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Starting October 3rd! NEXTGEN Grant Support Introduction and Partnership Opportunities

News, Newsroom

October 3rd, 2022, 5:30 PM – 7:00 PM Eastern Time
October 4th, 2022, 8:30 PM – 10:00 PM Eastern Time
October 5th, 2022, 4:30 PM – 6:00 PM Eastern Time
October 6th, 2022, 7:30 PM – 9:00 PM Eastern Time

REGISTER HERE

The Extension Foundation was selected by USDA-NIFA to serve as the technical service provider for NEXTGEN to raise awareness of the program and provide technical assistance for eligible institutions to develop teams, partners, program strategies and to connect with USDA and other career opportunities.

This webinar will provide an overview of grant support resources available immediately to streamline the application process, create compelling applications, and help with potential partnerships for the NEXTGEN grant. You are welcome to attend as many of these as you would like. You do not need to attend all of the webinar dates and times available, please choose one(s) that are most convenient for you. Visit our website at nextgen.extension.org.

About NEXTGEN

The primary goal of the From Learning to Leading: Cultivating the Next Generation of Diverse Food and Agriculture Professionals Program (NEXTGEN) is to enable 1890 Land-grant institutions, 1994 Land-grant institutions, Alaska Native-serving institutions and Native Hawaiian-serving institutions, Hispanic-serving institutions, and insular area institutions of higher education located in the U.S. territories to engage, recruit, retain, train, and support students to help build and sustain the next generation of the food, agriculture, natural resources, and human sciences (FANH) workforce including the future USDA workforce. NEXTGEN-supported projects should enable student scholarship support, meaningful paid internships, fellowships, and job opportunity matching, and also facilitate opportunities to learn the processes and pathways leading to training and employment in the federal sector.

About the Extension Foundation

The Extension Foundation was formed in 2006 by Extension Directors and Administrators. The Foundation partners with Cooperative Extension through liaison roles and a formal plan of work with the Extension Committee on Organization and Policy (ECOP) to increase system capacity while providing programmatic services, and helping Extension programs scale and investigate new methods and models for implementing programs. The Foundation provides professional development to Cooperative Extension professionals and offers exclusive services to its members.

September 30, 2022/by Aaron Weibe
https://extension.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/Extension-Foundation-Logo-padded.png 0 0 Aaron Weibe https://extension.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/Extension-Foundation-Logo-padded.png Aaron Weibe2022-09-30 10:22:422022-09-30 10:22:42Starting October 3rd! NEXTGEN Grant Support Introduction and Partnership Opportunities

Extension Foundation Selected by USDA-NIFA as Technical Provider for NEXTGEN Funding Opportunity

News, Newsroom, Uncategorized

The primary goal of the From Learning to Leading: Cultivating the Next Generation of Diverse Food and Agriculture Professionals Program (NEXTGEN) is to enable 1890 Land-grant institutions, 1994 Land-grant institutions, Alaska Native-serving institutions and Native Hawaiian-serving institutions, Hispanic-serving institutions, and insular area institutions of higher education located in the U.S. territories to engage, recruit, retain, train, and support students to help build and sustain the next generation of the food, agriculture, natural resources, and human sciences (FANH) workforce including the future USDA workforce. NextGen supported projects should enable student scholarship support, meaningful paid internships, fellowships, and job opportunity matching, and also facilitating opportunities to learn the processes and pathways leading to training and employment in the federal sector.

The Extension Foundation will raise awareness of the NEXTGEN program and provide technical assistance for eligible institutions to develop teams, partners, program strategies and to connect with USDA and other career opportunities. 

Dr. Dawn Mellion has joined the Extension Foundation to serve as the Program Director for this initiative. Dr. Mellion is the former Vice Chancellor for Extension at the Southern University Agricultural Research and Extension Center. 

The Association of Public and Land-grant Universities (APLU) will support the Extension Foundation in their role as a technical provider for NEXTGEN funding. Specifically, Wendy Fink, Assistant Vice President of the Office of Food, Agriculture, and Natural Resources, will serve to help connect potential institutional partners to one another. 

To learn more about the Extension Foundation’s services for NEXTGEN including upcoming webinars, please visit their website at nextgen.extension.org. 

