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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Master of Accountancy Program Ranked in Top Third in the Nation

In rankings recently released by TFE Times, Belmont University’s Master of Accountancy placed among the top 30 percent of such programs nationwide, landing at No. 60 on a list of more than 190 graduate schools offering accounting degrees. TFE Times is an online media site that seeks to be “the leading source of information for all things Wall Street.”

Associate Dean of Belmont’s Massey College of Business Dr. Joe Alexander said, “We are delighted that TFE is now confirming what so many of our public accounting employers tell us about the high quality of our accounting programs. Certainly, our graduates are prepared to pass their CPA exams, but with our additional programming in areas such as ethics, global leadership and entrepreneurial thinking, Massey accounting grads are ready to add value to their employers at the time of hire.”

TFE Times’ comprehensive rankings use a variety of components to determine each institution’s final score, including GMAT scores, undergraduate GPA, acceptance rate, employment rates after graduation and graduates’ starting salaries. Other southeastern-based programs near Belmont’s ranking included Auburn (56), Kentucky (67) and LSU (68). Click here to view the complete rankings.

The Massey School’s Master of Accountancy (MACC) degree was created in 1992. The Belmont MACC helps to prepare qualified students with non-accounting undergraduate degrees to sit for the CPA exam in as little as 15 months. The program is AACSB accredited, and the Massey Graduate School of Business has been lauded by U.S. News & World Report and the Princeton Review as one of the top business schools in the country.

Brown Receives Trailblazer Award for Excellence in Education and Journalism

photo (6)Dr. Sybril Brown, professor of media studies, received the Cynthia Williams Impact Award for Excellence in Education and Journalism during the Trailblazer Awards show on Sunday, October 4 at The Agenda Events Venue. 

The awards show honored those in the Middle Tennessee community who are trailblazers and pioneers in their fields. Primarily focusing on the education, journalism, entertainment, gospel and broadcasting industries, The Trailblazers Awards are the first of its kind within the state. Brown was one of several community leaders recognized including international gospel icon Dr. Bobby Jones,  Publisher of the Tennessee Tribune Mrs. Rosetta Miller-Perry and 92Q Radio Personality Conny Denell.

Center for Entrepreneurship Hosts GoodMarket Social Enterprise Village

The Center for Entrepreneurship and ENACTUS, with help from Massey College of Business, Center for Social Entrepreneurship and Religion and Arts, hosted the GoodMarket for the first time on campus to kick off the organization’s university tour.

Following a morning lecture at 10 a.m. featuring founders of social enterprises including Patrick Woodyard from Nisolo, Will Anderson of Salemtown Board Co. and Belmont alumni Taylor Allen from Henri Rose and Isaac Ezell of HOPE International, students were invited to visit the market and shop among featured products.

the good market-107Director of the Center for Entrepreneurship Elizabeth Gortmaker explained that this stop on the GoodMarket’s 10-campus tour was different from the rest as the Belmont market included exclusive, local businesses to personalize the experience for students. “I do hope to continue this event in the future. I wanted to bring in alums and other founders in the city who are doing work that interests our student body. We’ll be able to connect those founders with some of our student entrepreneurs for mentoring opportunities.”

The village featured 12 well-known, local businesses, and student social enterprises. The list includes NisoloFashionABLEMiriam DesignsSalemtown Board Co., Hope InternationalStrings For HopeHenri RoseSocial Enterprise AllianceThistle FarmsConsider the WLDFLWRS (Religion in the Arts alumnae), Enactus, DreamWeave and Sew For Hope.

In the spring, Belmont will host its annual Entrepreneurship Village to celebrate student entrepreneur and alumni businesses.

Pharmacy Students Selected to Compete at National Clinical Skills Competition

Pharmacy StudentsBelmont’s Student Society of Health System Pharmacy recently conducted the annual American Society of Health-System Pharmacists (ASHP) Clinical Skills Competition. In this competition, student participants entered as pairs and utilized their knowledge and clinical abilities to create a detailed, patient-centered care plan. Eight teams competed in the written competition and five teams were selected to present the care plan to faculty judges. Drs. Montgomery Williams, Kristy Wahaib and Ashton Beggs, faculty in the College of Pharmacy, served as judges for the competition.

Fourth-year pharmacy students Candace Beam and Haley Willett were selected as winners of the local competition. Beam and Willett will compete at the National Clinical Skills Competition at the annual American Society of Health-System Pharmacists Midyear Clinical Meeting in New Orleans this December.

