a tangible step towards being even closer to accreditation and welcoming students,” said Dean Dr. Anderson Spickard. “With a focus on whole-person care, Belmont’s Frist College of Medicine is committed to educating future clinicians and researchers, who consider a patient’s entire identity, calculating the personal context and the socioeconomic and systemic factors, and finding solutions that affect one’s ability to flourish. This program will produce the next generation of health care leaders of character and purpose who champion life abundant for all people.”

See more photos from the event here.

Annual Entrepreneurship Village Continues Promoting Student, Alumni and Employee Businesses

On April 5, the Thomas E. Cone Sr. Center for Entrepreneurship hosted Belmont’s Entrepreneurship Village, an annual showcase that highlights businesses created by students, alumni and faculty.  

An array of featured businesses set up shop under tents in front of Freedom Plaza where campus passersby could purchase products, talk to founders and learn about the mission and passions of each participating business.  

Student businesses 

Entrepreneurship Village is just one of several events that support student entrepreneurs across all majors.  

Owner Payton Culp (left) and Jacqueline Frist (right) of Ivy Underground

Freshman architecture student Payton Culp learned about Entrepreneurship Village from a friend and decided to participate for the first time. His vintage clothing business, Ivy Underground, focuses on taking responsibility for the sustainability of everyday wear. New items are added to the clothing website weekly. 

“We bring back forgotten fashion and are on a mission to reduce the 34 billion pounds of textiles that are thrown into landfills each year,” he said. “Belmont has given me countless opportunities to hear guest speakers and attend other events to learn how other businesses function and personally connect with other entrepreneurs.”  

Baxter Brown, Muze

Senior computer science major Baxter Brown is the founder of Muze, an online platform that connects student musicians to the music industry.   

“We essentially took the idea of a dating app, but made it for musicians to start bands, join bands and just get connected within the music industry,” Brown said. “Belmont was the perfect place to launch for obvious reasons– just how many musicians are here and how many people in Nashville need help getting connected.” 

Sophia Klingenstein, All of the Everything

Sophia Klingenstein was introduced to Entrepreneurship Village last year as a buyer, and the senior entrepreneurship and marketing double major knew she wanted to have a table this year for her Etsy shop. All of the Everything sells vinyl stickers to decorate laptops, water bottles and journals, among other things. “I wanted to participate because I think it is a great concept and opportunity for small businesses like mine to get the chance to showcase products and talk about something I am passionate about,” she said.  

Alumni businesses 

The Entrepreneur Center supports alumni far beyond their years as students. Two alumni businesses were a part of the Entrepreneurship Village this spring. 

Caroline Forsythe(left) and Hannah Ashton (right) of Dream Daily

Hannah Ashton ‘22 is the founder of Dream Daily, a stationery brand with a mission of female encouragement and empowerment. As a student in the entrepreneurship program, Ashton won a $2,000 grant in the 2021 Business Pitch Competition and participated in Entrepreneurship Village.  

“Last year I was blown away by the success that the Village brought to my business,” she said. “It was an amazing way to connect with students and professors, share my story and sell products, too! As a senior last year, it was such a sweet way to end my time at Belmont. Now, I’m excited to return to Belmont and share my business with current students.” 

Jared Johnson, Interchange Noise Works/ Subliminal Coffee Company

What started out as a hobby for 2022 entrepreneurship alumnus Jared Johnson has developed into a music equipment manufacturing business called Interchange Noise Works. Entrepreneurship Village is becoming a consistent event for Johnson to promote his hand-fashioned guitar pedals. 

“Participation in this event has helped get us connected with other entrepreneurs in the Belmont community and bring some awareness of our brand to student musicians on campus,” he said. “It also has served as a platform to practice selling our product and pitching our business to customers and other businesses.” 

Subliminal Coffee Company is another business that stemmed from Johnson’s passions. The mobile espresso bar is marketed to suit any kind of pop-up event. 

“The village has been one of the biggest ways that Belmont has supported my businesses,” Johnson said. “I learned valuable skills in my degree program, being that it was tailored for entrepreneurship. Above all, networking has been the most valuable asset to come out of my time at Belmont—there are several mentors and many entrepreneur friends.” 

Faculty business 

Jeremy Fyke, Two Heads Hot Sauce

Jeremy Fyke is a Communication Studies faculty member who also makes small batch, locally sourced hot sauces, dry blends and specialty items like pepper-infused maple syrup and hot honey.  

“A friend and I just created the business by accident tinkering in the kitchen one day in late 2020 and it boomed from there,” Fyke said.  

Two Heads Hot Sauce has a handful of private label branded items in partnership with Belmont. They make the official hot sauce of Belmont Athletics, Bruiser’s Bite, a specialty BBQ sauce in partnership with the Alumni Association (BLVD BBQ) and a branded version of their Hot Honey for the Fisher Center for the Performing Arts (Fisher Center Hot Honey).  

