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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Students Travel to Australia to Study Poisons and Social Justice

A seemingly unexpected combination, a group of Belmont students and two faculty from the College of Sciences and Mathematics traveled to Australia and the Great Barrier Reef this summer to study the poisons of marine animals native to the area and the quantitative reasoning and numeracy applied to the issues of injustice and inequality. While spending time in Australia, students had the opportunity to learn about where and how these native, deadly creatures live, how people co-exist among them and the various threats present to Australian ecosystems–all conversations led by Associate Professor of Chemistry and trip co-leader Dr. Alison Parker through her course, “Chemistry of Poisons.”

Throughout the same conversations, Assistant Professor of Mathematics and fellow trip leader Dr. Brad Schleben engaged students in his “Math of Social Justice” course, an opportunity for students to navigate their ability to question data while confronting the elements of power, privilege and interdependence seen in cross-cultural dynamics. Students had the opportunity to participate in active learning experiences including service projects, discussions with members of both the Quandamooka and Nyawaygi aboriginal communities and exposure to organizations pushing for social awareness and change – all from both a mathematical and human viewpoint.

Students scuba diving off the Great Barrier Reef in AustraliaFor Parker, the opportunity to lead students on a short-term study abroad experience creates a chance to impact their lives far beyond their three week trip. “Students learn more about their own worldview and how to recognize cultural difference and interact with people whose worldview is not the same. Lifelong learning isn’t just about your major and what you see and hear in a classroom, it’s about the confluence of experiences that influence every aspect of life.”

The group started their three weeks abroad in Brisbane and spent a few nights on North Stradbroke Island at a University of Queensland marine research facility where they learned about the ecology of local waterways and collected data on living systems. After travelling to Townsville to learn about the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park and its management processes, the group embarked on their first Reef EcoLogic Day on Magnetic Island where they discussed their responsibility on threats to the reef. Students had the opportunity for hands-on involvement as they pulled algae off rock and coral, quantifying both the plant mass and roots collected.

Continuing north, the group went to Cairns via Mungulla Station, an experience dedicated to protecting wetlands from environmental threats, and planted trees as part of the group’s restoration project. Parker took a group of students to the area last summer for the same project and the team was able to see the progress a year of work has created.

From there, the team spent a day on the reef experiencing the health and beauty of the open ocean. They also explored Daintree Rainforest and River before visiting Green Collar, an environmental data science firm that specializes in collecting, analyzing and modeling data to help agricultural enterprises and land owners maximize sustainable practices.

Belmont student and trip participant Katelyn Bosse said she had been interested in studying abroad since first hearing about the opportunity her freshman year. Though the trip’s countless experiences will forever be some of her favorite memories, Bosse said it was her fellow students and the ways in which they bonded that she’s most grateful for. “I was able to snorkel in the Great Barrier Reef and hold koalas with people I just met — only two weeks ago,” she said. “We are all from different backgrounds and majors, but we became close so fast, and it will be fun to run into each other on campus and share our stories.”

Beyond her new friendships, Bosse said she also walked away with a new found appreciation for cultures different than her own. “As tourists in other countries, we often visit the building and sites, but we don’t completely engage in the new culture. This trip was so unique in that we dug in and made connections. We were engaged and open-minded. I will talk about these three weeks-snorkeling, surfing, gorge walking with whales and dolphins and learning about coral reefs, marine life and aboriginal culture-forever.”

Steil Honored with Doc E Award for Long Time Service to Diabetes Camp

Professor in the College of Pharmacy Dr. Condit Steil was recently honored with the Doc E Award, a recognition given for long-term service and a strong interest in the welfare of campers that come through Camp Seale Harris, a diabetes camp for children held in Alabama each summer. Steil has been volunteering with the camp for the last 20 years.

As a staff member at camp each summer, Steil is responsible for assisting in the growth and development of young people with diabetes as they acquire the skills and understanding to achieve stronger control of their lives.

Thinking back over his years at camp, it’s the opportunity to watch campers further develop the ability to care for themselves that sticks out the most to Steil. “Young people come to camp with very few skills as their parents provide the care at home. But by the end of the week, many of our campers are carrying out several self-care steps independently,” he said. “Beyond that, several campers have never spent time in nature because their parents did not think it would be safe. It’s so powerful to provide that experience for these children.”

