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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Students Take the Plunge to Atlanta During Fall Break

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For students participating in Belmont’s annual fall break Plunge trip, the week off school was filled with learning, sustainability and giving. Partnering for the third year with the Medici Project, a faith-based organization in Atlanta that organizes alternative break trips for college students, participants took part in various projects and experiences around the city including talking with at-risk high schoolers about college, serving breakfast and lunch to the homeless at an outdoor church service, preparing meals for the elderly, working in a community garden and packing used text books to be shipped to Africa. Additionally, students visited the MLK, Jr. National Historic Site and were given time to wander around downtown Atlanta.

Students sorting books by subject and age level at Books for Africa
Students sorting books by subject and age level at Books for Africa

Sophomore Alex St. Dennis was a return ‘plunger’ after going last year as a freshman. “I simply loved Atlanta and all the people I got to help and work with. I could see no other way to spend my fall break,” he said. “The most meaningful part was always seeing the people you affect and learning about their stories because I believe there is nothing greater in this world than an individual’s struggle and how he or she overcame it. The most challenging part was sleep and how exhausted I was by the end, but it was such a nice exhaustion because it was done in service of others.”

Chaperone and Bridges to Belmont Coordinator Dr. Nadi Bishop said the best part was the in-depth explanations at each service location. It helped students understand why their work was important and emphasized the emotional significance.

Students learned about food scarcity and food deserts in urban settings and how this recently opened nonprofit Carver Neighborhood Market is seeking to bring healthy and affordable food to people in South Atlanta.
Students learned about food scarcity and food deserts in urban settings and how this recently opened nonprofit, Carver Neighborhood Market, is seeking to bring healthy and affordable food to people in South Atlanta.

For example, St. Dennis explained the biggest lesson learned from the trip was the importance of helping one another. “I see so many, including myself, turn a blind eye to those who are in need, and it comes to a point where one has to say, ‘when should this stop?'” he said. “When it comes down to it, when you die and the mourning is done, no one will remember the things you had or the days you didn’t go outside. They are going to remember the memories had with you and the people you touched with your kindness and heart.”

Co-Founder of Netflix Encourages Confidence and Creativity in Entrepreneurs

Entrepreneur, investor, mentor and co-founder of Netflix, Marc Randolph is widely known for his love of startup culture, idea generation creativity and commitment to optimism. During the Center for Entrepreneurship’s kick-off event for Entrepreneurship Month held on Tuesday, Nov. 3, Randolph addressed a group of students, faculty, staff and alumni on the power of the entrepreneurial spirit and his experience with Netflix.

To begin his presentation, Randolph highlighted two things every entrepreneur needs to be successful – a tolerance for risk and an idea. “It doesn’t even have to be a good idea,” Randolph said. “Mark Zuckerberg just wanted a way to meet girls and Facebook was born…It all starts with ideas.”

Mark Randolph, CrowdAnd that’s exactly how Netflix started. After learning he was going to be laid off from a Silicon Valley software company, Randolph and his future Netflix co-founder Reed Hastings began working through hundreds of ideas during their commute to work each morning. Once he got to the office, Randolph would research ideas and based on his findings, some began to stick. Even more were abandoned. Randolph said it’s this stage and his persistence that stick out most to him. Though 99 out of 100 ideas were discarded, the duo kept working towards finding one worth pursuing.

Netflix was that idea. After a number of trials and test periods, Randolph and his team launched the company on April 14, 1997 and after spending a day rebuilding servers that couldn’t handle the traffic, 100 customer orders were received. Now, 18 years later, Netflix has over 60 million subscribers.

The biggest piece of advice Randolph passed along to entrepreneurial hopefuls was what he calls “validation hacking.” To prove traction for any idea, startups must validate their plan – but this can be costly. To avoid the costly stages associated with testing, Randolph recommends an approved version of hacking where products are created without actually building anything. By creatively testing an idea or product without making anything costly, startups can research and validate their ideas.

Though Randolph began his time on campus by identifying two things entrepreneurs need to be successful, he closed with mentioning a third – confidence. Throughout his career, Randolph points to his optimism and confidence as the secret to his success. “I got knocked down a lot, but I got up a lot, too. I’m most proud of my optimism…I’m not just a glass half full optimist. I’m a glass overflowing optimist.”

For Randolph, success comes down to a simple formula that anyone can use. If you can generate ideas, tolerate risk and have confidence in your skills, “you can do it,” Randolph said. “Anyone can do it.”

Randolph was the University’s Moench speaker for 2015. The Moench Entrepreneurship Lecture Series has been funded by gifts from the late Ernest J. Moench and his wife, Anna.