About the Extension Foundation

The Extension Foundation was formed in 2006 by Extension Directors and Administrators. The Foundation partners with Cooperative Extension through liaison roles and a formal plan of work with the Extension Committee on Organization and Policy (ECOP) to increase system capacity while providing programmatic services, and helping Extension programs scale and investigate new methods and models for implementing programs. The Foundation provides professional development to Cooperative Extension professionals and offers exclusive services to its members. In 2020 and 2021, the Extension Foundation has awarded 85% of its direct funding back to the Land-grant university System, 100% of funds are used to support Land-grant university initiatives.

About APLU

APLU is a research, policy, and advocacy organization dedicated to strengthening and advancing the work of public universities in the U.S., Canada, and Mexico. With a membership of more than 250 public research universities, land-grant institutions, state university systems, and affiliated organizations, APLU’s agenda is built on the three pillars of increasing degree completion and academic success, advancing scientific research, and expanding engagement. Annually, member campuses enroll 5.0 million undergraduates and 1.3 million graduate students, award 1.3 million degrees, employ 1.3 million faculty and staff, and conduct $49.5 billion in university-based research. 

September 29, 2022/by Aaron Weibe
0 0 Aaron Weibe https://extension.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/Extension-Foundation-Logo-padded.png Aaron Weibe2022-09-29 11:00:492022-09-29 11:00:49Extension Foundation Selected by USDA-NIFA as Technical Provider for NEXTGEN Funding Opportunity

We’re Hiring! Review Panel Coordinator

News

The Extension Foundation is seeking a Grants Application and Review Panel Coordinator. This position will coordinate and schedule Grant Review Committee meetings, grant review processes, prepare and distribute applications and reports to Grants Committee members, and/or oversee the online grant application process. This position will work closely with and report to Beverly Coberly,  Extension Foundation COO, to support the development of and coordination of processes for grant applications and their review. The position expectations will include:

  • Lead role in writing request for proposal (RFP) documents for various grant and funding opportunities, working with the Extension Foundation Team.
  • Develop and plan an application and review process for applications for grants relative to the needs of the specific grant.
  • Develop and implement grant information sessions/workshops for potential applicants.
  • Create a communications plan to share grant opportunities and timelines for potential grant applicants.
  • Coordinate the development of online applications for grants with the Extension Foundation team.
  • Develop application scoring rubrics for use by selection committees to assess grant applications through an objective scoring process.
  • Enlist the services of grant reviewers by developing a pool of reviewers that can be contracted to review grants.
  • Schedule grant review committee meetings.
  • Manage the grant reviewer pool for calendaring their participation to conduct application reviews and handling specific SOWs for their work.
  • Lead the overall process and facilitate the finalization of the scoring rubric and decision-making regarding grant applications.
  • Communicate with successful and unsuccessful grant applicants.
  • Anticipated volume annually is estimated to be 6-8 RFAs and panels.
  • Assist in the development of RFA/project toolkits for applicants.

Experiences required:

  • Bachelor’s Degree, plus 3 years of experience in leading and managing application panels.
  • Ability to work in a virtual environment.
  • Proficient in the use of Google docs, Zoom, Slack, Jotform, and Hubspot.
  • Experience in managing and leading selection panels and review processes.
  • Leading and managing overall grant processes.

This is a contract role. To apply for this position, please submit your application by October 7, 2022 for consideration.

To apply click here: https://registry.extension.org/222645186416862

September 23, 2022/by jessica emery
0 0 jessica emery https://extension.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/Extension-Foundation-Logo-padded.png jessica emery2022-09-23 16:44:172022-09-23 16:44:17We’re Hiring! Review Panel Coordinator

New RFA: EXCITE Design Phase

News

REQUEST FOR APPLICATIONS

EXCITE: Design Phase

 

ELIGIBILITY: Non-competitive phase available to ALL Land-grant universities (LGUs) (1862, 1890, 1994) by completing a simple online application. Submit only one application per institution.

AWARD AMOUNT: $10,000

TIMELINE: 

  • Application Open: September 22, 2022
  • Application Deadline: November 1, 2022, November 30, 2022, 11:59 PM PST
  • Award Period: October 1, 2022 – March 15, 2023

APPLICATION ACCESS: The deadline for receipt of the application is November 1, 2022, 11:59pm PT. Applications should be completed through Extension Foundation here: https://registry.extension.org/222228253316853.  Applications received after this date will NOT be considered. For additional information, questions, or clarifications, please contact EXCITE@extension.org.

