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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Anderson’s Essay Published in Recent Anthology

Dr. Anderson's headshotDr. Mark Anderson, associate professor and chair of Belmont’s Philosophy Department, recently had an essay published in the book, “Nietzsche and the Philosophers,” which was released by Routledge on December 8. The book is an anthology of essays by leading scholars who have studied the life and work of German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche. His essay is titled, “Nietzsche’s Subversive Rewritings of Phaedo-Platonism” and is the third chapter of the anthology.

In 2014, Anderson published a book through Bloomsbury on the topic, called, “Plato and Nietzsche: Their Philosophical Art.” The paperback version of that publication is set to release next week.

Glowacka Awarded Clinical Placement and Financial Incentive through TRP

Glowacka's headshotFull-time Belmont MSN student Martyna Glowacka has been awarded a clinical placement and financial incentive through the Tennessee Rural Partnership (TRP). TRP, a subsidiary of the Tennessee Hospital Association, is a private non-profit organization established in 2006 to address the increasing challenges of providing healthcare in rural and underserved areas across the state. With this award, Glowacka will receive up to $7,500 in living expenses while in school and will be eligible for rural job placement as a family nurse practitioner and a $17,500 incentive after graduation.

“Martyna has benefitted from rural healthcare in her own life and is interested in giving back to her community. The TRP partnership has allowed Martyna the financial flexibility to be able to do that,” said Dr. Erin Shankel, assistant professor of nursing and Family Nurse Practitioner track coordinator.  “We are hopeful that more students will be able to benefit from rural placements in the future through our work with the TRP.”

Tough Wins Covenant Award for ‘Instrumental Song of the Year’

Tough's HeadshotDr. David Tough, associate professor of audio engineering technology, recently won a Covenant Award from the Gospel Music Association of Canada for producing and engineering the Instrumental Song of the Year, “Rise Again.” The composition features artist Treneta Bowden and was written by Bowden and Sean Spicer. The fiddle on the recording was performed by Belmont adjunct instructor Billy Contreras.

Honors Program Hosts Fisk University Students for Annual Shakespeare Dinner

Belmont and Fisk Honors students sitting at the dinner tableThe Belmont University Honors Program and Fisk University’s Honors Program recently partnered to meet for a dinner of homemade chicken-noodle soup and bread along with a performance of “Romeo and Juliet,” starring recent Belmont MFA theater performance graduate Morgan Davis as Juliet. Dr. Jonathan Thorndike, director of Belmont’s Honors Program, and Dr. Beverly Schneller, Belmont’s associate provost, worked with Dr. Patrick Fleming of Fisk University to organize the special event held in Belmont’s Honors House.

“The Belmont and Fisk Honors students shared their experiences with each other and discussed being in challenging classes and taking on academic and community leadership roles,” said Thorndike. “The students enjoyed Shakespeare’s incomparably rich language and the story of the romantic tragedy that unfolds in the story of the star-crossed lovers, Romeo and Juliet. Bringing Shakespeare to life and seeing the joy of ‘great books’ on the stage was a postive for both Belmont and Fisk Honors students.”

The Honors Program has sponsored a dinner each year since 2012 and has helped students to attend the Nashville Shakespeare Festival’s (NSF) professional productions at Belmont’s Troutt Theater. The NSF began an annual Winter Shakespeare production in 2008 after many years of producing outdoor performances each summer and fall in Nashville’s Centennial Park.  This allowed the festival to expand its repertoire to include plays that benefitted from a more intimate indoor venue. The Trout Theater allows the NSF to provide both public performances and daytime school performances for area high schools. The first eight winter productions served more than 35,000 students and adults from around Middle Tennessee.

Belmont University to Host Fourth Annual Symposium on Faith and Culture Feb. 6-10

Lectures and discussions will center on the theme ‘Contemplative Activism’  

The fourth annual Faith and Culture Symposium, sponsored by Belmont University’s College of Theology and Christian Ministry, will be held on campus Feb. 6-10 in the Janet Ayers Academic Center. This year’s theme, Contemplative Activism, highlights the university’s dual emphases on spiritual formation and social justice. The theme suggests that the contemplative and active dimensions of spirituality need one another and must be integrated for the renewal and transformation of persons and communities.

This year’s events span the topics of embracing hopelessness, activism, inter-faith dialogue and how to have conversations surrounding issues like race and political polarization. Guest speakers will include Dr. Miguel De La Torre, professor of social ethics and Latino/a studies at the Iliff School of Theology in Denver; Dr. Marcia Mount Shoop, who is a pastor, author and consultant on religious and political differences; Nathan Schneider, a scholar and journalist who writes about technology, economy and religion; and Micky Scott Bey Jones, a womanist contemplative activist and non-violent direct action organizer.

