IMPORTANT NOTE: These are the archived stories for Belmont News & Achievements prior to June 26, 2023. To see current stories, click here.

Home Blog Page 228

Belmont Hosts 2018 ‘The Power of Women Entrepreneurs’ Luncheon, Receives Donation for Female Entrepreneur Student

Earlier this month, Belmont University welcomed guests to the 2018 “Power of WE: Women Entrepreneurship” luncheon. The event featured guest speaker Michelle Hernandez-Lane, Chief Procurement Officer for Metro Nashville and centered around a panel discussion led by powerful women entrepreneurs and professionals from the Nashville area.

In addition to Hernandez-Lane, these panelists included Kate Herman, market president and publisher for Nashville Business Journal, Page Turner, principal broker/owner of Elite Real Estate & LIFE-Changers, Int’l and Tanaka Vercher, chair of the Budget and Finance Committee for Metro Council. The discussion, moderated by former principal owner of Remnant Management Group Stephanie Beard, allowed participants to hear advice from seasoned professionals who shared personal experiences and learning and growth opportunities as well as tips on how to get ahead in the business world.

At the end of the event, a check for $1,500 was presented to Belmont to be given to a female business student who is interested in beginning her own business.

Student-Run Public Relations Firm Presents Work to Easley Center

After several semesters of work, a group of public relations students from Belmont’s own student-run public relations firm presented their work and findings to their community client. The firm, Tower Creative Communications (TCC), is run by senior Joel Delabre, executive director and sophomore Chelsea Lomartire, managing director, under the advisement of Dr. Kevin Trowbridge in the department of public relations. Students work in groups to offer pro bono public relations services to community partners in exchange for real-world experience and practicum credit.

This year, Lomartire’s team, which consisted of Jordan Anderson, Shelby Cage, Morgan James, Christiana Green and Sarah Self, worked tirelessly with the Easley Community Center of Metro Parks to help improve programming for the Edgehill neighborhood. They recently presented their findings to Jackie Jones and Marlo Lavender from Metro Parks.

students standing and smiling with Easley representativesBelmont University seeks to be a meaningful community institution by giving students the opportunity to participate in, learn from and serve their communities through service-learning courses, community service opportunities and more. TCC exemplifies this value by combining valuable learning experiences for students with invaluable service to the community.

Located at Rose Park, the Easley Center offers many amenities to the community, including a recreation gym and weight room, a variety of classes and a swimming pool in the summer, as well as after-school and summer programming for local students.

 

Ivey-Soto, Reidy Recognized with Harold Love Awards

Dr. Mona Ivey-Soto, assistant professor of education and Cassandra Reidy, a student in Belmont’s mental health counseling graduate program, were recently recognized with Harold Love Outstanding Community Service Awards. Elected to the General Assembly in 1968, Representative Harold Love, Sr. was known for his compassion and good humor. A prominent Nashville insurance salesman, Love also served on the board of directors for the South Street Center and the 18th Ave Community Center. With the welfare of his community as his primary concern, Love would go to any lengths to help a constituent in need, even if it meant giving from his own pocket. That is why when he was present during a session of the House of Representatives, it was said, “Love is in the House.”

The awards were created and named for Love to celebrate and honor students, faculty and staff in higher education across Tennessee who have demonstrated exemplary service in their communities.
The Tennessee Higher Education Commission was given the charge to implement this recognition, and a task force of institutional and board representatives convenes annually to review submitted proposals. Each year, five awards are given to students, and five awards are given to faculty/staff.

As a scholar activist, Ivey-Soto is passionate about amplifying the voices and perspectives of those who are marginalized and overlooked. She seeks to shift the broader collective conversation from a deficit discourse to one that emphasizes assets and hope in engaging and impacting communities of color. She is dedicated to connecting teaching and scholarship to urban communities where she spends time with children and families. Practicing a posture of cultural humility, Ivey-Soto is blessed to develop strengths-based intentional relationships with families, nonprofit organizations and schools, co-laboring and striving for equity and justice.