But Steil’s experience at camp doesn’t stop with his own time on staff. He also provides an opportunity for fourth-year Belmont College of Pharmacy students to participate as an advanced pharmacy practice experience. Seeing his students interacting with the campers he’s spent years serving provides a meaningful experience that Steil says he’s grateful for. “This provides an opportunity for my students’ confidence to grow as they provide support an care in a different surrounding that what they’re used to,” he said.

Moving forward, Steil plans to serve as a staff member at Camp Seale Harris for as long as he can.

 

 

Cates Named Winner in ‘Women in Music City’ Awards

Sarah Cates head shotSarah Cates, director of development and industry relations for the Curb College and a Belmont alumna, was recently recognized by the Nashville Business Journal as one of the top women who is helping shape Nashville’s music industry. Now in its fifth year, the Women in Music City Awards honors women from all walks of the music industry — from agents to songwriters, and from entertainment lawyers to music venue executives.

Alumna Falvey Signs Publishing Deal

Emily FalveyNashville-based music publishing company, SMACKSongs, has signed songwriter Emily Falvey to an exclusive worldwide publishing deal. Falvey joins a roster of writers, producers, and artists, all led by Shane McAnally and Josh Osborne.

Falvey is a recent graduate of Belmont University, who earned a BA in Songwriting and a BBA in Music Business. During her time at Belmont, Falvey interned at SMACKSongs, as well as at other companies in the music industry.

“I can think of no greater honor than signing my first publishing deal with SMACKSongs, and to be able to join this extraordinary family of writers and industry leaders,” shares Falvey. “I am especially grateful to Robin Palmer and Lee Krabel at SMACK for believing in me, Mark Abramowitz and the entire Kobalt team, Leslie Roberts and MaryAnn Keen at BMI, Matt Cottingham at Ritholz Levy Fields, the Songwriting department at Belmont University, Emily Weisband, Josh Osborne and Shane McAnally for their mentorship and vision. I am excited to be a part of the changing landscape of Nashville and to be able to make music every day!”

“Over the last year we have absolutely loved getting to know Emily as our intern and resident cheerleader for SMACK,” said McAnally. “Her positive energy and budding talent caught our attention early, and we’re so excited to have her as our newest writer at SMACK. We look forward to her bright future ahead.”

During her time at Belmont, Falvey also participated in a Make Music Nashville event that allowed her to write a song with a local senior citizen.

Dapp Presents at Nashville 48 Hour Film Project Panel

Motke Dapp, who teaches directing Motke Dappin Belmont’s motion pictures program, presented last night as part of a panel for the Nashville 48 Hour Film Project. Dapp has previously won the Nashville version of this competition as well as won the best film in the United States for the 48 Hour Film Festival.

Occupational and Physical Therapy Students Swim with the Nashville Dolphins

Belmont University students from the Schools of Physical Therapy (PT) and Occupational Therapy (OT) performed aquatic exercises with the Nashville Dolphins under the direction of Dr. Natalie Michaels, professor of both PT and OT at Belmont, and Dr. Timothy Jones, associate professor and aquaticS specialist in the Department of Human Performance and Sports Science at Tennessee State University. The Nashville Dolphins, under the direction of Megan Kelly, is a group of children, teens and young adults, many with Down Syndrome, who enjoy swimming.

Michaels started the Aquifit program nine years ago to provide aquatic exercises for wellness, socialization and enjoyment to members of the community. Exercises are performed pool-side, to music, by physical therapists, occupational therapists, aquatic specialists and OT/PT students while community members exercise in the water. Michaels said, ” Once again, the community was extremely impressed by the professionalism, kindness and intellect of the Belmont students.”

Students from the DPT program included Hunter Pickens, Mallorie Sweat, Emily Averitt and Courtney Alama. Students from the OTD program included Emma Mace and Sally Widmann. Hunter Pickens and Mallorie Sweat also served as song leaders. Approximately 12 members of the Dolphins participated. They reported that they “had a blast,” and really seemed to enjoy their interactions with the Belmont students.

