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 Creates Dr. Fannie Hewlett Award, Honors Inclusivity and Diversity

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In honor of Dr. Fannie Hewlett, Belmont’s first African American graduate, the University created the inaugural Dr. Fannie Hewlett Award and bestowed it upon an undergraduate and graduate student at Wednesday’s annual Scholarship and Awards Day. The award celebrates racial and ethnic diversity by recognizing student courage, leadership and a contribution to a culture of inclusion at Belmont. Its creation is one of the many initiatives from the University’s Welcome Home Team, a committee of faculty, staff and students that explores opportunities and plans strategies to expand racial and ethnic diversity on campus.

Dr. Hewlett grew up in Bay Minette, Alabama, and decided to come to Belmont College, some 420 miles away from her home, after finding a brochure for the school in her mailbox. Though she hadn’t visited the College and didn’t know where Nashville was, she arranged for transportation and embarked on the journey of a lifetime.

After earning her Bachelor of Science in Psychology and English from Belmont in 1970, Hewlett went on to earn her Master of Arts in Clinical and School Psychology from Fisk University in 1975 and her Doctorate in Educational Administration and Supervision from the University of Tennessee at Knoxville in 1990. Most recently, Hewlett served as the interim president at Chattanooga State Community College.

Chair of the Welcome Home Team, Vice President and Chief of Staff Dr. Susan West said the University was honored to recognize Dr. Hewlett through the creation of this award. “The Dr. Fannie Hewlett Award celebrates Dr. Hewlett by honoring students who have followed in her footsteps to make powerful change on our campus. It is our privilege to remember the legacy she left at Belmont for many years to come.”

Dr. Hewlett returned to campus in October 2015 for the Welcome Home Team’s inaugural Diversity Week, a week created to celebrate the University’s diversity and inclusivity efforts. While on campus, Hewlett gave a presentation to faculty, staff and students and said, “The people I have met here are the people who have helped me to become what I have become today. For that, I am eternally grateful.”

The Dr. Fannie Hewlett Award will continue to be awarded during the University’s Scholarship and Awards Day each year. For West, the creation of this award is a testament to the great things transpiring on Belmont’s campus. “It means we’re acknowledging our past and taking important steps in the areas of racial and ethnic diversity and inclusion. It further recognizes the essential conversations that are happening in our boardrooms, classrooms and dorm rooms, and Welcome Home Team is honored to assist in facilitating those conversations.”

This year’s Dr. Fannie Hewlett Graduate recipient was Tetchi Assamoi, College of Pharmacy. A student leader within her college, Assamoi is also involved in the community as she works with Meharry Medical College to introduce health care careers to high school students. When West presented Assamoi with the award she quoted her nominator saying, “Ms. Assamoi is not only an outstanding student within the College of Pharmacy, but also a caring and giving human being. She has made choices of the types of organizations in which she is affiliated, often choosing organizations that allow her to reach out to others, especially minority populations to get them excited and engaged with professions within the health care field.”

The 2016 undergraduate recipient was Kristoff Hart, Mike Curb College of Entertainment and Music Business. Hart has served as a resident assistant, basketball manager, Bruin Recruiter and Tour Guide, among other things across campus, and West said his impact on the Belmont community has been immeasurable. Hart’s nominator quoted him as saying, “I treat everyone the same, from president to executive to student to child. My whole life has been about respect of others and equal treatment, regardless of color, creed, religion and I think that speaks volumes to my need for inclusion.”

 

Belmont University College of Pharmacy Finds Success on “Match Day”

Student pharmacists and alumni claim 32 positions across the U.S.

“Match Day,” the highly anticipated moment when Belmont’s College of Pharmacy soon-to-be-graduates and alumni learn where they’ll spend the next year honing their skills and talents, was a successful day at Belmont as 32 student pharmacists and alumni heard of their acceptance to competitive residency positions across the country. About 3,000 residencies were offered for this year’s American Society of Health-Systems Pharmacists match, far fewer than the number of student pharmacists desiring a position.

College of Pharmacy Dean Dr. Phil Johnston said, “Belmont College of Pharmacy has always had an impressive match rate, which can be attributed to enhanced student awareness of career goals and faculty mentoring. It was a happy week to celebrate the success of our students and their futures.  Congratulations to the classes of 2015 and 2016.”

