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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Incoming Students Volunteer in Annual SERVE Project

Mayor Karl Dean and Belmont President Dr. Bob Fisher sent off Belmont’s Class of 2015 and transfer students early Aug. 22 to serve Nashville through the annual SERVE Project.

Some 1,400 students volunteered in their new hometown at 38 local non-profit organizations, including Feed the Children, YMCA, Second Harvest Food Bank and Metro Beautification.

“Belmont has been great friends to this city. Belmont has become one of the most exciting and one of the most interesting schools in the country and you see that manifest in many different ways,” said Dean, mentioning the University’s community service efforts during the May 2010 flood and how students strive to positively impact Nashville.

An annual Welcome Week tradition for more than a decade, SERVE provides a perfect tie-in to Belmont’s ongoing commitment to engage students in their community and encourage the values of service on both a local and global level.

Sophomore Year Experience Launches with Center, Summit

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Belmont’s Quality Enhancement Plan (QEP), the Sophomore Year Experience, kicked into high gear over the past few days as rising sophomores moved into Kennedy Hall on Thursday and the Sophomore Transition Center officially opened its doors. The Sophomore Year Experience, known to students as Growth & Purpose for Sophomores (GPS), is intended to encourage sophomores to engage in focused exploration of themselves and their places in the world. Assessment will be an important element of the program, evaluating the impact on growth and development as well as overall retention.

Growth and Purpose for Sophmores wordmarkLocated on the second floor of Belmont’s Bunch Library, the Sophomore Transition Center will be the centerpiece of the GPS program, which also includes a Sophomore Summit held during Welcome Week, a sophomore service project, a lecture series and changes to on-campus living and the core curriculum. Curriculum changes include tailoring COM 1100, Fundamentals of Speech Communication, to address the needs of sophomores, and revising linked cohort courses to include engaged learning experiences.

Newly appointed Director of the Sophomore Year Experience David Sneed said, “The GPS is designed to aid sophomores in focusing on questions of who they are and what they want to be, empowering them to surge forward personally and professionally in a much stronger way than they might have without the program. We are developing and implementing programming that will integrate with all aspects of a sophomore’s Belmont experience, including academic courses, student life and residential living.”

In addition to Sneed, Nanci Alsup and another part-time coach will work out of the Sophomore Transition Center providing second-year students with advice and direction (Alsup will also continue her work in the Teaching Center). Programming began last week as sophomores were allowed to move in early and assisted with freshman move in, beginning mentoring relationships with the Class of 2015. A Welcome Back Dinner last night opened the inaugural Sophomore Summit which continued Monday with a variety of speakers from the faculty and community.

Dr. Jimmy Davis, associate provost and dean of the University College, served as chair of the QEP committee. He said, “In many ways our sophomore initiative is an extension of the creation of the BELL Core seven years ago. The BELL Core put in place specific experiences for first-year and third-year students, but was much less specific about how it addressed the needs of second year students. So, with the other parts of the BELL Core firmly in place, we have an opportunity to lean on them to create something unique for our sophomores.”

The QEP is part of Belmont’s reaccreditation process. Every 10 years Belmont University must reaffirm its accreditation through the Southern Association of Schools and Colleges (SACS), and the QEP describes a project the University will undertake to improve student learning outcomes. Click here to read the QEP Sophomore Year Experience proposal in its entirety.

Dean Raines Publishes Finance Article

College of Business Administration Dean J. Patrick Raines and Charles G. Leathers have published “Behavioral Finance and Post Keynesian-institutionalist theories of financial markets” in the Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, Summer 2011, v. 33 No. 4, pp. 539-573.

Psychology Alumna Receives Prestigious Teaching Position at UNC

Psychology alumna, Radha Carlson (2005), has been appointed as clinical assistant professor at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, as well as, a psychologist at Central Regional Hospital, a state psychiatric hospital. Carlson recently received her Ph.D. in clinical psychology from University of Miami and specializes in schizophrenia and the treatment of severe mental illnesses. During her time at Belmont University, Carlson was a member of the honors program and was mentored by Dr. Lonnie Yandell. Her husband, Stephen Carlson, also a 2005 graduate of Belmont, received his Ph.D. in marine biology and is now a postdoctoral fellow at the Bowles Center for Alcohol Studies at the University of North Carolina, conducting neuroscience research with rats studying alcohol dependence and withdrawal.

Phi Delta Theta Awarded Phoenix Trophy

Brock Fuller, a sophomore member of Phi Delta Theta, holding the Phoenix Award at the 2011 Emerging Leaders Institute.

Belmont’s Phi Delta Theta chapter was recently presented with the Phoenix Trophy at the organization’s General Headquarters annual Emerging Leaders Institute in Oxford, Ohio. The chapter has worked over the past eight months to focus more on being a values driven organization.

The award, named after the mythological bird that periodically recreates itself, is given to recognize a chapter that has shown dramatic improvement over the course of one academic year.  According to Phi Delta Theta, the Belmont chapter “has truly risen from the ashes of a chapter plagued with apathy into a chapter full of dedication, brotherhood, and values.”

Since January, Phi Delt has raised nearly $25,000 for various philanthropies and this summer, became the second Iron Phi Chapter of the other 160 across the country. Moreover, they set a goal to log 1,848 service hours (a symbolic number reflecting the year Phi Delt was founded), and the chapter is already halfway to its goal.

President John Michael Criswell created a 360 degree service plan to encourage members to serve the surrounding community in as many avenues as possible. Within the new points system, Criswell says members have been held accountable and, as a result, participation has grown exponentially.

In April, Phi Delt won Belmont’s Greek Week for the second year in a row and at Greek Sing, Phi Delt was crowned champion.