Students, Faculty Travel to South Korea & Japan for Maymester

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Group spends time with U.S. Ambassador to Japan while abroad

The Maymester Japan & South Korea program was first introduced this year to provide Belmont students with a unique global learning experience while visiting professional and cultural places in Tokyo and Seoul. A team of 29 students from The Mike Curb College of Entertainment and Music Business and The Jack C. Massey College of Business traveled with four faculty members including Dr. Amy Crook (Management), Dr. Don Cusic (Music Business), Dr. Rush Hicks (Music Business), and Dr. Doyuen Ko (Audio Engineering) on this year’s trip.

The purpose of the experience was to learn Asian music copyright policy, artist management system, business etiquette and the latest audio technology on-site with businesses and institutions in Tokyo and Seoul. After more than a year of preparation and dedicated coordination efforts by the faculty members, the team was able to visit several important sites including The US Embassy in Tokyo, the Japanese Society for Rights of Authors, Composers and Publishers, Warner Music Japan, Tokyo University of the Arts, Sungkyunkwan University in Seoul, SM Entertainment, JYP Entertainment, Seoul Art Center and The World Association for Hallyu Studies.

The U.S. Ambassador to Japan William Hagerty invited the entire team into the Embassy and shared his role and experience as a diplomat to one of the country’s most important allies. Hagerty is a native Nashvillian, and he served as commissioner of the Tennessee Department of Economic and Community Development from 2011 to 2014. Students also met top executives in the music industry and saw the inner workings of J-Pop and K-Pop which dominate Asian popular music.

Up ’til Dawn Team Earns National Program of the Year Award

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Belmont University’s Up ’til Dawn team recently won the organization’s Program of the Year Award. The annual event, which raised more than $140K last year, supports St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital with funds as students across the country stay awake all night on college campuses to raise money for childhood cancer research.

The Program of the Year Award recognized the St. Jude Up ’til Dawn school that implemented the most outstanding overall program, exceeding expectations in all aspects of the event. This includes how the Executive Leadership Team worked together, awareness and public relations efforts, recruitment, fundraising efforts, side events and the main Up ’til Dawn event.

The team received their award at the Collegiate Leadership Seminar in Memphis, held each year to support the students who lead Up ’til Dawn on their campuses.

When the award was presented, a number of Belmont’s Up ’til Dawn accolades were read from the podium including:

  • Belmont has been the national leader in National Recruitment Day efforts for three years in a row, consistently recruiting 400+ participants each year
  • By the end of September last year, the team had recruited 650 participants for their February event
  • Belmont’s team sold a unique National Recruitment Day sponsor who committed to donating $2 for every participant registered during the two days
  • The team hosted numerous social events to match their tailgate theme including strong call-to-actions requiring registration or fundraising actions to participate
  • They hosted a Greek Life No More Cancer Rally that raised $10,000 in 72 hours

By the time their Up ’til Dawn event day rolled around, the Executive Board had recruited 872 participants and raised $148,000 — a new school record. Their impressive fundraising total was revealed live on national television when Fox & Friends featured the story and allowed the group to share their efforts with the country, a first in St. Jude Up ’til Dawn program history.

Belmont alumnus and Executive Director of last year’s Up ’til Dawn Executive Board Joe LaMartina was proud to hear of the group’s honor. “The award is a culmination of the amazing hard work from the Up ’til Dawn team this year and the passion of the Belmont community for St. Jude,” he said.

College of Pharmacy Sends Students, Faculty on Global Missions Trips

Collectively, students served more than 3,300 patients during 18 days of clinics

Belmont University’s College of Pharmacy sent students abroad this summer on medical-related missions trips to both Honduras and Cambodia led by faculty members Dr. Tracy Frame and Adam Pace and College of Pharmacy Dean Dr. David Gregory. Though each trip visited a different place, they sought out a similar goal — to impact the lives of the patients they served.

Assistant Professor of Pharmacy Tracy Frame’s interprofessional team, made up of both undergraduate and graduate nursing students, pharmacy students, a social worker and five faculty members, spent 10 days in Cambodia facilitating an all-student run clinic that saw more than 700 patients. Developed by the students before leaving the States, the clinic’s protocol allowed each patient the opportunity to be seen by undergraduate nursing students to have vitals evaluated, treated by a graduate nursing student and then counseled and prescribed medication by a pharmacy intern.

Frame’s dedication to student service experiences is a foundational part of her teaching philosophy. “This generation of students loves experiences and getting involved,” she said. “They want to take initiative, have a voice and be transformed. Additionally, students learn more by getting involved in hands-on service experiences than by sitting in my classroom. Watching them serve and love others is when I see them happiest and the most content in their own lives.”

