
To the Junior ROTC cadets at Jeffersontown High School, she was 鈥淢ama G.鈥 Kimberly Goughler鈥檚 hundreds of hours of volunteer time combined with the thousands of dollars she raised for the program led the students to nominate her for a University of Louisville Outstanding Community Engagement award in 2014.
Goughler, who works at the Cardiovascular Innovation Institute on the Health Sciences Center Campus, cried when she won. She said she was 鈥渟hocked and embarrassed and humbled.鈥
Every year since 2009, the UofL Outstanding Community Engagement awards have been given out to recognize extraordinary community involvement by faculty, staff, students and community partners.
The deadline for nominations for the is April 29. Winners receive $2,500, have their names added to a plaque in Ekstrom Library and are honored at a reception.
Another 2014 winner was Karen Robinson, PhD, School of Nursing gerontology professor emerita and executive director of the .
Robinson聽was recognized for her work on behalf of those with Alzheimer鈥檚 disease and dementia and their caregivers. She has partnered with the Greater Louisville and Southern Indiana Alzheimer鈥檚 Association to start a Memory Caf茅 and with Norton鈥檚 Office of Church and Health Ministry to help build more dementia-friendly congregations and faith communities. She used the monetary award to travel to Amsterdam to visit a village designed specifically for people with dementia.
鈥淭he tour of this village inspired me to think of how these concepts might be used to build a more dementia-friendly community, including faith groups prepared to provide ministry to people with dementia and their caregivers,鈥 she said.
Diane Whitlock, assistant to the vice provost for diversity and international affairs, won in 2010 for her work with The Healing Place, an addiction recovery center.
鈥淚t was an honor to be recognized by my employer for work that I hoped would be beneficial to the community,鈥 Diane said. 鈥淭he university’s commitment to community engagement is a true example of how merging 鈥榯own and gown鈥 benefits our city stakeholders and demonstrates the positive impact of putting ideas to action.”
Kim Johnson, administrative associate in Information Technology, who won in 2015 with co-worker Ann Hobdy for collecting items such as warm clothing for homeless children and stuffed bears for frightened children in police patrol cars, said it was a 鈥済reat honor鈥 to win the award.
鈥淚 love volunteering and giving back to the community,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e have such a big need so close to our university home and every time I聽bring a service project to our department and ask for help, they are always there to help pay it forward. It is nice to know that the university recognizes the efforts that employees put forth to help make our community a better place.鈥
For more on the awards, including nomination forms for 2016, .


