Extension Collaboration on Immunization Teaching and Engagement (EXCITE) is a nationwide local response by U.S. Cooperative Extension made possible through an interagency agreement between USDA-NIFA and the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and a cooperative agreement with the Extension Foundation. EXCITE embeds partners to strengthen immunization education with a special focus on adult vaccination confidence around COVID and other adult immunizations. Over 11 million adults in rural and isolated populations have been reached.

Cooperative Extension’s partnership with the CDC initiated by the ECOP Health Innovation Task Force is happy to release EXCITE Phase 3. The long-term goal of this partnership is to strengthen Immunization Education with a special focus on adult vaccination confidence around adult immunizations. EXCITE will address COVID-19 vaccine confidence in LGU Extension communities and advance the work of EXCITE 1 and 2 for adult immunization education in local communities.  (https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/adults/index.html)

EXCITE will be in two phases: The Design phase (6 months), which is the subject of this RFA, and the Implementation phase (18 months, through December 2024), which will be competitive funding with a forthcoming additional RFA due March 15, 2023. The Implementation phase expects to fund up to 53 LGUs.

The overall objectives of the EXCITE project are to increase COVID-19 and other adult immunizations through (1) Increasing partnerships with local Departments of Public health with special emphasis placed on those at the local level. Other potential partners include Federally Qualified Health Centers and Rural Health Clinics, or other types of partners that can provide adult immunization in prioritized communities (2) Increasing positive perception of public health partners and vaccine providers of the value of collaboration with Extension (3) Changing attitudes and beliefs within LGUs about adult immunization that will lead the organization to become an asset model focused on building early adoption and innovation leaders in adult immunization education (4) Assessing best practices for adult immunization in rural communities through a National Convening and three selected pilot projects.

The objective of this Design phase is to assist institutions to prepare for the Implementation phase with competitive proposals and/or proposals that could be used for other funding opportunities. With the support of the EXCITE Program team, including CDC partners, the Design phase will include workshops on the identification of priority populations, implementation of rapid community assessments of vaccine confidence for identified populations, partnership development, selection of best practices for delivery methods, and training in the use of the LGU vaccine confidence tool kit. Upon completion of the Design phase, you will be prepared to apply for the EXCITE Implementation phase. The Design phase is a non-competitive phase available to all 111 LGUs in the amount of $10,000 each.

The competitive Implementation phase will implement the plans for adult immunization education and vaccination developed during the Design phase at the local level and directed to identified rural and medically-underserved communities and address COVID-19 Vaccine confidence in their LGU. You do not have to participate in the Design phase in order to apply for the Implementation phase.

Only one submission per institution will be allowed. Institutional Indirect Costs (IDC) are allowed at your institution’s negotiated rate. No match is required.

LATEST INFORMATION & QUESTIONS

  • Subscribe to the EXCITE program mailing list here: https://extension.org/excite/

  • Send Questions to: EXCITE@extension.org

WHAT TO KNOW BEFORE YOU APPLY FOR THE DESIGN PHASE

  1. A letter of support from your Extension Director/Administrator will be required for the Design Phase.
  2. Contact information for a person in your grants and contracts office will be required.
  3. Application to the Design phase will generate a contract including a Statement of Work and Budget to be sent by Extension Foundation for signature to your grants and contracts office.
  4. The Design phase is a buyout of time from your institution. You can choose to receive the funding as a stipend or a buyout of time.  Consult with your Grants and Contracts office on the best option.  If you select a buyout, then you will need a budget. (Salary, Fringe, and % of Effort).
  5. Application to and participation in the Design phase does not guarantee funding for the competitive Implementation phase.
  6. The Design phase offers six (6) workshops, 1 hour each, and optional additional office hours; Design Phase awardees will be expected to attend live or review the recordings at another time.
  7. Upon completion of the Design phase, teams will have the necessary information to apply for the EXCITE Implementation phase. In the Design phase, you will:
    1. Identify Priority Population for Adult Immunization Education supported by data and community assessment data
    2. Identify key health department partners and letters of commitment.  Partners must include at least one of the following as a partner at least at the Networking Level:  Department of Public Health (state, regional, or local level), Federally Qualified Health Centers, Rural Health Clinics or Tribal Health Center, or Indian Health Services.
    3. Knowledge of adult vaccine needs and insurance coverage in your community
    4. Develop a detailed Implementation Plan
    5. Develop a budget for Implementation Plan
    6. Attend six (6) 1-hour live workshops or recorded sessions related to aspects of the Implementation Phase application.
    7. Respond to the EXCITE Implementation Phase RFA or complete a final report.

