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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Alumna Opens ‘Baked on 8th’ Bakery

Cookies from Baked on 8th

The old adage, “From here to anywhere,” can be used to describe so many of Belmont’s graduates, whether they end up in California or China. For alumna Leah Carmean, “From here to anywhere” took her just a few blocks away from campus, to 8th Avenue South in Nashville, where she is fulfilling her long-time dream of opening a bakery. Aided by her expertise in entrepreneurship (her major at Belmont), her husband Adam and her love of baking, Carmean’s dream is being realized right down the street from her alma mater.

Baked on 8th, which opened in June, actually began as a brain child during Carmean’s time at Belmont. She wrote, “I did my initial business plan for a bakery while at Belmont with unending encouragement from many wonderful professors,” particularly Dr. Jeff Cornwall (entrepreneurship) and Dr. Bonnie Smith Whitehouse (English). “I took three writing courses with Dr. Smith Whitehouse, and much of my writing was focused on my dream of opening a bakery.” She also wrote her first business plan in Cornwall’s class, which she described as an “incredibly challenging process,” but also “the most rewarding work of my college career.”

According to Smith Whitehouse, “In my third-year writing class… Leah researched and wrote a tremendous business plan for a bakery she had long dreamed of opening. I have used her work as an exemplar of fine writing and research in the years since she was my student. I remember she generously brought scrumptious baked treats to our class one day. Leah even baked my wedding cake!”

Baked on 8th consists of around 10 employees and is already receiving rave reviews, including this recent Nashville Scene article. The shop focuses on serving cakes, pies and other single-serving desserts in “classic Southern bakery” fashion.

Belmont, Carmean wrote, was the driving force behind her dream. “I am so fortunate to have had a college education that has helped mold me and push me to actually become an entrepreneur, even eight years after graduating! Without my education, I know I would lack the confidence to actually take this leap into business ownership.”

Carr Convenes Panel on Nashville’s National Museum of African American Music

Cheryl Carr, associate dean in the Mike Curb College of Entertainment and Music Business, recently convened “Defining, Influencing and Valuing Popular Music: A Study of Nashville’s National Museum of African American Music,” a panel discussion presented for the annual conference of the Association of Popular Music Education.

In addition to Carr as moderator, panelists included Dr. Dina Bennett, senior curator for the National Museum of African American Music (NMAAM), Lolita Toney, NMAAM director of development and chief of staff and Crystal Hardison, NMAAM programs manager. The session explored the background, mission and vision for the museum, treatments of African American Music in the music business, including the law and the potential impact of a nonprofit entity on the commercial identity and popularity of African American Music.

Students Explore Adventure Tourism, Wellness in Australia

Trip highlights include experiential learning opportunities, collaboration with Live Nation and Mushroom Music 

Entertainment industry studies and music business students enjoyed a unique opportunity to earn credits in three courses—Activity and Adventure Tourism, Music Business and Wellness—in Australia this summer. While traveling ‘Down Under,’ students were able to take full advantage of experiential learning opportunities, which allowed them to apply, critique and learn from different principles of activity and adventure tourism in real-world situations in real-time.

Adventure Tourism classLed by Dr. David Schreiber (Entertainment Industry Studies) and Dr. Marnie Vanden Noven (Sport Science), the trip’s course information was applied while students were snorkeling on the Great Barrier Reef, participating in a Sydney bike tour, and zip lining and canyoning in the world’s oldest rainforest, the Daintree. Students also enjoyed learning from industry experts while indulging in many of these experiential learning opportunities allowing them to appreciate the marketing and management of tourism activities and the potential problems involved in organizing such services.

Classes provided students with an understanding of the evolutionary and current development of adventure and activity tourism as a significant sector of the leisure and tourism industries. Key issues relating to participation, team building, motivation, industry structures, destinations, environments, contemporary issues and influences of these types of activities on dimensions of wellness were examined in order to help students develop a contextual understanding of the activity amd adventure sector as it relates to the broader hospitality and tourism industry and personal well being.

International Collaboration Project Group PhotoStudents also collaborated on an international, interdisciplinary entertainment industry project with students from Australia and China. Working with industry professionals from Mushroom Music Group (Australia’s largest independent music company) and Live Nation (the world’s largest concert promoter), students worked in international teams to investigate, plan and present a project related to the primary and secondary ticketing markets within the live entertainment industry.

Throughout this experience, students discovered how ticket scalping issues, including copyright implications and local legislation, influenced ticket pricing and availability in different markets around the world, and the role the industry was playing in addressing or ignoring these issues. Belmont students provided global context as well as cultural and business perspective from their own regions as they worked closely with industry executives and faculty.

Searcy Elected to Tennessee Women’s Forum

Joyce Searcy HeadshotJoyce Searcy, Belmont’s director of community relations, was recently elected to the Tennessee Women’s Forum, a charter group of The International Women’s Forum (IWF-TN). IWF is a gloabal organization advancing women’s leadership across careers, cultures and continents by connecting the world’s most preeminent women of significant and diverse achievement. Members come together across national and international boundaries to share knowledge and ideas, enrich each other’s lives, provide a network of support and exert influence. Through the Leadership Foundation, IWF helps prepare future generations of women leaders. Currently, there are over 4,000 members worldwide.

