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 Introduces New Major in Public Health

Undergraduate degree seeks to address critical topic of community well-being

This fall Belmont University will begin preparing the next generation of expert community health advocates through the establishment of an undergraduate Bachelor of Science in Public Health (BSPH). A dynamic field of study and practice credited with saving millions of lives, public health focuses on improving the health of communities and populations by working to develop the conditions and behaviors that contribute to better health for all. Practitioners address a wide range of topics that can include air, water and food standards; vaccine initiatives; tobacco control regulations; highway safety and injury prevention programs; emergency preparedness; and more.

Dr. Cathy Taylor, dean of Belmont’s Inman College of Health Sciences and Nursing where the major will be housed, said, “Establishing a Bachelor of Science in Public Health supports our College’s goal to prepare graduates who are compassionate providers and transformational leaders dedicated to service. The need for the content in this program is great, as the health of Americans—and Tennesseans in particular—remains sub-optimal. We suffer illness and premature death at higher rates than other developed countries, and the U.S. economy is at risk due to rising healthcare costs with an unhealthy workforce that has grown less competitive in the global marketplace. Our faculty and students can bring their best science and qualified skills to addressing those issues head on.”

“Tennessee is fortunate to have excellent schools and programs in public health that help meet the increasing demand in our state, nationally and internationally for professionals who are well grounded in population health principles and practice, increasingly understood as being more important even than healthcare to meet the desire we all share for optimal health,” said Tennessee Department of Health Commissioner John Dreyzehner, MD, MPH, FACOEM. “We are delighted that Belmont is creating this undergraduate public health program that can meaningfully contribute to this growing emphasis on public health, and I’m grateful to Belmont President Dr. Bob Fisher, Dr. Taylor and others at Belmont who have taken this forward looking step in their institutional journey and educational mission. We look forward to working with them to help train an advancing generation of professionals.”

The Belmont program was designed based on accreditation guidelines set forth by the Council on Education in Public Health. The BSPH prepares students for work in positions in a variety of settings including health-related agencies, hospitals, local and state public health departments, academic research centers and institutes, corporate disease management and wellness programs, non-profit agencies, and healthcare businesses and industries. Examples include:

  • Community health outreach worker
  • International health organization or missions program assistant
  • Research assistant with a nonprofit organization
  • Carrying out health-related assessments at construction sites
  • Doing consulting work related to disease prevention
  • Working at a company that does health communication and health marketing
  • Conducting air quality sampling and surveying

Many students with undergraduate degrees in public health go straight on to health-related graduate programs, while some graduates choose to take advantage of government programs to gain more experience before entering the workforce or moving on to graduate study (e.g., serving in the Peace Corps, AmeriCorps or participating in a CDC Training Fellowship such as the Public Health Associate Program, a 1-2 year, paid fellowship).

Belmont’s program will emphasize hands-on field work hours in clinical, research, policy or community health settings at local and international locations. Students in the major will be mentored to achieve personal goals whether they choose employment after their bachelor’s degree or admission into a graduate or professional program. Courses will include explorations in the foundations of public health, epidemiology, environmental health, biostatistics, policy, global health and health economics, among others. Finally, as with all health science programs at Belmont, public health majors will benefit from the ability to work with interdisciplinary teams of students and professional colleagues in nursing, occupational therapy, physical therapy, pharmacy, social work and health care administration, providing the best possible atmosphere to emulate the challenges and complexities of modern health care.

For more information, visit belmont.edu/publichealth.

Blash Speaks at Healthcare Information Management Systems Society Conference

Anthony BlashBelmont University College of Pharmacy Assistant Professor Dr. Anthony Blash co-presented at the 2016 Healthcare Information Management Systems Society (HIMSS) annual conference in Las Vegas, Nevada with JoAnn W. Klinedinst, M.Ed., CPHIMS, PMP, DES, FHIMSS, vice president of professional development for HIMSS North America.

Blash spoke about the benefits of being a HIMSS Approved Education Partner (AEP) and highlighted the fact that Belmont University’s College of Pharmacy was the first AEP chosen by the HIMSS society.