 

WHERE TO APPLY

The deadline for receipt of your application is November 1, 2022 at 12:59pm PT. Applications should be completed through Extension Foundation here: https://registry.extension.org/222228253316853. Applications received after this date will NOT be considered.

BUDGET AND BUDGET CONSIDERATIONS

The Design phase is essentially a buyout of time from your institution. You will have the option on the application to select to receive the funding as a stipend or a buyout. Consult with your Sponsored Programs (or Grants & Contracts) office on the best option.  If you select a buyout, then you will need a budget. (Salary, Fringe, and % of Effort)

A stipend is essentially a support/subsistence allowance for the benefit of the named Recipient that an institution may choose to spend on behalf of the recipient rather than provide in the form of direct compensation. Use of the stipend on behalf of the Recipient is expected primarily to support the Recipient’s professional development, although *incidental* expenses incurred by the Recipient to fulfill the deliverables outlined in the application may also be funded from the stipend. Use of the stipend for other project direct expenses, e.g., salaries, benefits, or capital equipment, is permitted only via amendment of the contract to establish a specific cost-line budget.  Note that your institution may not receive indirect costs on a stipend.

If you select a buyout, you will need a budget (Salary, Fringe, and % of Effort). The budget will consist of Personnel Costs Compensation in the form of Salaries and Wages, Fringe Benefits and Indirect Costs. Indirect Costs are based on your pre-negotiated federal rate. Your institution has the option to reduce or waive the indirect cost rate. If you do not have a negotiated federal rate, you may include 10% indirect costs.

Personnel Costs Compensation in the form of Salaries and Wages for the faculty, technicians, research associates and assistants, postdoctoral associates, and other technical personnel necessary to meet the goals of the project, computed as either percent effort, hourly wages, or person months.

Fringe Benefits normally encompass employer contributions for social security, employee life, health, unemployment, worker’s compensation insurance, and pension plan costs related to the personnel charged to the project. Costs must be expressed as a percentage of salaries and wages in the proposal budget based on negotiated Federal rates applicable to each person or role.

 

APPLICATION FORM FIELDS

  1. Institution Name
  2. Project Team Leader and/or Principal Investigator Contact Information
    1. First and Last Name
    2. Email
    3. Phone Number
  3. Entity’s DUNS Name and DUNS Number
  4. EIN Number
  5. Currently registered in SAM.gov?
    1. Yes
    2. No
  6. Congressional District
  7. Zip Code
  8. Administrative Contact Information
    1. First and Last Name
    2. Email
    3. Phone number
  9. Financial Contact Information
    1. First and Last Name
    2. Email
    3. Phone Number
  10. Invoice/Payment Email
  11. Authorized Official Contact Information
    1. First and Last Name
    2. Email
    3. Phone number
  12. Legal Address
  13. Administrative Address
  14. Payment Address
  15. EXCITE: Design phase Checklist of Expectations
    1. Upon completion of the Design phase, you will have the necessary information to apply for EXCITE Implementation phase. Throughout the Design phase, with the support of the EXCITE Program team, including CDC partners, you will be expected to:
      1. Identify Priority Population for Adult Immunization Education supported by data and community assessment data
      2. Identify key health department partner and letter of commitment.  Partners must include at least one of the following as a partner at least at the Networking Level:  Department of Public Health (state, regional, or local level), Federally Qualified Health Centers, Rural Health Clinics or Tribal Health Center or Indian Health Services.
      3. Knowledge of adult vaccine needs and insurance coverage in your community
      4. Develop a detailed Implementation Plan
      5. Develop a budget for Implementation Plan
      6. Attend six (6) 1-hour live workshops or recorded sessions related to aspects of the Implementation Phase application.
      7. Respond to the EXCITE Implementation Phase RFA or complete a final report.
  16. Upload a letter of support from your Extension Director/Administrator
  17. Budget
    1. How would you like to receive this award?
    2. Provide a detailed budget using the budget template linked below. The total budget should not exceed $10,000, including indirect costs based on your pre-negotiated federal rate. Your institution has the option to reduce or waive the indirect cost rate. If you do not have a negotiated federal rate, you may include 10% indirect costs.
    3. Download the budget template HERE.
      1. To complete the budget template using Google Sheets, go to File > Make a Copy.
      2. To complete the budget template using Microsoft Excel go to File > Download > Microsoft Excel.
    4. Upload completed budget
    5. Upload Negotiated Indirect Cost Rate Agreement
  18. Application Confirmation
September 23, 2022/by kennyelston@extension.org
https://extension.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/Extension-Foundation-Logo-padded.png 0 0 kennyelston@extension.org https://extension.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/Extension-Foundation-Logo-padded.png kennyelston@extension.org2022-09-23 14:47:022022-09-23 14:47:02New RFA: EXCITE Design Phase