Daus and Students Participate in Drug Take Back Day

On September 26, five Belmont undergraduate students and Professor of Chemistry Dr. Kimberlee Daus participated in the Dickson County Drug Take Back, held on National Prescription Drug Take Back Day.

Coordinated by Vanderbilt University and the Dickson Police Department, the team worked alongside faculty and students from Vanderbilt, Lipscomb  and Belmont pharmaceutical studies to catalog and count more than 50 pounds of medication. Students participating included Mack Ogle, Teaghan Chen, Mackenzie Watson, Unique Ellis and Allison Lane.

The National Drug Take-Back Day, set by the Drug Enforcement Agency, provides a service to the community through safe and responsible disposal of unused medication. Additionally, these events help to educate the public about the potential drug abuse associated with these medications.

Panvini and Students Attend Environmental Education Conference

Professor and Chair of the Department of Biology Dr. Darlene Panvini and five students attended the Tennessee Environmental Education Association conference at Montgomery Bell State Park on Saturday, September 26.

Participating students included Alex Jeffers, Walter Burn, Lindsay Millward, Lindsey Dennis and Katlin Stodard. Panvini, Stodard and Millward gave a presentation titled “Leaf Litter Decomposition Studies for Middle School, High School, and College Students” that discussed their senior research project. Drs. Panvini, Fox and Smith Whitehouse gave a presentation titled “Compost Happens,” which modeled an interdisciplinary lesson integrating science, mathematics and language arts.

The group was also joined by environmental science alumni Erin Pitts and Sylvia Alsup, Assistant Professor of Mathematics and Education Dr. Ryan Fox and Professor of English Dr. Bonnie Smith Whitehouse.

Mathematics Major Receives Actuarial Scholarships

Mallory WhiteMallory White, senior mathematics major, was awarded three competitive actuarial scholarships this summer including one of two $1,500 Casualty Actuaries of the Southeast Scholarships, a $1,500 Southeastern Actuaries Conference Scholarship and one of two $1,000 D.W. Simpson Actuarial Scholarship.

This is the fifth consecutive year that a Belmont student has won at least one of these awards for actuarial students.

Pharmacy Students Counsel on Medicare Choices

Belmont University College of Pharmacy has partnered with the Tennessee State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP) to provide student volunteers to assist with counseling senior citizens on drug and health plan choices. Belmont is one of three pharmacy schools in Tennessee working with TN SHIP to help individuals with their decision-making during the Medicare Part D Annual Enrollment Period (AEP) in the fall.

Four Belmont pharmacy students including Leah Dickerson, Emily Russell, Sara Thompson and Chris Kepinski  participated in AEP events last year as part of their rotation at Walgreens. The group completed the project for their academic concentration in pharmacy missions and public health, one of four areas of specialized study within Belmont’s PharmD program. In August, additional students received training to assist individuals in the coming months.

The volunteer training program was recently featured in a newsletter published by the National Council on Aging.

Meredith Clark Discusses the Evolving Community of ‘#BlackTwitter’

A convocation Tuesday sponsored by Belmont’s Black Student Association sought to educate the community on the phenomenon known as “Black Twitter,” which can be described as the online realm of opportunity for the black community to tell their stories.

The presentation was led by Dr. Meredith Clark, assistant professor in the Mayborn School of Journalism at the University of North Texas,who last August defended her doctoral dissertation on “To Tweet Our Own Cause: A Mixed-Methods Analysis of the Online Phenomenon Known As Black Twitter.” With research interests in race in media, as well as digital and social media, she opened her talk with the recent anecdote of telling a woman on a plane that she had her PhD in Twitter. A discussion followed about the opportunity to take on this community and be a voice in the digital world.

Clark explained the long process of starting her dissertation on Black Twitter. An ethnography class led her to realize that she found community by logging onto her phone at night, listening to what people were talking about and seeing which hashtags were trending. “We are a community that has a story to tell. When I realized I wanted to pursue higher education, I always went back to the same truth: it’s my truth, and I speak it in my every work. My truth is that everyone has a story to tell,” she said.

Clark quoted others that have led this revolution, saying, “too long have others spoken for us; we wish to speak our own. They sought to give a voice to the black community, and their charge was to capture and portray an accurate narrative of the black experience.”