Additionally, a panel discussion will occur on February 7 at 6:15 p.m. titled, “Faith in Dialogue: Sharing Stories of Nashville.” Panelists will represent various religious backgrounds including Episcopalian, Hindu, Islamic, Jewish and Roman Catholic:

  • Moderator Gordon Peerman, an Episcopal priest who has taught seminars in Buddhist-Christian dialogue
  • Radha Babu, on the founding board of the Sri Ganesha where she has been giving tours for the past thirty years
  • Hasina Mohyuddin, a PhD student at Vanderbilt in Community Research and Action who also serves on the board of the Islamic Center of Nashville
  • Bruce Morrill, a member of the Jesuits and a Roman Catholic priest who teachestheology and Catholicism at Vanderbilt Divinity School
  • Tallu Schuyler Quinn, who brings her educational background in the fine arts and theology to her creative and pastoral work as founder and director of the Nashville Food Project, a ministry of Woodmont Christian Church
  • Pat Halper, a visual artist and long-time member of The Temple who has made a vocation of organizing, managing and being hands on with various volunteer based work, including The Boulevard Bolt, the Jewish Community Center and NOAH

“Our annual symposium works to sustain an ongoing conversation relating to faith and culture,” said Drs. Judy Skeen and Cynthia Curtis, professors of religion and co-chairs of the symposium’s faculty committee. “By inviting speakers who shape and participate in the national conversation on religion and public life, the university-wide conversation is carried forward and informed by academic and congregational dynamics. Symposium speakers represent this integration as their own devotional and worship practices have shaped them to see more clearly things about ourselves and our world in need of healing. Their work holds up to us a kind of mirror to help us see as well. This theme also raises questions about what a contemplative presence in the world looks like and how we can bring such a posture into spaces of brokenness to make a difference with compassionate and just action, bearing witness to Christ and God’s loving presence around and within us.”

A full list of events including speakers, dates, times, locations and topics can be found here.

 

Belmont Names Gibbs as New Missionary in Residence

Jane Anne Gibbs, a native Nashvillian who has years of experience serving through missions in African cities, was recently appointed as Belmont University’s new Missionary in Residence. The Missionary in Residence program was introduced in the fall of 2011 and aims to connect both students and faculty to information on how they can get involved in global missions.

Gibbs began her missionary work in 1989 when the International Mission Board appointed her and her husband to serve as church planters and evangelists in Burkina Faso, Africa. The Gibbs completed one year of French study in Tours, France before heading to Burkina Faso, where they spent 13 years in a rural area planting churches, training pastors and homeschooling their three children. Jane also worked in a limited capacity in literacy and women’s work during that time. The Gibbs resigned as missionaries and headed back to Nashville in 2003 in an effort to care for their oldest daughter who was struggling with several health concerns.

Upon returning, Jane began teaching English at Whites Creek High School while her husband, Bart, served as a bivocational pastor at Hobson Pike Baptist Church. When their daughter’s health began to improve, Jane and Bart felt once again that God was leading them to west Africa. They were appointed in 2010 as church planting catalysts in the small town of Nalerigu in northern Ghana, where Jane helped with the homeschooling efforts of five missionary families.

She also spent her time visiting churches and forming groups dedicated to supporting the church, its women and women in the community through prayer, discipleship and outreach. After three years in Ghana, the couple was asked to return to Burkina Faso to serve various tasks including church planting, mentoring new missionaries, teaching the Bible and working as school board trustees and medical services council members.

“The last three years of our missionary tour were some of the most tumultuous we’ve ever experienced,” Gibbs said. “because of the tragedy of the Ebola virus in west Africa, a peaceful overthrow of the Burkina Faso government in 2014, a year’s transitional government, an ultimately unsuccessful coup d’état in September 2015, peaceful Democratic elections in November 2015 and a terrorist attack killing 30 innocent civilians and ex-patriates by Al-Qaïda of the Islamic Magreb in January 2016, as well as AQIM’s kidnapping of an 84-year-old independent missionary surgeon and his wife from a northern medical clinic.”

The family is now on home assignment, through May 2017, where they are visiting family, helping their youngest daughter settle into college and pursuing coursework and training in working with struggling readers.

“We are so thankful for the opportunity God has provided us to serve as missionaries with the International Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention. Our following Jesus’s Great Commission of Matthew 28:19-20 has taken us to ‘the uttermost parts of the earth,’ and it’s been the source of innumerable blessings and great joy to witness others giving their lives to God and growing in His grace and knowledge.”

Belmont’s Vice President for Spiritual Development Dr. Todd Lake said, “Belmont is thankful to have a Missionary in Residence program that serves our students so well.  Our newest MIR, Jane Anne Gibbs, has connected so warmly across campus with international students, those interested in becoming more involved in missions and students and faculty who desire to learn more about French-speaking Africa.”

Kearney, E. S. Rose Scholar, Volunteers at W. O. Smith Music School

Isaiah Kearney's headshotAs part of the community service aspect of his E.S. Rose Scholarship, freshman entrepreneurship major Isaiah Kearney has spent the semester volunteering at the W. O. Smith School of Music as a guitar teacher for beginners. So far, Kearney has been helping one student learn the fundamentals of music and develop a passion for playing instruments.