Team serving in Guatemala

Traveling to Gracias, Honduras with the “Mission of Harmony,” Gregory’s team included two pharmacy students and one undergraduate Spanish major who spent time serving throughout the group’s clinic. The pharmacy students worked with each patient after they had seen the health care provider, selecting the proper medication for the patient’s disease along with the appropriate medication management parameters. But their work didn’t stop there.

Though a considerable amount of the group’s efforts was medical in nature, Gregory said the service they completed in Honduras goes so much deeper than what can be seen in a health record. “A patient’s life is so much more than their medication,” he said. “Pharmacy can be a tool in helping each person live a better life, but it’s not the most important aspect. Pharmacy is what God has allowed me to do with my life, but these trips are about so much more than that. It’s about fulfilling human needs, not just medical ones. And that’s a transcendent cause.”

Pharmacy Manager and Associate Professor Dr. Adam Pace took his group to Copan, Honduas where they implemented a clinic that facilitated health care to local residents and provided “family packs” complete with hygiene items, vitamins and parasite medications. While there, the group was able to share their faith with the patients they served.

Students fill prescriptions during this missions experience in Cambodia

Pace said he sees service learning as the ultimate expression of his faith. “As Christian faculty, it is our duty to model Christian love before our students,” he said. “I can think of no better way to do that than to take them with me as I serve and try to show the love of Christ to the world.”

Beyond a physical expression of his faith, Pace said he sees the experience as a way to ensure his students have the opportunity to experience the blessings of their lives in a tangible way. “I hope they gain a fuller sense of the privilege we all enjoy and the obligations we have in this privileged environment. I hope they also have a heightened sense of the importance of what our profession offers by seeing what happens in its absence.”

Trip participant and Pharmacy student Camry Kerley said the opportunity to travel alongside her team to Honduras was an excellent experience that only strengthened her passion for missions through medical care. “Everything was so different from home,” she said. “The language, the lifestyle, the surroundings and peoples’ attitudes–Honduras is unlike any place I’ve ever been, and this experience was definitely one of a lifetime. After the completion of this trip, I feel more confidence in my pharmacy knowledge and reassured of my passion for missions.”

All missions trips facilitated by the College of Pharmacy are open to non-health care majors who are interested in participating and are financially supported by the College’s Golf Fundraiser.

Alumna Melissa Radke Delights Crowds on Book Tour for ‘Eat Cake Be Brave’

Viral video sensation preps for new USA sitcom, offers advice to current Belmont students

The path to her current national tour isn’t what alumna Melissa Radke expected from her life’s journey when she was a Belmont University commercial music student in the late ’90s, but despite the bumps in the road, she wouldn’t have it any other way. The Lufkin, Texas native has become an internet sensation with online videos that have reached over 59 million people on her Facebook page alone, and she has amassed a following of more than 325,000 across her social media channels. Moreover, Melissa, her husband David (also a Belmont alum), and their two children, Remi and Rocco, will be the subjects of a new USA network unscripted family comedy series set to premiere this fall.

Eat Cake Be Brave Book CoverRadke returned to Nashville last week for a stop at Parnassus Books as part of an ongoing national tour to promote her debut book, “Eat Cake Be Brave,” which was published by Grand Central/ Hachette earlier this summer. “Last year I traveled all over the United States as a public speaker for civic group, corporations, benefits, galas, schools, etc. This year has been spent getting the word on my book out by traveling and doing appearances from ‘Megyn Kelly’s Today’ show to Hallmark’s ‘Home and Family.'”

Her success comes as a result of years of hard work that began when she first created a public Facebook page and, as she notes, “was off to the races” with her unique and inspiring storytelling. “By the end of the first week I had 470 followers, and I thought that was amazing! I would just put up silly, little videos for me and my 470 friends and family. Until one night I made a video called Red Ribbon Week. We posted that video the next morning before I went off to work and by the time I left work at 3 p.m., it had almost a million views. One day later, 4 million. A week later, 10 million. Today it has been viewed over 100 million times all over the world. That little video changed the trajectory of my life. If that sentence sounds dramatic, IT IS! It’s been absolutely crazy. But what I always want people to know though, is this: I was ready. I had paid my dues and then some. I worked hard for many many years, singing for people who rejected me, speaking to tens of people, writing for a local magazine that had a very small circulation. Whatever it took – I would do it. And yes, I thought that part of my life was over. But God. He knew better. So when that video went viral and people and media started contacting me, I was ready, because I had been working. I had always been working.”