Criswell said, “I feel beyond blessed that I have been able to surround myself with a group of men who all share the same fear for mediocrity. By being a member and the President of Phi Delta Theta, I have experienced, first hand, the powerful experience of what it feels like to be a champion.”

New Cafe, Bruin Grounds, Opens Its Doors in Bunch Library

Faculty and staff enjoy samples from new cafe, Bruin Grounds.

New Belmont dining option Bruin Grounds opened its doors this week in the lobby of Bunch Library. Featuring a variety of gourmet coffee drinks, sandwiches and salad options, the new shop hosted a food showcase Tuesday to allow faculty and staff to sample the new menu.

Based on its location in the library, offerings are named in honor of famous books, allowing customers to try out items like The Catch 22 breakfast item, a Count of Monte Cristo sandwich or a Grapes of Wrath salad, among others. The shop will also sell a variety of desserts, juices, chips and fruit cups.

Bruin Grounds will be open this week from 7 a.m.-3 p.m. and will extend its hours until 10 p.m. on weekdays beginning Wed., Aug. 24, the first day of classes. In addition, the café will be open on Sat., Aug. 20 from 7 a.m.-5 p.m. for Move In Day. Bruin Grounds hours may be adjusted during the semester based on demand, and the cafe will be accepting dining points and Bruin Bucks in addition to cash and credit cards.

Kyle Grover, director of Belmont’s Dining Services through Sodexo, adds that his team is also looking at the possibility of adding a mobile app that would allow customers to place orders in advance, though that service will likely not be available this semester.

Made possible through conversations between SGA, Senior Leadership, the Bunch Library and Student Services, Bruin Grounds is one of several endeavors intended to transform Bunch Library into a learning commons, according to Dr. Ernest Heard, director of library services. The Bunch Library has also recently added tables to the first floor lobby and atriums on the second and third floors to provide additional seating for Bruin Grounds diners and to further encourage collaboration among students, faculty and staff using the library.

Belmont Partners With Avenue Bank for Course in Entertainment Industry Finance

This fall Belmont University’s Mike Curb College of Entertainment & Music Business (CEMB) will partner with Avenue Bank to offer a unique course for entrepreneurs in the music and entertainment industries. Titled “A Study in Personal Finance & Banking in Relation to the Music Industry,” this course offers an elite group of junior and senior level students an introduction to banking and personal finance, including loan examples and case studies that are music industry specific.

In response to feedback during last year’s Curb College strategic planning process, this new course will address student concerns about managing their own finances as entrepreneurs in the music and entertainment industries. In line with Avenue’s mission to serve the local community and the entertainment industry, the Avenue Bank team developed a curriculum to teach students how to create a budget and understand the basics of managing personal finances, to identify and evaluate financial information necessary to make a loan decisions and to analyze a music industry loan, underwritten with royalties and publishing, among other topics.

Avenue Bank Chairman, President & CEO Ron Samuels said, “It is exciting for Avenue Bank to partner with Belmont University to educate students on personal finance and understanding the role of a bank in the music industry. This class will give students real job-ready knowledge that they will definitely be able to put to use as they embark on careers in music and entertainment.”

Senior Director of Curb College Initiatives Sarah Cates added, “The Curb College values addressing student feedback and is excited to partner with Avenue to help prepare our students for unique challenges and opportunities they’ll face as they maneuver the financial side of the industry.”

Students Start Online Grocery Store

Belmont students Jonathan Murrell and Bruno Silva are delivering groceries to students’ dorm rooms through their online care package business that aims to save students time and money.

The friends, both juniors on Belmont’s tennis team, joined Murrell’s brother James to begin MyDormFood.com last fall. The company delivered some 60 packages in the winter, before pulling its website to revamp it.  Now back online this fall, MyDormFood.com hopes parents will use its services to send custom-made care packages to their children and students choose the door-step deliveries over off-campus trips and expensive convenience stores.

(left to right) James Murrell and Belmont students Bruno Silva & Jonathan Murrell are co-owners of MyDormFood.com.

Jonathan said he pitched several ideas for new businesses to Dr. Jeff Cornwall, director of Belmont’s Center for Entrepreneurship, but had trouble narrowing his focus until an epiphany with friends.

“One of my friends was getting in the car and eating a PowerBar. She said she paid $3 for it, and I knew it cost half as much at the grocery store. I realized college students were paying super high prices just because of the convenience of having stores on or near campus,” said Jonathan. “MyDormFood is identical to grocery store prices. You will break even using us, but you will save time because you don’t have to leave your dorm room.”

Parry Elected Group Secretary for Journalism Association

Pam Parry, chair of the Communication Studies Department, was elected Aug. 11 as secretary of the Small Programs Interest Group of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication at the organization’s annual meeting in St. Louis. She is the immediate past Teaching Co-Chair of the organization, which focuses on the special needs of teaching communications in the context of small programs, such as Belmont’s Corporate Communications Program. Parry became the director of the Corporate Communications Program in fall 2010.

Center for Executive Education Announces Guy Kawasaki as Fall Leadership Breakfast Speaker

The Center for Executive Education at Belmont University will host venture capitalist and entrepreneur Guy Kawasaki as the keynote speaker during its Fall Leadership Breakfast on Nov. 17 at the Curb Event Center Arena.

Kawasaki, former Apple “chief evangelist,” is the co-founder of Alltop.com, an “online magazine rack” of popular topics on the web, and a founding partner at Garage Technology Ventures. He has authored 10 books, including The Art of the Start, Rules for Revolutionaries and Reality Check.

Kawasaki said, “When I’m in Nashville, I’m planning to speak on ‘Entrepreneurship,’ illustrating the benefits of treating every company as a startup. Hopefully, we can inspire managers to unleash entrepreneurial thinking and help foster the pluck and creativity companies need to stay ahead of the pack.”