“It is extremely rewarding for me when my student shows up every week excited to show me what she practiced because it means that she is enjoying music,” Kearney said. “That, to me, is the most important thing that a young musician can learn.”

Kearney was inspired to spend his time volunteering at the W. O. Smith Music School by his father, Chris Kearney, who was a volunteer drum instructor at the school when Isaiah was an infant.

“I was eager to continue in some of the good work he was doing with W.O. Smith,” Isaiah said of his father. “My time so far has definitely been a growing experience because, though I don’t compare myself to him, my hope is that I can instill the same eagerness to learn that he gave to me and all of his students in mine.”

The E.S. Rose Scholarship was established in 2007 to honor the memory of Reverend E. S. Rose, a religious and Nashville community activist who served as pastor of Greater Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church (founded in 1866) from 1928-1944. Each year, the university awards full and (when funds allow) half-tuition scholarships to students distinguished by their record of academic achievement and recognition from educational leaders. As part of the scholarship, recipients are required to volunteer at the location of their choosing in the Rose Park or Edgehill area.

Students Raise More Than $110,000 for St. Jude by staying ‘Up ‘Til Dawn’

Belmont University students held their third annual fundraiser for St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital this weekend—and they set their monetary goals high. Hoping to raise $100,000 to support research efforts for childhood cancer, the student organization “Up ‘Til Dawn” hosted a 24-hour event that included games, inflatables, a silent disco and other activities designed to keep participants awake. Additionally, teams competed against each other in a series of challenges designed to educate students about the hospital. Around 5:30 a.m., the group announced that the fundraiser had collected a total of $110,530.70. Last year’s event raised around $85,000 and the 2015 event raised $47,000, bringing the total amount of money raised by Belmont students to around $242,000 in just the last three years.

Students dance the night away for Up Til Dawn“This event is important because it gives Belmont students an opportunity to help in the fight to find the cure for cancer,” said Joe LaMartina, Up ‘Til Dawn event and logistics director. “Cancer affects us all, including students at Belmont, and Up ‘Til Dawn gives students the opportunity to partner with St. Jude in their mission to end all childhood cancer. Belmont students should get involved to have an awesome time and to help save lives. I got involved in the event because of my passion for cancer research and my want to help St. Jude and its amazing patients.”

Up ‘Til Dawn is an event implemented on 60 college campuses across the country to aid St. Jude in its mission “to advance cures, and means of prevention, for pediatric catastrophic diseases through research and treatment.” Thanks to the vision of St. Jude founder Danny Thomas, an inductee in the Tennessee Health Care Hall of Fame, no child is denied treatment at St. Jude based on race, religion or a family’s ability to pay. The hospital has the world’s best survival rates for the most aggressive childhood cancers, and treatments invented at St. Jude have helped push the overall childhood cancer survival rate from 20 percent to 80 percent since it opened more than 50 years ago.

Images provided by Chandler Bado.

Weston Participates in the Planning of the 2017 AACP Annual Meeting

Dr. Weston's headshotDr. Scott Weston, associate dean for academic affairs and assessment in Belmont’s College of Pharmacy, recently participated in the planning of the 2017 annual meeting of the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy (AACP) in Alexandria, Virginia. Weston, along with a committee of other selected members representing pharmacy schools from across the country, reviewed and discussed the hundreds of proposals for poster, podium and roundtable presentations in order to select the programming for this year’s meeting, which will be held in Nashville.

Founded in 1900, the AACP is the national organization representing pharmacy education in the United States.  AACP is comprised of all colleges and schools with pharmacy degree programs accredited by the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education. This includes more than 6,400 faculty and 62,500 students enrolled in professional programs as well as 5,100 individuals pursuing graduate study. The AACP’s annual meeting is the largest gathering of academic pharmacy administrators, faculty and staff and each year offers 70 or more educational programs that cut across all disciplines in pharmacy.

Belmont Breaks Ground on New Residence Hall

Campus’ largest residential building to date will house 600+ students

Rendering of new Residence HallCommitted to providing students with a traditional residential, liberal arts-based education, Belmont University officially broke ground today on what will be the institution’s largest residence hall to date. The 220,000 square foot structure will open in phases with half of the facility welcoming students in August 2018, and the second half of the hall being finished by January 2019. The new complex is anticipated to cost $80 million and will house 600 upperclassmen in total upon its completion.

Belmont President Dr. Bob Fisher said, “We have been blessed with extraordinary growth over the past 15 years as students continue to be attracted to Belmont’s unparalleled academic programs, vibrant campus life and appealing location near the heart of Music City. Creating additional on campus living allows our students to more easily embrace all of the opportunities Belmont has to offer.”

Approximately 55 percent of Belmont’s undergraduate population currently lives on campus, and the new hall will increase residential spaces from approximately 3,500 currently to more than 4,100 spots. The new facility will feature both suite and apartment-style room options and will be located in the southeast quadrant of campus, between 15th and 12th avenues. Nashville-based R.C. Mathews is the contractor and ESa the architect for the project.