Enrolled in Belmont’s Masters in Mental Health Counseling Program, Reidy has been dedicated to community serve and those around her for years. Her family created a fundraiser for Cystic Fibrosis
over 22 years ago, helping Cassandra learn the importance of service at a young age. Her community work has expanded and deepened as she entered the mental health field and recognized the importance of community on overall wellness. Cassandra is grateful for the many opportunities she has found in Nashville to serve women in addiction, incarcerated individuals, individuals with severe and persistent mental illness and fellow counselors striving to improve their practice.

Both recipients were honored at a ceremony on Friday, April 27 at the Cordell Hull State Office Building.

Students Honored at Nashville’s Public Relations Society of America Parthenon Awards

Five Belmont students were honored for their public relations campaigns at the 2018 Public Relations Society of America Nashville Chapter’s Parthenon Awards April 30 at the Country Music Hall of Fame.

Receiving an Award of Merit for their “Instruments of Joy: Strike a Chord Campaign,” Haley Becker, Makenzie Clayburg, Thomas Koerschen and Alora Lauver held a campaign in fall 2017 for their public relations campaigns class. The initiative included fundraising events for Instruments of Joy, a nonprofit organization dedicated to providing quality musical instruments to aspiring musicians in developing countries.

Callie Edwards received an Award of Merit for her “Dickens Dynamics” awareness campaign in spring 2017 on behalf of the T. J. Martell Foundation, a nonprofit organization partnered with the music industry to raise funds for innovative medical research to cure leukemia, cancer and AIDS.

Area public relations/communications professionals and students attended the annual awards ceremonies. The Public Relations Society of America is the nation’s largest association of public relations and communications professionals. The PRSA Nashville Chapter includes almost 200 members and sponsors five student chapters of the Public Relations Student Society of America, including Belmont PRSSA.

Belmont Hosts Poverty Simulation for Health Sciences Faculty, Staff

Running around a crowded gym carrying paper money and wearing a nametag detailing the role they were given, nearly 100 Belmont College of Health Sciences and Nursing (CHSN) faculty and staff filled the Sports Science Center on Wednesday, April 25 to participate in the Community Action Poverty Simulation (CAPS). Booths representing community agencies (social services, school, the bank, a pawn shop and more) lined the walls as participants assumed their roles. Some were experiencing homeless, others represented single parents and even more participated as families with many children — all simulating exactly what it is to live in poverty across America.

A poverty simulation participant holds the money, vouchers she was given.

The CAPS experience asks participants to meet, and better understand, the day-to-day challenges  faced by more than a million Tennesseans who live in poverty. . Armed with bus passes, plastic EBT cards, paper money and more, each person role-played the lives of low-income families. They had the stressful task of providing for basic necessities and shelter on a limited budget during the course of four 15-minute “weeks.”

CHSN hosted the simulation as part of the BeTIP program–Belmont’s Educating Trauma-Informed Professionals Initiative, a program that is funded by Belmont’s receipt of an Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) grant administered through the Department of Children’s Services Building Strong Brains Tennessee Initiative.

Director of Clinical Education in the School of Physical Therapy Gail Bursch participated in the simulation and was given the role of a single mother of two–a 17-year-old son who had dropped out of high school, was selling drugs and had a pregnant girlfriend and a 15-year-old daughter in high school. Her husband had recently left and the family was forced to survive on only $20. Bursch said the experience was incredibly eye-opening and induced significant amounts of stress on she and her family.

“The experience will continue to stick with me,” Bursch said. “Our students, once graduated, will have the opportunity to treat people from all socioeconomic classes and this simulation is important training in ensuring they are able to develop deepened insight and empathy.”

Dean of the College Dr. Cathy Taylor described the importance of trauma-informed professionals throughout health care, noting the impact toxic stress can have on a person’s physical health. “There is constant stress associated with living in poverty,” Taylor said. “Stress associated with not having the resources to pay bills, a lack of transportation and limited access to adequate childcare are just a few examples of that stress. And we know the developing young brain is especially  vulnerable to the effects of toxic stress — it can literally disrupt  brain development and lead to a host of poor mental and physical health outcomes.”

That’s why Taylor and her team are actively working to ensure their students and graduates are familiar with the effects of poverty throughout our communities. Experiences like the Poverty Simulation provide significant perspective that assists in informing their practice.