Attendance at this years’ conference was at a near-record high with over 40,000 attendees. After the conference, the society donated HIMSS conference backpacks to Blash for Belmont University College of Pharmacy students in the Healthcare Informatics concentration. The bags will go to students in a variety of healthcare informatics courses, as well as those who obtain their CAHIMS certification before graduation.

HIMSS is a not-for-profit organization dedicated to improving healthcare quality, safety, cost-effectiveness and access through the best use of information technology and management systems with 52,000 individual members, 570 corporate members and 225 not-for-profit association members.

Theatre Department Receives National Awards from The Kennedy Center

Belmont University’s production of “Alice” by Ara Vito was recently named one of the best collegiate theatrical productions in the country by the Kennedy Center American College Theater Festival (KCACTF). The Festival’s selection panel, responsible for this year’s national awards, recognized “Alice” with several top honors including Outstanding Performance & Production Ensemble and Outstanding Director of a New or Devised Work. The production was also a finalist for Distinguished Production of a New or Devised Work.

“Alice” was further recognized as Vito, the playwright, received second place for the Harold and Mimi Steinberg National Student Playwriting Award. This award comes with a $1,000 prize, an invitation to attend the National Festival at the Kennedy Center, membership in the Dramatists Guild of America and the Playwrights’ Center of Minneapolis and a professional development residency. Additionally, Associate Professor Brent Maddox received the Outstanding Director award which includes a Faculty Fellowship to attend the Kennedy Center’s National Conference. Vito and Maddox will attend the conference to receive the national awards.

Additional recognition from the KCACTF includes the following individuals who were finalists for their distinguished work in each of the named categories: Caroline Knott for Distinguished Costume Design, Madeline Marconi for Distinguished Performance by an Actress and Paul Gatrell for Distinguished Scenic Design.

Maddox called the recognition an honor and humbling experience. “Receiving these awards from the Kennedy Center American College Theatre Festival (KCACTF) is a real honor and a highlight of my teaching and theatre career,” he said. “I am both humbled and overwhelmed to have our production recognized on the national level by our esteemed colleagues and peers. It’s a testament to the hard work and efforts of our students, and the dedication they put into their art and our program.”

Founded in 1969, the Festival has grown into a network of more than 600 academic institutions throughout the country where theatre departments and student artists showcase their work and receive outside assessment. KCACTF honors the theatrical work of students and faculty after national judges view productions at eight regional festivals. Belmont’s department was selected to participate with Alice at the 2016 American College Theatre Festival 48 Region IV in Charleston, South Carolina.

“Alice” is a variation on Lewis Carroll’s classic tales Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass that relate the story of a young girl named Alice Pleasance Liddell and the relationship she develops with Charles Dodgson (alias Lewis Carroll). Overcoming her parents’ stifling indifference, Alice discovers her creativity through her adventures on the other side of the looking glass, conquering her fears as she approaches a vision of her true self. This play is framed within a conversation between Carroll and Liddell, who was the inspiration for the fictional character.  This devised, narrative movement piece was developed through a unique process grounded in ensemble and collaboration with an all-female cast.

The production was developed through a process grounded in ensemble and collaboration, practices promoted to students for the creation of transformative art.  The ensemble of seven actors included Madeline Marconi, Morgan Conder, Nyazia Martin, Johnna McCarthy, Caitlyn Weaver, Austin Williams and Kristen Ladd. The student designers included Maggie Jackson for lights, Sam Lowry for projections, Caroline Knott for costumes and Kyle Odum for sound. The technical team for the KCACTF Region IV production consisted of JB Bridge, Taylor Thomas, Amanda Bell, Jake Wallace, Andrew Timms and the Theatre Department’s Technical Director Jerry Stratton. “Alice” was originally produced by Belmont’s Department of Theatre and Dance in November 2015.