Graduates selected for first-year residencies include Sarah Ayers (Jackson-Madison County Hospital in Jackson, Tennessee), Candace Beam (VA Tennessee Valley Healthcare in Nashville, Tennessee), Bailey Bolten (Erlanger Health Systems in Chattanooga, Tennessee), Tyler Casey (Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tennessee), Ricky Church (Memorial Healthcare System in Chattanooga, Tennessee), Jennifer Collins (University of Chicago Medical Center in Chicago, Illinois), Scott Denno (Tennessee Department of Mental Health in Nashville, Tennessee), Fernando Diggs (Huntsville Hospital in Huntsville, Alabama), Meredith Ervin (Birmingham VA Medical Center in Birmingham, Alabama), Chelsea Goodman (Ephriam McDowell Regional Medical Center in Danville, Kentucky), Sarah Hardeman (The Medical Center, Columbus Regional in Columbus, Georgia), Shelby Hood (Maury Regional Medical Center in Columbia, Tennessee), Joe Huenecke (University of Toledo in Toledo, Ohio), Michelle Kirchbaum (Tuscaloosa VA Medical Center in Tuscaloosa, Alabama), Jocelyn Mason (University of Minnesota Medical Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota), Quyen Nguyen (Cookeville Regional Hospital in Cookeville, Tennessee), Frederick O’Neal (Dignity Health St. Rose Dominican in Henderson, Nevada), Emily Russell (James H. Quillen VA Medical Center in Mountain Home, Tennessee), Kristen Sherlin (University of Louisville Hospital in Louisville, Kentucky), Jennifer Sposito (Parkview Health in Fort Wayne, Indiana), Sara Thompson (VA Caribbean Health Care System in San Juan, Puerto Rico), Erin Todd (Tristar Centennial Medical Center in Nashville, Tennessee), Alexander Tu (National Association of Community Drug Stores), Duy Vu (Dekalb Medical Center in Decatur, Georgia), Danielle Walker (Fort Sanders Regional Medical Center in Knoxville, Tennessee), Katie Wickler (Saint Thomas Rutherford Hospital in Murfreesboro, Tennessee) and Haley Willett (Norton Healthcare in Louisville, Kentucky).

Additionally, of the 22 student pharmacists who matched last spring, five are going on to a second-year residency. Drs. Emily Doss, Meghan Duquette, Elizabeth Jasper, Jocelyn Mason and Nilam Patel will be pursuing second-year residencies in internal medicine, psychiatry (2), infectious disease and cardiology, respectively.

First-year pharmacy residencies provide post-PharmD training in health systems, managed care and community settings, while second-year residencies provide advanced training in a focused area of patient care.

Belmont Celebrates Achievement with Scholarship and Awards Day

Belmont’s highest achieving students and faculty were honored for their commitment to the University’s mission and dedication to scholarship, service and leadership at the University’s Scholarship and Awards Day convocation in the Massey Performing Arts Center on Wednesday. Assistant Professor of Asian Studies and Chinese Language Dr. Qingjun Li, the 2014-15 Chaney Distinguished Professor, gave the ceremony’s Honors Address and discussed the power of one in making a difference. Quoting Mother Theresa and a Chinese proverb, Li encouraged attendees to intentionally care for others throughout their communities and “bring light where it scholarship awards-117-X2wasn’t before.”

The presentation of the annual John Williams Heart of Belmont Award is greatly anticipated each year as one student is recognized for their commitment to Belmont’s values including innovation, persistence, advocacy for change, community development and service. The 2016 recipient, Samantha Hubner, is an honors, political science student who chose Belmont because of its emphasis on both high scholastic achievement and high community involvement. With an internship that will take her overseas this summer, Hubner will further develop her passions surrounding international affairs and global relations.

Other students honored in Wednesday’s ceremony included:

The Williams-Murray First Year Writing AwardsGregory Wittenberg (“The People Behind the Witch”) and Kaitlin Braile (“This Too Shall Pass”)

The Alfred Leland Crabb Award: Robert Kessler (“Gnosticism, Orthodoxy, and the Self”) and Taylor Herald (“Anger as the Mother-Tongue and Communicative Discourse of Feminist Literary Theory”)

The Stacy Awalt Writing AwardTyler DeMunbrun (“Nietzsche and Solitude”)

The Annette Sisson First Year Writing AwardCourtney Potter (“Harry Potter and Feminism; My Apathy is Not Enough”)

The Lumos Travel AwardIris Chiang (Auroville, India), Haley Culpepper (Accra, Ghana), Mackenzie Hartfield (Delhi, India), Samantha Hubner (Rabat, Morocco), Ashley Virgin (Bethlehem, Israel) and Savannah Weeks (Managua, Nicaragua)

