Belmont’s community health students recently delivered the curriculum they developed for a new nursing school that will be established in Pemba, Mozambique by non-profit Mobile Medical Disaster Relief (MMDR). Dr. David Vanderpool, a Brentwood surgeon, founded MMDR in 2005 to serve the victims of Hurricane Katrina in the Mississippi area. The humanitarian organization now exists to help fulfill the medical needs of vulnerable and underserved people in the United States and throughout the world.
Developed under the leadership of Associate Professor Ruby Dunlap, whose parents were missionaries in Africa, the nursing curriculum was presented to Vanderpool Nov. 13 following the Sigma Theta Tau induction ceremony. Vanderpool will use the curriculum as part of his group’s efforts to start a hospital and nursing school in Mozambique, Africa. The organization is also collecting vaccines, malaria drugs and AIDS medications for their work there. According to the MMDR Web site, Mozambique medical facilities are scarce or nonexistent. One in six people have HIV/AIDS, and 60 percent of children die before the age of 5.
Karen Thomas, MMDR’s Director of Operations, said, “The curriculum development is a very important part of the process toward getting a nursing program in Pemba going. We can accomplish so much more in a short period of time than they can in Africa. Once the hospital is built, there will be a place to meet and train. Dr. Vanderpool is looking forward to replicating the hospital and nursing school in other places. What you have accomplished is a very important link in the chain.”
Students Deliver Nursing Curriculum for Mozambique Hospital
Men’s Basketball Garners National Media Coverage
Following last week’s huge win over Cincinnati 85-75, the Belmont Bruins men’s basketball team has received attention in a number of national media outlets, including USA Today, ESPN.com and Sports Illustrated. Combined with wins by Gardner-Webb over Kentucky and Mercer over Southern California, Belmont’s Cincinnati victory garnered coverage for the entire Atlantic Sun conference. Visit the links below for more details.
USA Today
ESPN.com, Kyle Whelliston story
ESPN.com, Andy Katz column
Sports Illustrated
Psychology Chair Dr. Pete Giordano Named 2007 Tennessee Professor of the Year
Dr. Peter Giordano, professor and chair of the Psychology Department, was named today as the 2007 Tennessee Professor of the Year, an award selection determined by The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching and the Council for Advancement and Support of Education (CASE). Dr. Giordano, who is currently in Washington, D.C. for special ceremonies to receive his award, was selected from more than 300 top professors in the United States. Belmont will be holding its own celebration to honor Dr. Giordano on Mon., Dec. 3 at 2 p.m.
Dr. Giordano said, “I am very honored to receive this award. After 18 years of full-time teaching, there is one thing I know for sure: good teachers are not lone wolves. I have been extremely fortunate to have been surrounded by many gifted teachers here at Belmont with whom I have talked continuously about the craft of teaching. This award is theirs as much as mine.”
Dr. Giordano joined Belmont’s Psychology Department in 1989 after receiving his B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. (Clinical Psychology) degrees from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. A past National President of Psi Chi, the honor society for psychology, he frequently teaches courses in such subjects as Abnormal Psychology, Psychology of Personality, Psychometrics and Introduction to Psychological Science. He is also a member of the Belmont Undergraduate Research Symposium Steering Team, Fellow of Division Two of the American Psychological Association and a consulting editor for Teaching of Psychology. In the past year alone, he has received the Tower Award for exceptional contribution to campus life from Belmont’s Student Affairs division and the Academic Inspiration Award from Belmont’s Student-Athlete Advisory Committee.
Dr. Dan McAlexander, Provost of Belmont University, said, “Pete Giordano has been an outstanding faculty member since his first days on the Belmont campus, receiving the high honor of our own Chaney Distinguished Professor award and serving as a former director of the Belmont Teaching Center. Pete is an excellent model of how all Belmont faculty are committed to teach in ways that empower students to learn to their highest potential. His own ongoing commitment to intellectual exploration makes Pete a model of the teacher-scholar, a way of teaching that enables his students to thrive.”
Belmont University professors have received the Tennessee Professor of the Year Award two other times in recent history, in 2000, for Dr. Mike Awalt (Philosophy) and in 2001, for Dr. David Julseth (Spanish).
Polkinghorne Speaks on Relationship Between Faith and Science
Rev. Dr. John Polkinghorne, a knight, physicist and Anglican priest, spoke on campus this week regarding the collaborative relationship that should exist between religion and science. President emeritus of Queen’s College at Cambridge University in England and author of 15 books on the connections between physics and faith, Polkinghorne’s treatment of theology as a natural science invigorated the search for interface between science and religion.
Speaking on the “gifts” that science and religion offer one another, Polkinghorne noted that many scientists have lost their sense of wonder about the fields they explore and the research they undertake. “I actually believe that science is possible because the world is a creation and we are creatures made in the image of a Creator.”
At the same time, he noted, Christians should embrace what science has to offer as it allows us to understand how the world works. In speaking of one often controversial topic, Polkinghorne explained that evolutionary potentiality echoes faith in that creatures “are allowed to be themselves and to make themselves… People who are seeking to speak modern truth should never fear truth regardless of where it comes from. I stand before you today as a man who has two eyes, the eye of science and the eye of religion. I can see more with both of those eyes together. They are truly friends, not foes.”
Shores Selected to Contribute to Nursing Licensure Exam
Dr. Lynne Shores, associate professor of nursing, was approved by the Tennessee Board of Nursing and selected by the National Council of State Boards of Nursing (NCSBN) to participate on the Licensure Examination item development panel of subject matter experts that was held in Chicago, Ill., Oct. 24-27.
