By Jeff Murphy,
                                                									April 28, 2020
                                             
                                             
                                              
                                              
                                             
WARRENSBURG, MO – One of the pillars of engaged learning and future-focused academics
                                                at the University of Central Missouri is to provide opportunities for students to
                                                pursue meaningful research with faculty mentors. In the spirit of this goal, faculty
                                                member Jasmine Cloud, Ph.D., is being recognized this spring as the recipient of the
                                                Undergraduate Research Faculty Mentor Award.
                                             
                                             The award is presented annually by the Office of Undergraduate Research, and selections
                                                are made on the basis of nominations. Criteria include: mentorship of student research
                                                and/or creative projects that demonstrate strong commitment to engaged learning and
                                                future-focused academics; promotion of a culture that supports undergraduate research
                                                and/or creative projects at department, college, and/or university-levels; incorporation
                                                of undergraduate research and/or creative projects into the classroom; and contribution
                                                to field through their own active research agenda or creative works.
                                             
                                             Cloud is an associate professor of art history. She was nominated by one of her students,
                                                Christina Foster, a junior sculpture major seeking a Bachelor of Fine Arts in the
                                                School of Visual and Performing Arts.
                                             
                                             “I was very surprised to win this award, and completely honored to be recognized in
                                                this way. It was especially meaningful because it's a student-nominated award,” Cloud
                                                said. “The greatest part of my job is interacting with and learning alongside my students.
                                                I'm truly grateful for their support. Their desire and willingness to grow as thinkers
                                                and people is incredibly inspiring to me, as an educator and a researcher.”
Cloud joined the faculty at UCM in the fall 2015 semester teaching art history to
                                                art and design majors, as well as general education students. She also directs this
                                                academic area’s Study Abroad program.
                                             
                                             “We go on a tour to visit art museums, archaeological sites, and architectural masterworks
                                                in European cities every May (though this year, of course, was cancelled). I don't
                                                have art history majors beyond a few who have designed individualized degrees with
                                                me, so I find that Study Abroad is an essential way to connect with and mentor students,”
                                                Cloud said. “These trips are about so much more than visiting the sites and seeing
                                                works of art in person (though that is wonderful), and I find these intensive trips
                                                to be a way to get to know my students better, encourage them, their interests, and
                                                their curiosity, out in the wider world.”
                                             
                                             See the list of this year’s nominees for the Undergraduate Research Faculty Mentor
                                                   Award.