Students Present at TN Experiential Learning Symposium

President of Belmont Volunteers for Literacy (BVL) and senior marketing major Denee Headen and Vice-President of BVL and sophomore English major Rachel Petty recently presented at the First Annual Tennessee Experiential Learning Symposium at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville.

Their presentation focused on the organization’s efforts to promote literacy and literacy awareness in the Nashville community through programs like Belmont’s annual Family Literacy Day and elementary school poetry contest. Emphasis was placed on how curricular and co-curricular aspects come together to provide learning and service opportunities for students.

The Learning Symposium, whose inaugural planning committee included Belmont Provost Dr. Thomas Burns, seeks to show what can happen when high-impact educational practices like service-learning, undergraduate research and global learning come together. Students from 14 Tennessee colleges and universities presented at the event.

Dishman’s Sister Sadie Signs with Pinecastle Records

Sister Sadie
Photo provided by Pinecastle Records

Tina Dishman, Director of Curb College’s Academic Advising, is a member of Sister Sadie, an all-female, bluegrass group recently signed by Pinecastle Records. The band is currently working on an album to be released in 2016 comprised of member-written originals and other pieces.

Made up of Dishman and four friends, Sister Sadie was born out of what was initially intended to be a one-time jam at Nashville’s Station Inn. After the sold-out show, the band began getting calls for gigs and Sister Sadie, a name inspired by a Tony Rice song, was born.

A release published regarding Sister Sadie’s recent signing said, “We are all in a very natural state when we perform as a group. No struggle…just in tune with thought, spirit and musical expression. Along with these factors, being on what we feel is one of the most creative and artist friendly labels in the business, Pinecastle Records, we have a sense of excitement that Sister Sadie will be in the perfect musical environment to be who we are and offer our style in the purest way….which is what this band wants. We are pumped and excited to be teaming up with Pinecastle for this project and can’t wait to get it out to our fans!”

Greeks, Staff Partner to Host Edgehill Halloween Celebration

Belmont’s Phi Kappa Tau chapter partnered with the Edgehill Community Center and Belmont’s Office of Community Relations to host the fifth annual Halloween Trunk or Treat event on Oct. 31.

Serving as the event’s main volunteers, 30 members of Phi Kappa Tau volunteered to provide a safe evening for neighborhood children that included carnival games, face painting, dance competitions and a cake walk. Throughout the event,  Chapter President Joey Whalen said Phi Tau brothers were able to celebrate Halloween and build relationships with the children who attended.

Halloween CelebrationBrayton Johns, a Phi Tau associate member, said the opportunity to build relationships with the children was a highlight of the event. “The best part of the Edgehill Halloween Party was getting to have fun with the kids and hear their stories. While face painting, I heard so many stories about what the kids do for fun and what they dreamed of doing one day,” Johns said. “I absolutely loved interacting with them.”

Though Greek organizations are committed to involvement and support of their national philanthropies, Whalen said it was powerful to get connected and serve the heart of their own community on a local level. “While our national philanthropies are all awesome causes, we don’t always get to see the results of our efforts. Is it important for us to support and give back to our Nashville community in any way possible. Reaching out to the Edgehill community was such a rewarding experience as we were able to impact the neighborhood by providing a fun, enjoyable memory for the kids.”

 

Former Mayor Karl Dean Recalls Leadership Priorities, Forecasts Nashville’s Needs

In a 50-minute convocation Monday in the Wedgewood Academic Center, former two-term Nashville Mayor Karl Dean used his experience running the city to paint a picture for the importance of having specific priorities in the way anyone approaches their work. In recalling the three priorities that he believes made his administration successful–public education, public safety and economic development–Dean also emphasized that these are the same issues he still sees as the crux of what Music City needs to focus on as it moves forward.

He opened the lecture by noting that his campaign platform revolved around those three priorities and that he believes they are interrelated, interdependent and critical for any metropolitan area. In terms of economic development, for example, he said, “You want to be a city of opportunity, but it’s also important to the city’s tax base. If you want to have strong fire and police forces as well as great public education, then you have to have a tax base to pay for them.”

Nashville’s economy, he noted, benefits from the stable industries like healthcare management, hospitality and universities that help attract and retain educated work forces and frequently spawn new entrepreneurial ventures that further grow the city. “The music industry is also important not so much for the sheer number of people it employs, but because it gives the city a special edge. There’s a huge creative element that’s a major positive.”