 

For the full national press release from the Kennedy Center, please visit the following website:

http://kcactf.blogspot.com/2016/03/the-national-awards-of-2015-festival.html

Alpha Chi Honor Society Members Present at National Convention

Eight Belmont members of Alpha Chi National Honor Society, led by faculty sponsor, Dr. Mélanie Walton, assistant professor of philosophy, presented on their academic research at “Transcending Boundaries: The 2016 Alpha Chi National Convention” in Washington DC.  The three-day convention featured more than 300 student presenters representing all academic and artistic disciplines and culminated in a gala awards banquet with a keynote presentation by the Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Sonia Nazario.

Presenters included:

  • Samantha Gould: “Technological Screen Exposure’s Affect on Danio rerio’s Development,” whose research presentation won the Convention’s award for the best work in psychology
  • Juliana Ireland: “Smoking among Low-Income Pregnant Women: The Problem and the Solution”
  • Adam James: “Effects of Probiotic Fermentation on Antioxidant Activity in Blueberries”
  • Zara Latif: “The Link between Obesity and Parkinson’s Disease”
  • Amber Lowe: “The Effect of Mood Priming and Extraversion on the Perceived Pain of Spending Money”
  • Jeanette Morelan: “Exploring Community Development through Arts Education and Sport Coaching in South Africa”
  • Julia Wermuth: “What’s in a Word?”
  • Miranda West: “The Effects of Nicotine on Parkinson’s Disease”

Founded in 1922, Alpha Chi is the oldest and most prestigious Greek society at Belmont, and membership in the society is Belmont’s highest academic honor awarded. Membership is by invitation, only, as determined by faculty endorsement of the quality of character and intellect of junior and senior students ranking academically in the top 10 percent of the University as determined in the fall and spring semesters. Alpha Chi’s mission is to promote academic excellence and exemplary character and to honor students who achieve such distinction.

Belmont Vision Wins Four Awards from Tennessee Associated Press

The Belmont Vision, Belmont’s student newspaper, walked away with four awards from the Tennessee Associated Press on Saturday, including second in Best College Media Website.

Sports broadcast Bruin Blitz, created by senior sports writer Emily Proud, won first place in the Best Online Sports Coverage/Program category. Sports Editor Samuel Cowan and Editor Riley Wallace received honorable mentions in Best Online Sports Reporting and Best Online Spot Coverage, respectively.

“The Associate Press awards for excellence once again serve as proof our young journalists excel in their chosen field. These awards are judged by working professionals who hold these reporters to the highest standards,” said Chair of the Media Department and former adviser of the Vision Thom Storey.

The Tennessee Associated Press Broadcasters and Media Editors College Contest is an annual competition for college media students throughout the state.

College of Law Holds Barristers’ Ball, Supports Legal Aid Society

Belmont’s College of Law recently held the Barristers’ Ball on Saturday, April 9. Students, alumni, faculty and members from the legal community gathered together to support the Legal Aid Society of Middle Tennessee and the Cumberlands.

Over 180 tickets were sold for the event which included live music and a presentation of a $1,000 donation to the Legal Aid Society of Middle Tennessee and the Cumberlands in support of their continued mission of service and justice for all.

Pictured above: SBA President Caitlin Patenaude, Legal Aid Society of Middle Tennessee and the Cumberlands Executive DirectorGary Houseman and Belmont College of Law Dean Gonzales

Belmont Launches New Institute for Innovative Faith-Based Leadership

Jon Roebuck Head ShotLongtime Woodmont Baptist senior pastor named Institute’s executive director

With a strong ongoing commitment to its Christian identity, today Belmont University announced the formation of the Belmont Institute for Innovative Faith-Based Leadership, a newly created entity designed to equip church leaders for entrepreneurial thinking and innovative means to meet the modern needs of the local community and culture at large. Dr. Jon R. Roebuck, the senior pastor of Woodmont Baptist Church for the past 17 years, has been named executive director of the institute; he shared the news with his congregation yesterday and will begin his new full-time position at Belmont on June 1.