“Despite the effects of that stress,” Taylor said, “we also know there are critical periods of development where we can make a difference. Providers who are aware of the traumatic events their patients and clients have experienced can  change the conversation from ‘What’s wrong with you?’ to ‘What’s happened to you?’ And then–“And how can we help?'”

In the Fall, the College will host the Poverty Simulation for students–providing another opportunity to build additional perspective and add to their trauma-information education. “This is powerful,” Taylor said. “By ensuring our graduates leave our campus with an understanding of how trauma can impact the people they serve, they will be instruments of healing. We are preparing the next generation of providers to be just that.”

The College plans to host the simulation again in the fall for students.

https://youtu.be/K_6IiKAlJGo

Brown Honored with By-Line Award from Alma Mater

Sybril Brown at MarquetteDr. Sybril Brown, professor of media studies, was recently awarded the By-Line Award from her alma mater, Marquette University. The By-Line Award honors an alumnus/a who has attained distinction in journalism and related fields.

Brown is an Emmy Award-winning multimedia journalist, educator, author, international speaker and presenter with an interesting take on the internet. She’s written a book that compares today’s most innovative network with another from the early- to mid-19th century: the Underground Railroad.

Brown — “Dr. Syb” to her students — began her career working behind the scenes at major television network affiliates in Milwaukee and Chicago, then moved to a station in Nashville as a reporter, filling in when needed as a news anchor and talk show host. Along the way, she earned a master’s degree in education and a doctorate in higher education administration. She now teaches courses in social media reporting, digital citizenship, mass media and entrepreneurial media, with a research focus on innovation, civility, and digital and social media.

Brown calls her time at Marquette “a consistent positive memory.” She was a resident adviser, president of the Black Student Association, member of Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority, and worked at the student newspaper and radio station. She also worked closely with Student Affairs to improve campus and community relations, which she says was “extremely influential” in her decision to earn advanced degrees in education.

Alumna Snyder Wins Regional Murrow Award

Alumna Sarah SnyderGood Morning Alabama co-anchor Sarah Snyder, a journalism and new media alumna from Belmont, was recently awarded a Regional Murrow Award by the Radio Television Digital News Association. The Excellence in Writing award resulted from Snyder’s series on Medical Miracles which explored people who were out of medical options but still overcame their conditions.

Snyder has been with Birmingham’s ABC 33|40 since 2011.

Vision Garners Top Honors from Tennessee Associated Press

The Vision, Belmont’s student media outlet, won five awards this weekend from the Tennessee Associated Press Broadcasters & Media Editors college contest, including first place for both College Media Website and TV Newscast (the monthly VNN: Vision News Network). The awards were presented Saturday evening at the John Seigenthaler Center in Nashville. Students from 17 schools submitted more than 300 entries in the contest to honor the best in Tennessee college journalism in 2017.

Individual honors for the evening included:

Murphree’s ‘Bug Camp’ Featured in TN Conservationist

Professor of Biology Dr. Steven Murphree hosts the BBB–“Beetles, Bugs & Butterflies”–Camp on Belmont’s campus every summer and this year, the experience will be featured in the TN Conservationist’s May/June Issue.

The article highlights the camp and details the many experiences children have the opportunity to enjoy during their time on Belmont’s campus each year.

Curb College Hosts Adjunct Faculty Job Fair

Through a partnership between the College of Entertainment & Music Business and Creatives’ Day, a non-profit organization that serves the creative community, Belmont hosted its first adjunct faculty job and creatives’ resource fair. Through the collective vision of Curb College of Entertainment and Music Business (CEMB) Associate Dean Cheryl Carr and the Director and Founder of Creatives’ Day Brian Sexton, the event’s objective was to serve the creative community while broadening the University’s reach to sectors of the artistic community that offer diverse contributions and expertise.

The event was attended by approximately 150 participants. Attendees received information about the University and CEMB programs from Associate Dean Carr, Chair of Music Business Dr. Rush Hicks, Chair of Entertainment Industry Studies Dr. David Schreiber, Chair of Songwriting James Elliott, Chair of Motion Pictures Will Akers, Chair of Audio Engineering Technology Michael Janas and Professor of Media Studies Rich Tiner.