The Radke family on set for the new USA sitcom
The Radke family appears on set for their new USA sitcom.

Another viral video, titled “Eat Cake Be Brave,” was viewed by a literary agent in New York City who thought Radke’s words and ideas should reach an even broader audience. Shortly thereafter, eight publishing companies were bidding for the rights to her debut book. Now, she hopes “Eat Cake Be Brave” can help others be more bold in their own lives. “I want readers to get to know me a little better, to feel like they are just really great friends who are meeting me over Mexican food and Diet Coke, and I’m just spilling my guts. But what I want them to leave with is the idea that all it takes is a little spark of bravery to start a forest fire. That’s what it was for me. I didn’t blow the candle out on my 41st birthday cake and change the world the next day. No! I simply started saying yes to little things; if I was asked to do something that scared me – I did it anyway. If I was asked to speak or sing or walk up on stage in front of people – I did it. If it felt scary, I did it. If it felt strange or foreign, I tried it. Is it because I had been studying how to be brave? No. Was it because I had seen an inspirational cat poster hanging in my kids classroom? No. It was because decision by decision, day by day, minute by minute, I would decide to do the bravest thing I could do. And it wasn’t just changing my career (as it turns out), it was changing my life. From the inside out.”

As a student at Belmont, Radke was a commercial music vocal performance major who sang in Jazzmin and was selected to participate in the annual Commercial Music Showcase her senior year. Though she endured several rejections during her college years, moments that became significant parts of her story, she says she wouldn’t change a thing. In fact, Radke credits her Belmont experience with providing the foundation for the attributes she needs for the spotlight she’s in today, pointing especially to School of Music faculty member Sandra Dudley. “She made me feel like I could – and would – one day set the world on fire. She was not just a fan of my voice, she was a fan of ME. All of me. She hears good voices all day long, and she teaches good voices all day long. She really put a lot of stock into the individual, too. When the crowds come out and the cameras click and the fans scream – what kind of person will you be? She taught us how to be good humans, and I’ll never forget that. She was one of the best cheerleaders I’ve ever had in my life.”

Radke Family PhotoWith her own career now in high gear, Radke also took a moment to offer advice to current Belmont students, whatever path they may be choosing. “First, I would want them to know that in the course of their life they will face some rejection. Maybe they already have. Maybe they are facing some of it right now. We all face rejection, it’s part of our journey. What we cannot allow to happen is that we cannot allow it to define us. Our rejection is not the end of us, body shaming is not the demise of us, dream killers will not have the last word for us. There must be something inside of us that is stronger than the words thrown at us. But that is up to you – and no one else. No one else can do that hard work for us, we have to do it ourselves. So however you want to do it, through your faith, through counseling, through journaling, whatever path you choose just make sure you are reminding yourself daily WHO you are, WHOSE you are and what the truth about you really is. Secondly, there is a section in my book that says ‘We will lose all the girls if we teach them that never stopping equals strength,’ and what I mean by that is this, we are in a relentless culture. Keep trying, keep going, never stop, get better, work harder, get up and try again, dust yourself off and keep at it. Doing that, day in and day out? It’s unhealthy. Sometimes the healthiest thing we can do is to quit forcing a dream or a destiny that might not be for us. I just KNEW my voice would make me famous – and it is – but not at all in the way I originally thought. The minute I stopped throwing myself against a brick wall was the minute God grabbed me and said, ‘I need you elsewhere. I’ve been needing you for a  long time but you were just absolutely sure you knew what was best for you. You didn’t. You had no idea.’ He was right. He was so very right.”

As for her future, Radke says her goals are changing from when she first started that Facebook page several years ago. “I used to want to be funnier, funnier, funnier, I wanted to keep people’s attention and collect more and more followers. Not anymore. Now, I want to continually be an encouragement to people who have dreams that they want to pursue. I want to be a cheerleader for those people who felt like I did at one time, like there’s was a wasted life. Because it isn’t wasted. Not one minute of one thing they have gone through is a wasted story. And my goal now is to make sure people know that and do something about it!”