The First Year Award, LeadershipSean Grossnickle (international business and finance double major, French and religion & the arts double minor)

scholarship awards-153-X2The Second Year Award, LeadershipMissy Martin (environmental science and social entrepreneurship double major, public relations, social issues concentration, minor)

The Third Year Award, LeadershipKatie Bays (musical theatre major, dance and business administration double minor)

The Fourth Year Award, LeadershipJeanette Morelan (social entrepreneurship and mass communication double major)

Dr. Fannie Hewlett Undergraduate Award: Kristoff Hart (music business major)

Dr. Fannie Hewlett Graduate Award: Tetchi Assamoi (pharmacy)

In addition to student award winners, a number of awards were given to faculty members. The Christian Scholarship Award honors faculty scholarship that engages the Christian intellectual tradition and advances the scholarly conversation between Christian faith and learning. This year’s recipient was Assistant Professor of Philosophy Dr. Melanie Walton.

The Leadership in Christian Service Award honors faculty who provide leadership to a new initiative or an established Christian organization that serves those in need. This year’s recipient was Dr. Rich Tiner, professor of media studies.

An award created last year, The Faculty Award for Scholarship, recognizes a faculty member for outstanding intellectual and creative contributions of discovery, integration, application or teaching. This year’s recipient was Professor Physical Therapy Dr. Michael Voight.

scholarship awards-187-X2Dr. Marieta Velikova, Massey College of Business, was named the 2015-16 Chaney Distinguished Professor. The Chaney Distinguished Professor Award, determined on the basis of superior teaching, is presented each year to a faculty member who best represents the vision of the university to be a “premier teaching institution.”

Dr. Daniel Biles, College of Sciences and Mathematics, was awarded the 2015-16 Presidential Faculty Achievement Award. The Presidential Faculty Achievement Award is presented each year to a faculty member who has made outstanding contributions to student life outside the classroom. The award honors and recognizes excellence in faculty-student relationships, special abilities in meeting student needs – academic, personal and professional – and symbolizes Belmont University’s commitment to being a student-centered institution.

Click here for additional photos from the event.

Bado Earns Special Commendation from Tennessee Senator Ken Yager

Kirk Bado HeadshotBelmont junior Kirk Bado has taken Belmont’s mission to “engage and transform the world” to the State Capitol this semester, recently earning special commendation from the Senate.

Kirk, a politics and public law major, is interning for Senator Ken Yager from Tennessee’s 12th district. Sen. Yager took note of Kirk’s work and filed a Senate Resolution honoring him for his contributions not only to the Belmont community but to the state.

During his presentation on the Senate floor session, the senator detailed how Kirk created and presented a proposal for a substantial grant for a town in his district. Combining skills he learned from the classroom and his internship, Kirk was able to secure the funds necessary for the town on his own.

“The presentation for Oliver Springs was a great culmination of everything I learned from presenting in my political science classes and learning how the state works here,” Kirk said.

The Resolution goes on to commend Kirk for his extra-curriculars at Belmont saying he has “surpassed all criteria that define a devoted and conscience legislative intern and has performed his many duties with extraordinary insight and rare decorum.”

“I’m very thankful for Senator Yager’s appreciation, Dr. Vaughn May for preparing me for this and for Belmont for allowing me this opportunity,” Kirk said.

Bullington Receives Fulbright-Terra Foundation Award

judyChair of the Art Department Dr. Judy Bullington recently received the 2017 Fulbright-Terra Foundation Award in the History of American Art. In addition to conducting research on her topic, “Likeness & Emblems in Early American Portraiture; Garden Motifs in 18th C. Transatlantic Art,” Bullington will be teaching a course at St. Andrews University in Scotland.

Bullington’s project will analyze garden & landscape motifs as a means of self-fashioning in ca. 1740-1840 portraits of merchants, ministers, landowners, women, families and expands on current scholarship through a study of the transatlantic practices of artists and plantsmen who ordered nature.

 

Trading Club Secures Sixth Place in TVA Portfolio Management Competition

The Belmont Trading Club achieved the sixth best performance among 24 universities in the Tennessee Valley Authority portfolio management competition. Managing over $600,000, the team’s 2015 performance was more the four percent better than the S&P 500. The team–led by Daniel Mittuch, Emily Weissmann, Matt Pellettiere and Carson Fears–was awarded $5,400 for its contribution to growing the TVA’s decommissioned asset fund.