Belmont President Dr. Bob Fisher said, “I can’t think of anything that’s more Belmont than an institute that leverages many of this University’s strengths and passions: entrepreneurial and innovative thinking built on a foundation of Christian faith. The Belmont Institute for Innovative Faith-Based Leadership will uniquely equip church leaders with progressive resources gleaned from business, music, law and theological leadership. We believe that Jesus intended for his church to be a living, adaptive and dynamic body, and I know this Institute will breathe new life into congregations of all sizes and denominations through Jon Roebuck’s leadership.”

The Institute comes in response to a felt need for a program that provides executive training to both leaders who are called to grow churches that make a difference in their community as well as leaders of faith-based community development ministries. The Belmont Institute for Innovative Faith-Based Leadership can fill that void, serving both clergy and lay leaders by bringing an unprecedented, holistic approach to church leadership education that is not currently being offered in seminaries. Envisioning a more adaptive way of doing local church ministry, the Institute will seek to create a vibrant church culture that thinks critically about the ways local congregations can make a difference both locally and globally.

Roebuck added, “We will focus on insuring that churches of the 21st century become relevant, relational and resourceful. Our goal is to insure that the local church continues to matter… that it makes a difference in both the community and moment into which it is placed.”

Empowered by a 25-year history of top-tier C-level programs being offered through Belmont’s Center for Executive Education, the Institute will take a similar approach, offering clergy and ministry leaders broader skills training and a deeper understanding of an operational model that includes finance/accounting, marketing, conflict resolution, negotiation, management and other business skills. Moreover, through Belmont’s College of Theology and Christian Ministry and College of Law, not to mention the University’s numerous music and arts programs, an abundance of existing resources exist to offer a comprehensive package of courses to meet church leadership needs.

Roebuck has served as senior pastor of Woodmont Baptist Church in Nashville since 1999, having become the third pastor of the 75-year-old congregation. Under his leadership Woodmont has continued a legacy of local and international missions involvement and is currently celebrating 50 years of continual live Sunday morning television broadcasts. Author of two devotional books, Roebuck also teaches courses in Belmont’s College of Theology and Christian Ministry and has served as member of the University’s Board of Trustees. He is a graduate of Samford University (AL) where he completed a double major in religion and church recreation before achieving master’s and doctoral degrees at The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary (KY). Dr. Roebuck has pastored five congregations during the past 32 years of pastoral ministry. He and his wife, Linda, have been married for 32 years. They have three grown and married children and now enjoy spending moments with two granddaughters.

Cusic on OPB and PBS to Discuss Merle Haggard’s Legacy

don-cusicCountry Music Historian and Professor of Music Business Dr. Don Cusic was interviewed by NPR “Here and Now’s” Jeremy Hobson for OPB’s “Thinking Out Loud” on Wednesday, April 6 after the death of country music legend Merle Haggard.

Of the man who is thought to have actually lived the life of the lyrics heard in country music songs, Cusic said, “Well he was one of country’s greatest singer/songwriters, up there with Hank Williams. That’s how good he was. That’s his legacy. He was a working man. If he had not been a singer, he would have been a manual laborer. That was just his life. He was a genius at writing songs, but he was a good ‘ol boy, too. He was what he sang.”

Additionally, Cusic talked about Haggard’s legacy on PBS NewsHour on Wednesday. “If ever there was a poster boy for prison reform and prison rehabilitation, Merle Haggard would be exhibit A.”

16th Annual Family Literacy Day Invites Neighborhood Children to ‘Read with Me’

Belmont’s 16th annual Family Literacy Day, an event that invites families from the Nashville community to read with Belmont students and promotes literacy for the whole family, brought nearly 230 student volunteers together on Saturday, April 9. With more than 200 community members registered for the event, 2016 Literacy Day was the largest one to-date.

Belmont’s Director of Service-Learning and event organizer Tim Stewart said he and his team look forward to Family Literacy Day each year and it engages the community in a special way. “The best part of the event is seeing the children having such a good time as they are engrossed in books,” Stewart said. “They frequently don’t want to stop when we take breaks for announcements and door prizes. It’s also exciting to see them so eager to pick out books and then to get to take them home.”