Members are women of achievement who are receptive to association with other women on a state, national and global scale. IWF-TN consists of leaders and professional women who have regional, national and international influence. Each year, the top seven nominees who receive the most votes will be invited to join the forum.

This year, Searcy joins six other new members including Anne Courtenay Davis, Jaynee Day, Wanda Lyle, Lyn Plantinga, Renata Soto and Gail Carr Williams.

A reception honoring this year’s new members will be held on August 23. For more information on IWF, click here.

Belmont Named as a 50 Most Beautiful Christian College in the United States

Belmont University was recently named on Online Christian College’s 50 Most Beautiful Christian Colleges lists and came in at No. 14 on the organization’s list. The University was the highest ranked school in Tennessee.

OCC points to 50 universities that, though beautiful in design, are “highly-respected institution[s] built upon the tenets of the Christian faith.” The ranking considers a few criteria including awards and recognition including both local and national, student enjoyment, campus notable features and other characteristics including historical significance and environmental friendliness.

To read the ranking in its entirety, click here.

John Hosts Novel Discussion at Parnassus Book Club Meeting

Parnassus Book Club Coordinator Kathy Schultenover, Dr. Caresse John & Parnassus Manager Andy Brennan

Dr. Caresse John, associate professor of English at Belmont, led the discussion of classic novel Passing by Nella Larsen at both the morning and evening session of Parnassus’s Classic Book Club meeting on July 27. Over 30 participants in each session appreciated deeper insight into the novel through John’s academic knowledge of Larsen’s background and writing.

John’s area of teaching is American Literature, Composition and Gender Studies and she is interested in Modernist poetry, contemporary women writers and literary theory, particularly feminism and narratology. She has published two articles and a book chapter on Passing and will be taking a sabbatical this Fall to continue her study of the novel.

 

Belmont to Celebrate August Commencement on Friday, August 10

Belmont University will celebrate its summer commencement ceremony for both undergraduate and graduate students on Friday, August 10 at 5 p.m. in the Curb Event Center. The University will confer 281 degrees including 125 Bachelor’s, 108 Masters and 48 doctoral.

University President Dr. Bob Fisher will preside over the event and Associate Professor of Pharmacy Dr. Edgar Diaz-Cruz will present the commencement address. Diaz-Cruz is the 2017-18 Presidential Faculty Achievement Award recipient, a title awarded for the outstanding contributions he has made to student success.

Graduating students will cross the stage confidently as they look towards the University’s most recent “First Destination Rate,” a measure that indicates the percentage of graduate who secure employment, enroll in graduate school or enlist in military service within six months of graduation. This year, Belmont’s rate is 94 percent, the highest rank the University’s has ever earned and a rate that is significantly higher than the national average.

The ceremony will be live-streamed on Belmont’s website at www.belmont.edu.

Belmont Hosts Business Assistance Office’s 2018 Business Symposium

Belmont University recently served as the host site for the 2018 Business Symposium, presented by Metro’s Office of Minority and Women Business Assistance. The event, which was held on July 19, included a full day of programming complete with presentations detailing results from the survey of Prime & Minority Contractors, remarks from Mayor David Briley, tips on how to do business with the city of Nashville, a panel on procurement and more. The day concluded with a business development mixer.

Speakers included CEO of Minority Business Development Institute David Cayemitte, Senior Vice President & Financial Advisor at Pinnacle Financial Partners Beth Deering, Assistant US Attorney for the Middle District of Tennessee Chris Sabis and Metro Nashville’s Chief Procurement Office Michelle Hernandez-Lane, among others.

Event sponsors included Metro Nashville, Collaboration for Excellence, Women’s Business Enterprise Council, Belmont University and Bloomberg Associates.

Photo courtesy of Metro BAO. 

West Named as Missions Committee Chair of Saint Thomas Health Board

Dr. Susan West Headshot

Vice President and Chief of Staff Dr. Susan West was recently named as the Saint Thomas Health Board’s Mission Committee Chair. Currently serving in her second year on the board, West will oversee the work of the committee as they provide governance oversight for mission integration, ethics, pastoral care, clinical pastoral education, church relations, charity care and community benefit. The committee’s membership is made up of board members, community members and Saint Thomas senior leadership.

West will be the first lay person to chair the  committee. Historically, a member of Saint Thomas’s founding religious community, the Daughters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul, has led the work of the committee.

Belmont University Named as a Most Beautiful College Campus in the South

CountryLiving recently released its list of the 25 Most Beautiful College Campuses in the South, and Belmont University was ranked No. 14 on this year’s list. In honor of summer coming to an end, the list points to the most beautiful campuses in the southern region that will soon be welcoming students back.