Belmont University

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Belmont University

Motto "From here to anywhere"
Established 1890
Type Private
Endowment $52 million
President Robert "Bob" Fisher
Faculty 461
Students 5,000
Undergraduates 4,000
Postgraduates 1,000
Location Nashville, TN, USA
Campus Urban, 65 acres (263,000 m²)
Athletics NCAA Division I - 7 men and 8 women varsity teams
Colors Scarlet and Blue
Nickname Bruins
Mascot Bruiser the Bruin
Website www.belmont.edu

Belmont University is a private, coeducational, liberal arts university located in Nashville, Tennessee. It is the largest Christian university in Tennessee and the second largest private university in the state.

Contents

[edit] Academics

Belmont is currently ranked by U.S. News & World Report as one of the Top 10 masters-degree universities[1] in the South.[2] For the applicant class of 2005-06, Belmont admitted 72.6% of its applicants, and just over half of those students matriculated. The admitted class's SAT scores ranged from a 75% score of 1280 to a 25% score of 1070, and its ACT scores ranged from a 75% score of 28 to a 25% score of 23. Approximately 2/3 of entering freshmen eventually graduate from Belmont, and approximately 1/3 of entering freshmen eventually transfer out of Belmont.[3]

In addition to the music and music business programs, Belmont offers a full range of majors and programs that extend outside of class. Belmont and HCA created a health sciences consortium with local universities to alleviate the shortage of nurses and health care professionals in the local community.[4] The entrepreneurship program provides shared office space and mentoring from faculty, local entrepreneurs and attorneys.[5] New Century Journalism students have gained work experience at The Oprah Winfrey Show, The Daily Show, CBS Evening News, and British Broadcasting Corp.[6]

[edit] Music and music business programs

Belmont's Mike Curb College of Entertainment & Music Business (CEMB) is the only college of entertainment/music business in the world. The music business faculty consists of current/former authors, performers, expert witnesses (for industry lawsuits), artist managers, lawyers, record label executives, songwriters, and others. The former dean of the CEMB, Jim Van Hook, is a legendary Nashville label head, especially as part of the Christian music industry; he is currently CEO of Word Entertainment. One of the hallmarks of the program is its vast internship program, which sends hundreds of students annually out into the Nashville music industry to intern for record labels, management companies, publishing companies, booking agencies, publicists, recording studios, law firms, and other businesses.

Besides having three professional quality recording studios on campus, Belmont owns The Belmont Studios (formerly known as Ocean Way Nashville), part of which is operated for-profit (for the likes of Dave Matthews, Sheryl Crow, and Bob Seger), and part of which is used by students. Belmont also operates historic RCA Studio B (formerly used by Elvis Presley, Roy Orbison, and Dolly Parton), in conjunction with the Country Music Hall of Fame and the Curb Family Foundation. In addition, the music business program operates Belmont West and Belmont East, which enable students to spend a semester learning about and interning in the entertainment industries in Los Angeles and New York City, respectively.

[edit] Notable alumni

Neither Pearl nor Paisley actually graduated from Belmont University. Paisley did not graduate, and Pearl attended Belmont's predecessor, the Ward-Belmont School.

Belmont's best-known supporters include Mike Curb (substantial donor/namesake of CEMB and Curb Event Center/founder and head of Curb Records), Jack C. Massey (substantial donor to and namesake of BU's business building and graduate business program, former head of Kentucky Fried Chicken and a founder of Hospital Corporation of America), and Vince Gill (country music artist whose annual charity event has raised thousands in scholarship money).

[edit] Relationship with the Tennessee Baptist Convention

In 1951, Ward-Belmont College, the finishing school operated in Nashville by Ward-Belmont, Inc., was facing severe financial difficulties. To relieve those problems, the school entered into a relationship with the Tennessee Baptist Convention. Under the terms of that relationship, the Tennessee Baptist Convention provided the school with financial support and in exchange was granted certain management rights related to the school. In particular, all of the members of the school's Board of Trustees were to be Baptists.