Celebrating EXCITE Vaccine in Education Projects Reaching Over 11 Million People!

News

We are celebrating EXCITE Vaccine Education Projects reaching over 11 million people through their 1st year. After calculating the data from the June program reports, EXCITE total reach came to 11,201,951 people! Bringing crucial Vaccine Education to this number of people during a challenging year is a significant accomplishment for the EXCITE project. This figure demonstrates Extension’s ability to reach hard-to-reach populations and the value of the system’s boots-on-the-ground efforts. The EXCITE projects have done an excellent job of elevating Extension as a trusted partner in health education in their communities.

Seventy-two Land Grant Universities representing all six regions of Cooperative Extension participated in Activity 1, Vaccinate with Confidence Campaign, to provide immunization education to diverse populations and reduce their vaccination hesitancy. The CDC chose Extension as a partner in COVID-19 Immunization Education because Extension is one the only partners who specifically target rural and medically underserved communities, Extension agents are trusted messengers represented in almost every county across the US, and agents experience on the ground- Extension is on the front lines, experienced pushback, and persevered.

11 Million Reached:

  • Priority populations that were reached include communities of color, Tribal communities, rural communities, faith-based communities, college students, low-resourced individuals and families, healthcare professionals, and agricultural workers.
  • EXCITE project teams partnered with over 91 city and county health departments, 104 Healthcare Providers, 45 Faith-Based Partners, 104 Community partners, and 53 departments or professional schools within their intuitions to reduce vaccine hesitancy in their local Extension community. These health partnerships and vaccination education are evidence of a statewide focused effort contributing to a system-wide impact.
  • EXCITE teams developed educational assets that were culturally appropriate and relevant to their audiences. Assets were translated into Spanish, English, Hattian, and Somalian. EXCITE teams distributed educational assets through channels such as print, radio, Pandora, social media, billboards, TikTok, YouTube, and virtual and in-person events.

In addition to reaching 11 million people with vaccine education, EXCITE has accomplished the following through Activity 1 projects:

  • 730 Vaccination Clinics
  • 25,492 Immunizations
  • Improved trust in vaccinations
  • Improved perceived vaccine safety
  • Improved perceived importance of vaccines for preventive health and disease prevention
  • Improved social norms emphasizing the importance of vaccinations
  • Increased number of individuals vaccinated
  • Decreased barriers to vaccinations

We are also excited to provide more information about another EXCITE programming opportunity, made possible by the Extension’s outstanding work promoting immunization awareness in their local communities. Anyone interested in participating or learning more about this opportunity is welcome to the project introduction session on September 22nd at 3 PM ET. Register Here.

See more about the EXCITE project:

  • View the breakdown of reach by an institution and priority population on the project Dashboard here.
  • See EXCITE website for project videos from teams.
September 23, 2022/by kennyelston@extension.org
https://extension.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/Extension-Foundation-Logo-padded.png 0 0 kennyelston@extension.org https://extension.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/Extension-Foundation-Logo-padded.png kennyelston@extension.org2022-09-23 14:45:092022-09-23 14:45:09Celebrating EXCITE Vaccine in Education Projects Reaching Over 11 Million People!
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This website is supported in part by New Technologies for Ag Extension (funding opportunity no. USDA-NIFA-OP-010186), grant no. 2023-41595-41325 from the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture. Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this publication are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the view of the U.S. Department of Agriculture or the Extension Foundation.

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