Belmont Hosts Turning Green’s Conscious College Road Tour for Second Year

With Belmont’s own Missy Martin reigning as Turning Green Project’s Green Challenge Global Champion, Belmont was a given to host a stop on the organization’s annual Conscious College Road Tour. This was the second year the tour stopped on campus. Sponsored by the ECO club, the tour sets up information tables to inform students about seven key lifestyle categories about conscious consumerism featuring product sampling, hands-on demos and in-depth conversations.

Senior corporate communications major Olivia Nishi got involved last year to pursue her interest in living green. “We are talking about these products to get our peers to think about what kinds of products they are using and to get them to be more conscious consumers,” she said.

eco tour 4The sustainability fair was followed by a town hall meeting, a gathering for students, faculty and school leaders. President of the ECO Club Krystin Estes said the group hopes to be the voice for enviornmentalists on campus. “We want to know what the students want and need to be more sustainable on campus. We hope to develop one student-led initiative,” she said.

Camp Acheives Certified Healthcare Simulation Expert Ranking

Sara CampInstructor of Nursing Sara Camp recently achieved the Certified Healthcare Simulation Expert (CHSE) rank from the Society for Simulation in Healthcare. This certification sets her apart as an expert in the assessment, practice and methodology of simulation and will be instrumental in helping advance the full certification of our simulation program in the Gordon E. Inman College of Health Sciences and Nursing.

There are over 700 other CHSE professionals from 19 countries; Camp is one of only 16 such professionals in Tennessee.

Annual Best of the Best Showcase Features Top Musical Acts

The Best of the Best Showcase highlighted Belmont’s remarkable student talent with performances from the winners of the Curb College of Entertainment and Music Business Showcase Series, which is held throughout the academic year. This year’s winners included The Orchardist, Forest Fire Gospel Choir, Kassi Ashton and Sound Proof. Winners from the ASCAP Writers’ Night series also performed including Aubrey Holden, Emma Place, Brad Blackburn and Stephen Day.

Best of the Best 2

The show consisted of smooth transitions between showcase winners and Writer’s Night winners alongside complete stage effects and well-produced live sound overseen by a Belmont student production crew.

Opening with a cover of Justin Bieber’s “What Do You Mean,” The Orchardist, winner of the Christian Showcase, exhibited their folk styling through rustic instrumentation and encouraged audience participation. Finishing their set with their single “All of Me,” the group incorporated sounds reminiscent of Mumford & Sons.

Identifying as “Roots Rock,” Forest Fire Gospel Choir, winner of the Rock showcase, harnessed influences such as Dave Grohl to provide a show “forged out of classic vibes and good times.”  Former roommates Will McGee, Nick Fields, Sam Hunt, Will Lydne and Kip Allen overcame slight technical difficulties to put together a set with classic rock solos that showcased their strong strong connection between band members.

Representing the Country Showcase, Belmont senior Kassi Ashton is a self-described country-soul singer. Her strong lead vocals and commanding stage presence exemplify the country greats who have influenced her. Incorporating elements of current popular country artists allowed Ashton to create a unique combination of classic and pop country.

Winner of the Urban/Pop Showcase, Sound Proof closed the evening with an energetic set that had students rushing the stage and singing along.  This self-described “R&B/Pop Fusion” group has been assembled for a little over a year.  Featuring Belmont dancers, Sound Proof provided the full concert experience for those present by tossing t-shirts into the crowd at the conclusion of the Best of the Best Showcase.

Winners of the ASCAP Writer’s Night Series were featured between the various Showcase winners.  Singer-Songwriters Aubrey Holden, Stephen Day, Emma Place, and Brad Blackburn all brought original works to the side stages. Holden shared his song “Ricoche,” which consisted of strong harmonies and an acoustic-electric guitar pairing. Approaching the stage with a very comfortable stage presence, Day greeted the crowd as friends and recently released his EP titled “Undergrad Romance and the Moses in Me.”  A songwriting major from southern California, Place shared her clear vocals and country-influenced music. Blackburn enjoyed his second year as a Writer’s Night winner at the Best of the Best Showcase and is currently working on his second album.

A unique and innovative aspect of Curb College offerings, the Showcase Series allows Belmont students to produce five full-scale arena concerts each year in the Curb Event Center along with an outdoor festival-style event, each with an average of 1,500 audience members per show. By partnering with industry professionals, the Belmont Showcase Series seeks to highlight student talent onstage and backstage. The series helps further the college’s goals of providing a career-oriented and practical education while also equipping students with the tools needed to prosper in diverse work environments.

Visit the Belmont Photo Gallery for more images from the event.

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.

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