Student organizations, campus departments and individual volunteers created reading groups, centered around a theme and invited attendees to join their station for a book or two. The event’s festivities celebrate d the joy of reading by encouraging children, and their parents, to enjoy literacy together. It also raised awareness around some of Nashville’s literacy—related resources including Books from Birth, Ride for Reading, Nashville Adult Literacy Council, Metro Public Library, Book’em and the Pencil Foundation, among others.

literacy day-149-X2While the event is organized by Stewart and the Belmont Volunteers for Literary student organization, a number of organizations joined efforts this year to partner with the team. Stewart said he is very grateful for the partnership of so many community organizations who come together to host Literacy Day.

The event serves as a family friendly celebration for community members who live within the Rose Park neighborhood, but above all, it provides an opportunity for children to experience education in a new way. Allowing students to read outside with college students and receive prizes for doing so continues to encourage literacy and the chance for students to strengthen their reading skills.

“Family Literacy Day is very rewarding to see. The smiles on the faces of the children, their parents and our students make it all worthwhile!” Stewart said.

For more information on the event and the Belmont Volunteers for Literacy organization, click here. For more photos of the event, click here.

Belmont Employees Take Bruin Pride to the Community

Nearly 150 employees volunteer at Second Harvest Food Bank of Middle Tennessee for University-wide service day

In celebration of Belmont’s charge to be “Nashville’s University,” faculty and staff members left campus on Friday, April 8 and found themselves sorting donated food, packing backpacks with meals and weighing meat in Second Harvest Food Bank of Middle Tennessee’s industrial-sized freezer. The annual service project, which the University dubbed “It’s Bruin Time in the Community,” began two years ago with employees spending a morning painting at Hunters Lane High School. Last year’s project was also at Second Harvest.

This year, with Vision 2020 ideals in mind, Belmont employees registered to serve during one of two three-hour shifts, aligning Belmont’s vision and resources with the “ever-changing needs of the people in our community.” Divided into three teams upon arrival at Second Harvest’s Martin Distribution Center, one group was tasked with sorting pallets of food into specific boxes–pasta, rice, snacks and vegetables, among others. These boxes, once weighed, were marked and prepared for shipment to any one of Second Harvest’s many community partners.

The next group, decked out in their winter warmest, headed for the organization’s freezer to weigh and pack donated meat. No stranger to the freezer’s sub-zero temperatures, Belmont’s Residence Life Department spent last year’s event volunteering in the freezer and the participants said the team had been looking forward to bundling up for the third annual service day, again.

Knowing that some people shy away from volunteer opportunities that could be seen as inconvenient, Residence Director Kim Kolk said she and her team were more than happy to step in. “Volunteering at Second Harvest allowed us to work as a group and make a tangible, lasting impact on the community. Working in the freezer with my colleagues and friends reminded me of the value of teamwork and just how much we can accomplish when we work together,” Kolk said. “I am so glad I work for an institution that values service and allows us to fellowship together while impacting the world around us.”

community day-122-X2The final group, and the quickest to volunteer when the groups were divided, took on Second Harvest’s “Backpack Program,” a program that provides food for at-risk children on weekends and during school breaks when other resources are not available. This team stocked more than 2,300 backpacks with canned entrees, applesauce, cereal, fruit juice, milk and a snack, contributing to the more than 5,000 hungry children fed by the program each week.

Planned and executed by Belmont’s University Staff Advisory Council (USAC), the annual event has become a staple on Belmont’s campus during the spring semester as faculty and staff are given an opportunity to celebrate a successful year through service to the community. USAC Chair Katie Ashley said, “This event is a great opportunity for Belmont employees to give back to the community while strengthening relationships among the Belmont team. It’s a win-win!”

In total, Belmont’s “It’s Bruin Time in the Community” morning and afternoon groups boxed more than 12,000 lbs of food, 2,300 backpacks and 7,000 lbs of meat for packing and delivery. For more photos from the event, click here.