Entrepreneurship Village continues to serve the Belmont community by giving student, alumni and employee businesses an opportunity to engage with the campus. Other businesses that participated in the Entrepreneurship Village included Bizi, Peyton Jane Design, Chechi’s Chai, Neurodivergent, The Tower Music, Samsdesignshop and Patch Thrift. 

Scholarship and Awards Day Ushers the Close of Another Accomplished Academic Year 

Indicating in the close of another academic year, Scholarship and Awards Day 2023 honored the outstanding work and accomplishments of Belmont students and faculty members on Wednesday, April 12 in the Massey Performing Arts Center.  

Each year, awards are presented to faculty and students who have exhibited honorable dedication to scholarly achievement and service. “It’s a great joy for us to gather as a community because part of what marks Belmont is our connection to each other,” President Greg Jones said in a welcome. “We come together to recognize one another, to support and encourage one another.” 

Student Achievement Awards  

Two inaugural student awards were presented from the Algernon Sydney Sullivan Foundation, recognizing individuals who demonstrate the highest standards of character, integrity and service to others and their community. Belmont is the 72nd school among select colleges and universities in the American South to present these non-monetary awards. Each recipient received a certificate and medallion.  

  • The Algernon Sydney Sullivan Award Recipient: Colson Kelley  
  • The Mary Mildred Sullivan Award Recipient: Elizabeth Jordan  

The Dr. Fannie Hewlett Award celebrates racial and ethnic diversity by recognizing student courage, leadership and contribution to a culture of inclusion at Belmont. Gus Sneh was the recipient of the undergraduate Dr. Fannie Hewlett Award, and Carsyn Snagg received the graduate equivalent.  

Celeste O’Brien received the John Williams Heart of Belmont Award which recognizes a student who has exhibited a range of qualities including service, problem-solving, persistence, and advocacy.  

Belmont Graduate Student Awards were given in the categories of leadership and scholarship.  

  • Belmont Graduate Leadership Award: Hanna McClain 
  • Belmont Graduate Scholarship Award: Lindsay Dial 

University Writing Awards 

  • The Williams-Murray First Year Writing Award: Ellie Williams (“Why I Like Worms”) and Haley Fountain (“Racial Discrimination within the Foster Care System”) 
  • The Alfred Leland Crabb Award: First place to Emma Baltz (“Lightning Frog”) and second place to Rose Blake (“Utilizing Revival Technology”) 
  • The Stacy Awalt Writing Award: Adam Krodel (“Toward a New Art of Pragmatism”) 
  • The Annette Sisson First Year Seminar Award: Lizbeth DelaRosa (“Blood Quantum Laws Never Native Enough”) 

University Hale Leadership Awards 

  • First Year Award: Ava Munyer 
  • Second Year Award: Avery Kyle 
  • Third Year Award: Abby Scalici 
  • Fourth Year Award: Allison Gunderson 

Four students were presented with Lumos Travel Awards, which will enable them to “travel with purpose” and fund self-designed “working adventures” for international projects.  

  • Aaron Kleinschmidt– Guadalajara, Mexico 
  • Nardien Sadik– Cairo, Egypt 
  • Ilaria Youssef– Cairo, Egypt 
  • Jenna Yordy– Guatemala  

Faculty Achievement Awards 

Five categories of faculty achievement awards were presented for commendable representation of Belmont’s accomplished teaching community. 

Drs. Annette Sisson, professor of English, and Luke Langlinais, assistant professor of management, received the Christian Scholarship Award, presented for scholarship that engages the Christian intellectual tradition and advances the scholarly conversation between Christian faith and learning.  

The Leadership in Christian Service Award honors faculty who provide leadership to a new initiative or to an established Christian organization, connecting the resources of Belmont’s academic community to the needs of the world. Professor of History Dr. Daniel Schafer accepted the award. With interests and concerns focused on learning more about race and social justice, Schafer “models for his peers and students what it means to be a man of faith and service.”  

Recently inducted into the Western Music Hall of Fame in the historian category and considered one of the premiere historians of country music, professor of music business and music industry history Dr. Don Cusic was bestowed the Faculty Scholarship Award. The award recognizes Cusic’s “engagement in outstanding scholarly work that reflects and embodies the spirit of the award and the culture of exploring new ideas that benefit Belmont students and community.”  

Finalists for the Faculty Scholarship Award were Hope Campbell (College of Pharmacy), Lucian Dervan (College of Law), Eduardo Lopez (Massey College of Business) and Luke Petach (Massey College of Business).  