NCSBN, headquartered in Chicago, is responsible for developing and administering the NCLEX-RN and NCLEX-PN licensing examinations. Shores, one of 15 nurses from across the nation to be selected for this assignment, was nominated on the basis of clinical specialty and nursing expertise. All nurses in the United States and its four U.S. territories must take the NCLEX.
Riechert to Present at National Communication Association Conference
Bonnie Riechert, assistant professor of public relations in the department of communication studies, will be a panel presenter at the annual conference of the National Communication Association Nov. 15-18 in Chicago. The theme of the conference is “Communicating Worldviews: Faith-Intellect-Ethics,” and Riechert will discuss “Communicating Worldviews: Feminists of Faith.” NCA is the oldest and largest national organization to promote communication scholarship and education. The purpose of the association is to promote study, criticism, research, teaching and application of the artistic, humanistic and scientific principles of communication.
Alumna Melinda Doolittle Performs at White House
Alumna Melinda Doolittle (’99) performed last night for President George W. Bush, Mrs. Laura Bush and special guests in the East Room of the White House during a social dinner in honor of America’s Promise-The Alliance for Youth (White House photo by Joyce N. Boghosian). The America’s Promise Alliance is the nation’s largest multi-sector collaborative dedicated to the well-being of children and youth and is currently chaired by Alma Powell, wife of founding Chair General Colin Powell.
The Alliance presented a Founders Award to First Lady Laura Bush for her commitment to children and youth, who in turn thanked Doolittle for joining her in a trip last summer to Africa, noting that Melinda is “a wonderful ambassador for our country.”
Doolittle returns to Nashville this weekend for rehearsals in preparation for hosting Monday evening’s Christmas at Belmont concert at the Schermerhorn Symphony Center. Though tickets are no longer available for the Nov. 19 performance, the special will air nationally on PBS Mon., Dec. 24, at 10 p.m. EST after its local premiere on Nashville Public Television (NPT) Thurs., Dec. 20, at 8 p.m. CST.
Belmont Announces Settlement with Tennessee Baptist Convention
Belmont University is pleased to announce that it has reached a mutually agreeable settlement of all disputed claims with the Tennessee Baptist Convention. We believe that this resolution honors the many significant contributions that Tennessee Baptists have made to the University and upholds the teachings of Jesus Christ, whom we all seek to serve by ending litigation.
The settlement concludes a 56-year relationship between Belmont and the TBC and provides gifts by Belmont to Tennessee Baptists of $1,000,000 next year followed by annual payments of $250,000 for the next 40 years. These gifts are an expression of gratitude to Tennessee Baptists for the financial and spiritual support that they have provided to the University over the past five decades. The funds will be added to an endowment at the Tennessee Baptist Foundation to support Tennessee Baptist missions and ministries.
Approximately $4,900,000 in funds being held for Belmont by the Tennessee Baptist Foundation for the benefit of the University will be transferred to another trustee selected by Belmont. Of that amount, $1,500,000 represents funds which are subject to the terms of the settlement agreement between Belmont and the Tennessee Baptist Convention.
Belmont is grateful to the many Tennessee Baptists who have encouraged the University as it seeks to broaden its Christian mission by including on its Board of Trustees Christians who are members of churches affiliated with other denominations. The University will continue to be a student-focused, Christian community of learning and service with a rich Baptist heritage that we intend to foster and nurture through our ongoing relationships with local Baptist churches. That is our promise and our covenant.
Though Belmont is parting ways with the TBC, we trust that our shared history has provided important groundwork to achieve common goals of the Convention and the University, and that our futures will evidence this good work. Belmont is committed to its Christian mission and to cherishing its Baptist roots.
—Marty Dickens
Chairman of the Board of Trustees
Belmont University
Alumnus Assists OTD Students with Gas Cards
Alumnus Todd Burr (’91), owner of the Shell Station at 21st Avenue South and Acklen, is providing $25 gas cards to nearly a dozen OTD students this month to help defray the costs of getting to and from occupational therapy fieldwork sites. Belmont University’s doctor of occupational therapy (OTD) students are traveling many miles to clinical sites across multiple counties in Tennessee, including Home Health in rural areas of Maury, long term care facilities in Williamson, and hospitals in Rutherford, Wilson, and Sumner counties, as well as to many local sites in Davidson. Ruth Ford, Associate Dean of the School of Occupational Therapy, said, “Some students are traveling as far as 2,000 miles per semester to meet the 800 hours of clinical work requirement. A strong advocate for Belmont University, Todd is fully aware of the needs of students and plans to continue the service by providing more cards each month. His ongoing support is very much appreciated, and I hope faculty and staff can return the favor by stopping by his service station.”
Vision Editor Receives CMA Merit Award
The Country Music Association recently selected Belmont University junior Courtney Drake, a journalism major and editor of the Belmont Vision, as the first recipient of the CMA Close Up Award of Merit. The award was created this year to honor the student who demonstrated the most creativity, dedication and promise in covering the 2007 CMA Music Festival on assignment from CMA. Drake is pictured at right (center with Bob Doerschuk and CMA Vice President of Communications Wendy Pearl; photo by Drew Maynard) after being presented the award Wed., Nov. 7 during the backstage press conference coverage of the 2007 CMA Awards at the Sommet Center in Nashville.
“CMA is proud to foster up-and-coming music reporters and critics by giving them the tools and opportunities to practice their craft,” said CMA Chief Operating Officer Tammy Genovese. “We wanted to honor Courtney’s exemplary work in an effort to recognize excellence in entertainment journalism and encourage the next generation of writers.”