When Dean was first elected in 2007, his term was dealt a significant blow only five months in as the country encountered a deep recession. His platform priorities had to be reflected, then more than ever, in the budgets he proposed. “When making decisions, having clear priorities really makes a difference.”

Though a number of Metro positions were eliminated during the recession, Dean made a decision to not cut the education budget and to push forward on a plan to build a new $650 million convention center. “A city has to have enough confidence to invest in itself… People would argue that you shouldn’t do this now, but we didn’t wait. It was the really the exact right time to build during a recession because it gave the city a shot in the arm, and with the economy in a ditch, building costs were significantly cheaper.”

In addition to construction and related employment that came with the convention center, affiliate projects like the Omni Hotel and Country Music Hall of Fame expansion also moved forward, allowing Nashville to weather the country’s economic storm better than most cities. “To build [the Music City Center] now would cost $50-75 million more, and we’re over $50 million ahead of where we thought we’d be in paying for it.”

Even in retaining a strong focus on his three priorities throughout his administration, Dean said there’s always more work to do. “Education, public safety and economic development never reach a place where you can check them off a list… You can never say our public schools are good enough. It’s an issue that remains a constant.”

While he believes those issues will still need attention in the years to come, Nashville’s success and phenomenal growth in recent years has also led to other challenges for the city, topics that he saw as being front and center in the most recent mayoral election: affordable housing, cost of living, transit, city demographics/diversity and health.

Dean is currently serving as Distinguished Visiting Professor of History and Politics at Belmont while also chairing a new school-choice education nonprofit called Project Renaissance.

Students Inducted into National History Honor Society

Belmont’s Xi Alpha Chapter of national history honor society Phi Alpha Theta inducted 10 students as new members at a ceremony held on Oct. 22. The new members included Annie Chun, Jordan Heykoop, Rebecca Green, Rachel Bryan, Alison Harpole, Michael Sbarra, Storm Sloan, MacKenzie Groff, Matthew Pritchett and Bailey Scogin.

The ceremony, held in the Belmont Mansion, was attended by history faculty and inductee guests. The annual PAT lecture, given by Belmont History Department Alumnus and Assistant Professor of Architectural History at the College of Charleston Dr. Nathaniel Walker, followed. It was entitled “Parade of Progress. General Motors’ Mid-Century Campaign to Promote Highway-Centric Urban Planning in Hometown U.S.A  ”.

Lake Elected to National Board of Lilly Fellows Program

Todd LakeDr. Todd L. Lake, vice president for spiritual development, has been elected to a four-year term on the Lilly Fellows Program in Humanities and the Arts National Board.

Lake received his bachelor’s degree in German studies from Harvard University in 1982 and studied at Princeton Seminary before earning his Master of Divinity in 1988 from Southern Seminary. In 1997, he earned his doctorate in systematic theology at Boston College. Lake’s career includes positions as dean of chapel and dean for university life at Baylor University before coming to Belmont. Lake has served as a Peace Corps volunteer in Paraguay, a California legislative aide working to protect migrant farm workers and a refugee resettlement worker in Boston.

The Lilly Fellows Program in Humanities and the Arts, founded in 1991, seeks to strengthen the quality and shape the character of church-related institutions of learning through three programmatic initiatives. The National Network represents a diversity of denominational traditions, institutional types and geographical locations. Belmont has been a member of the Lilly Fellows Program since 2005. The Program is based at Christ College, the interdisciplinary honors college of Valparaiso University in northwest Indiana.

DeVries Appointed to CPA Content Subcommittee

del-devriesAssociate Professor of Accounting and Information Systems Dr. Delwyn DeVries was recently appointed to the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) subcommittee, a national subcommittee responsible for content associated with the business environment and concepts section of the Certified Professional Accountant (CPA) exam.

The group provides guidance in the determination of BEC exam question composition and evaluates the technical accuracy of items.  The BEC subcommittee is composed of 10 individuals from CPA firms, businesses and academic backgrounds.

Belmont Named on College Choice’s ‘Best Christian Colleges List’

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Belmont was recently named as number seven on College Choice’s “Best Christian Colleges” in 2015 list.

The list was assembled based on criteria college freshman said was most important when deciding what school to attend. These topics include “academic reputation, financial aid offerings, overall cost and success of graduates in the post-college job market.”

Under the Belmont profile, the list mentions the University’s No. 5 ranking among universities in the South according to U.S. News & World Report and calls Belmont one of the “Most Innovative” in the nation. A write up on the ranking from Newsmax mentions that, with more than 7,200 students and more growth to come, Belmont claims the title of “largest ecumenical Christian university in America.”