Named for Dr. Virginia Chaney who dedicated 37 years to Belmont as a professor of Latin and classics, the Chaney Distinguished Professor Award is determined based on superior teaching in the classroom and was awarded to Dr. Jennifer Crowell Thompson, assistant professor of social work. A student comment stated “Dr. Crowell teaches with a sensitivity and passion with awareness for the various levels of understanding abilities her students have, a drive to change injustices and inequities in Nashville and even greater society, and kindness to all her students. She always has a joyful spirit, and it shows in her teaching.” 

Finalists for the Chaney Distinguished Professor Award were Steve Guthrie (Theology and Religion and the Arts), Mary Ellen Pethel (Interdisciplinary Studies and Global Education) and Carole Scherling (College of Sciences and Mathematics). 

Jeffery Ames wins the Presidential Faculty Achievement award.

Director of Choral Activities and Assistant Professor of Music Dr. Jeffery Ames was honored with the Presidential Faculty Achievement Award for his outstanding contributions to student life outside the classroom. Ames led more than 450 students of the Belmont Oratorio and Orchestra in his 2022 masterwork debut, Requiem for Colour. The production honored the lives and legacies of enslaved Blacks and the sacrifices made by contemporary Black martyrs for equality and freedom. Quotes from students and faculty members who nominated Ames were read aloud, offering a glimpse of his impact. One student commented about participating in Requiem for Colour. “Getting to be a part of this mass community that he composed was an experience of a lifetime,” the student said. “The time he took to explain his reasoning and how much our presence meant to him made those week-long rehearsals a reminder of why we chose music– to be a part of something bigger than ourselves and to change the world.”  

Finalists for the Presidential Faculty Achievement Award were Christian Williams (College of Health Sciences and Nursing), Jennifer Duck (Mike Curb College of Entertainment and Music Business) and Fernando Diggs (College of Pharmacy).  

Provost and Executive Vice President for Academic Excellence Dr. David Gregory also recognized the following faculty members entering retirement: Drs. Daniel Byles, Andrew Webster, Joy Kimmons, Phil Johnston, Karen Robinson, along with Elizabeth Small and Jocelyn Fisher.  

“Thank you for your years of dedicated service to Belmont University,” Gregory said. “You will be missed. We wish you all the best as you pursue your interests outside of the Belmont community and we hope you will continue to allow us to be a part of your lives.”  

Click here for additional photos from the event. 

Songwriting Master Class with Desmond Child

Belmont University’s first songwriting master class in a new series, presented in partnership with the Songwriters Hall of Fame New York (SHOF), featured Grammy-nominated songwriter Desmond Child, best known for penning hit songs such as “Livin’ on a Prayer” by Bon Jovi, “Dude (Looks Like a Lady)” by Aerosmith, and “Livin’ la Vida Loca” by Ricky Martin. The event, held at Belmont’s 34 Music Square East facility on March 17, drew dozens of aspiring songwriters and other Curb College students. 

The mission of SHOF is to celebrate and honor the contributions and legacies of songwriters in all genres while developing the next generation of songwriters through master sessions, songwriting craft forums, scholarships and digital initiatives.  

Fletcher Foster

Fletcher Foster, Belmont alumnus and current SHOF Board of Directors member opened the event and spoke to the Hall of Fame’s partnership with Belmont, saying this would be “the first of many master sessions with Belmont.” In addition to the master class series, SHOF will award two scholarships to songwriting students at Belmont. Recipients will have the opportunity to travel to New York City to attend the organization’s Induction and Awards Gala in June. 

Jodi Marr, instructor of songwriting, served as moderator for the inaugural session. “The Songwriters Hall of Fame is an incredible organization and their outreach to young songwriters is second to none,” Marr said of the partnership before welcoming her friend and mentor, songwriter Desmond Child to the stage.  

Jodi Marr

Child started off by sharing his own journey as a musician, first as a performer in the pop-rock band “Desmond Child and Rouge,” and later as his rise to fame as a songwriter. “It’s a nickel and dime business,” he said. “Everything counts.”  

As he reflected on the numerous artists and performers he has worked with, he emphasized the importance of staying true to oneself. Songwriting is a “whole person approach,” he said. “It’s not just the song, it’s not just the 10,000 hours. It’s making yourself part of the song.”  

To end the session, he left students with encouragement to stay curious and continue honing their craft. “It’s never too late to keep learning. College is just the start. Keep educating yourself and filling your mind with amazing things.”  

The master session was made possible by SHOF’s Lisa Moran, president and CEO, and Fletcher Foster, Board of Directors member; along with Curb College’s Sarita Stewart, interim dean; James Elliott, chair of Songwriting; Drew Ramsey, interim chair of Songwriting; Scott Munsell and Ben Poff, audio engineering technology instructors; and numerous Curb College students.