In 2005 Belmont's Board of Trustees sought to remove Belmont University from the control of the Tennessee Baptist Convention while remaining in a "fraternal relationship" with it. Advocates of this plan presented a blueprint for change in which all board members would be Christians but only 60 percent would be Baptists in order to affirm a Christian affinity while acknowledging the diversity of both the faculty and the student body. The head of the TBC would continue to be an ex officio board member. The TBC rejected this plan.

In November 2005 The Tennessean reported that the TBC would increase its funding of two other institutions, Union University and Carson-Newman College by the amount previously given to Belmont and Belmont would replace the three percent of its budget that was funded by the TBC; this announcement seemed to mark the end of the matter. However, on April 7, 2006 The Tennessean reported that the TBC would seek to oust the existing board and replace it with one comprised entirely of Southern Baptists and amenable to ongoing TBC control.

After settlement talks failed, the Tennessee Baptist Convention Executive Board filed a lawsuit on September 29, 2006 against Belmont seeking the return of approximately $58,000,000, a lawsuit that was still pending as of December 2006.[1]

[edit] Campus Facilities

In June 2006, Belmont opened the new $18 million Gordan E. Inman Centre that now houses the College of Health Sciences and Nursing.[7] A state-of-the-art facility, which was financed primarily by Nashville businessman Gordan E. Inman and the HCA TriStar Health System, the building has three stories of classroom space that contain learning labs equipped with Sim Man mannequins that respond to the actions of the nursing students. Additionally, there are classrooms centered on both adult and pediatric occupational therapy, maternity and neonatal care complete with Sim Man babies and a birthing Sim Woman, orthopedics lab, and many classrooms of various sizes.

Belmont also houses the Curb Event Center, a 5000-seat multi-purpose arena, which is used for basketball games, concerts, and other events like the 2006 and 2007 CMT Awards, and potentially the 2008 Presidential Debate.[8] The facility is connected to the Beaman Student Life Center and Maddox Grand Atrium—collectively, a $52 million development.

[edit] Belmont athletics

Belmont Bruins
Belmont Bruins

Belmont is a member of the NCAA Division I and is a member of the Atlantic Sun Conference, a non-football conference.

In the mid-1990s, Belmont adopted the mascot "Bruins", replacing the earlier mascot of Rebels due to the latter's association with the Confederacy.

The school has an ongoing basketball rivalry with Lipscomb University and currently plays them at least twice per year on a home-and-home basis (even more frequently in some years) in games nicknamed the "Battle of the Boulevard". In 2006, likely the most important Battle of the Boulevard game to date was played. With both teams battling for their first-ever NCAA Tournament berths, the Belmont Bruins nipped Lipscomb in overtime to win the Atlantic Sun conference championship 74-69. The Belmont Bruins were seeded 15th in the 2006 NCAA Tournament, losing in the first round to the UCLA Bruins.

In 2007, Belmont won the Atlantic Sun Conference championship for the second year in a row, defeating East Tennessee State University in Johnson City 94-67. The Bruins continued to the NCAA Tournament for the second consecutive year, losing in the first round to the Georgetown Hoyas.

[edit] Organization

Belmont University is comprised of the following colleges, schools, and campuses:

[edit] References

  1. ^ A masters-degree university is a university which offers several masters degrees but not does not offer a full slate of doctoral programs.
  2. ^ http://www.usnews.com/usnews/edu/college/rankings/brief/t1univmas_s_brief.php US News 2006 Private University Rankings].
  3. ^ The National Center for Education Statistics
  4. ^ http://nashvillecitypaper.com/index.cfm?section_id=9&screen=news&news_id=50374
  5. ^ http://online.wsj.com/public/article/SB117390337333137197-zpGhIVPFuFeMrJ_P8azhBxfj_4Q_20070325.html?mod=mktw
  6. ^ http://outandaboutnewspaper.com/article.php?id=54
  7. ^ Michaela Jackson, "Belmont opens Gordon Inman Center. Health-care training may ease shortages," The Tennessean, 9 June 2006, 1.
  8. ^ http://forum.belmont.edu/umac/archives/006854.html

[edit] External links

[edit] Affiliated media

[edit] Belmont centers