Black twitter 2Clark was able to recruit 36 volunteers, via her own Twitter account, to participate in her dissertation. Through interviews, she noticed three major phenomena of Twitter. The first is personal communities, or the idea that people join a community because others they know are already there. The second is thematic nodes, or the places one will return to repeatedly because of a common interest. Television, for example, creates communities centered around thematic nodes, like Clark’s favorite “Shondaland.” The third is the place these two phenomena intersect over an event or the news – a process or community like Black Twitter. #Blacklivesmatter, #solidarityisforwhitewomen or even #paulasbestdishes are results of this kind of community coming together as one viral voice to protest injustices in the real world.

Before the question and answer portion, Clark ended by encouraging the audience to think about the communities they are a part of and asking who will represent those communities. “Stories will be told by (a) the traditional media, (b) niche media, which will focus on reactions and ignore history or (c) by you, individuals who can work at the intersections of media, race and power,” she said. “You are the best chance at standing against the unchecked narratives. We are the people formerly known as the audience, and we are now the creators. We can change the narrative to change the moments in history.”

Clark received her PhD from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Journalism and Mass Communication. She tweets @meredithclark.

College of Pharmacy Launches Early Assurance Admissions Program

Initiative promises undergrads guaranteed admittance, potential six-year PharmD completion

Belmont University College of Pharmacy recently unveiled an exciting new option for high-potential high school students interested in pursuing a doctorate of pharmacy. The new Early Assurance program allows selected students who are accepted as Belmont undergraduates to earn guaranteed admittance to the University’s PharmD program. The program also provides opportunity for students to achieve their PharmD in as little as six years.

College of Pharmacy Dean Dr. Phil Johnston said, “Students in the Early Assurance program have distinct advantages. The College of Pharmacy reaches out and includes these students in professional pharmacy organizations, offers these students exposure to guest lectures, provides them with supplemental advising and mentoring as they progress through the first two years of undergraduate courses on our campus, and provides them with the culture of the profession of pharmacy. I can see this program growing significantly.”
 
High schoolers interested in Early Assurance must achieve a minimum of 26 on the ACT (1150 SAT) as well as hold a 3.5 or higher high school GPA. Upon acceptance and admission to Belmont as a freshman, the student must then indicate interest in the program and complete a successful interview with the College of Pharmacy. Once enrolled as a Belmont undergraduate, the student must exceed minimum grade requirements and successfully complete the application process to the PharmD program as specified.
 
An additional benefit of the Early Assurance program allows participants to waive the Pharmacy College Admissions Test (PCAT), which is typically required for admission to the PharmD program. “We are confident that undergraduate coursework completed at Belmont, particularly in the areas of math and science, provides exceptional preparation for PharmD students,” said Bill Nichols, the College of Pharmacy’s director of student recruitment. “That confidence and the outstanding academic record of our Early Assurance students allow us to waive the PCAT for these applicants.”
 
Once enrolled, Early Assurance pre-pharmacy students must complete 65 undergraduate credits at Belmont in math, science and liberal arts courses, all while retaining a GPA of 3.0 or higher. Upon completion of those pre-requisites, acceptance to the Belmont College of Pharmacy is guaranteed and any academic merit scholarships awarded as an incoming freshman will continue for a total of four years of pre-pharmacy/PharmD study if eligibility requirements are met.
 
In addition to guaranteed admission, potentially shorter doctoral program and the continuation of merit scholarship money for the graduate program, other advantages of the “Early Assurance” program include:
·      Offers pre-pharmacy students more opportunities to become involved with the pharmacy program via activities and student organizations
·      Ensures pre-pharmacy students have a solid liberal arts foundation from the university offering the pharmacy degree
·      Provides open invitation to lectures, seminars and other Pharmacy events
·      Connects undergraduate with a faculty member from the College of Pharmacy who will serve as academic advisor for the pre-pharmacy student
 
About Belmont University College of Pharmacy
Situated in the Health Care Capital of the World, Belmont University’s Doctor of Pharmacy program is dedicated to rigorous and purposeful teaching, scholarship, service and leadership. With graduates achieving an impressive first-time pass rate of 100 percent in 2013 and 97 percent in 2014 on the North American Pharmacist Licensure Examination (NAPLEX), Belmont’s College of Pharmacy is quickly becoming a nationally-recognized center for practice and leadership in Pharmacy Education. With five areas of specialized concentration, students have the opportunity to choose the career path best suited for their interests. For more information, visit www.belmont.edu/pharmacy.