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Three Cooperative Extension Leaders Selected As New Technologies for Ag Extension Catalysts

News, Newsroom

The Extension Foundation welcomes three new Catalyst team members:

  • Dr. Barbara Board, District Extension Director Emeritus, Virginia Tech; Retired Eastern Region Extension Director and Interim Associate Administrator, North Carolina A&T State University. 
  • Dr. Dyremple Marsh, Retired College Dean, Research Director, and Extension Administrator, Delaware State University
  • Dr. Dawn Mellion, Retired Vice-Chancellor for Southern University Cooperative Extension. 

The New Technologies for Ag Extension (NTAE) cooperative agreement (grant no. 2020-41595-30123) with the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) through a partnership with Oklahoma State University will enter its third year on September 1, 2021.

A key program in the cooperative agreement is the Program Accelerator. The Program Accelerator is a unique partnership between a project/program team and the resources of the Extension Foundation for a year of rapid growth and progress resulting in expanding the team’s local impact and national potential. The Extension Foundation’s methods and team of catalysts and key informants work uniquely with each team to produce scalable, better resourced, and more effective programs and community-based initiatives through a one-year boost of additional support. 

Catalysts mentor, advise, support, and assist with networking and access to resources to assist in the acceleration of the project. Dr. Board, Dr. Marsh, and Dr. Mellion join an existing team of retired Cooperative Extension leaders serving as catalysts including: 

  • Scott Reed, Emeritus Vice Provost for University Outreach and Engagement, Oregon State University
  • Fred Schlutt, Retired Vice Provost for Extension and Outreach at University of Alaska Fairbanks
  • Rick Klemme, Former Executive Director, ECOP
  • Jimmy Henning, Extension Professor, Former Director of Cooperative Extension Service, University of Kentucky
  • Chuck Hibberd, Retired Dean of Cooperative Extension, University of Nebraska-Lincoln. 
  • Chuck Ross, Retired Director of Extension, University of Vermont

The addition of three new catalysts will help support the increase of programs served by the NTAE Program Accelerator for 2021-2022. Year 3projects will be announced in August, 2021. For more information on the NTAE Program Accelerator, please visit extension.org/ntae. 

August 12, 2021/by Aaron Weibe
0 0 Aaron Weibe https://extension.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/Extension-Foundation-Logo-padded.png Aaron Weibe2021-08-12 13:43:112021-08-12 13:43:11Three Cooperative Extension Leaders Selected As New Technologies for Ag Extension Catalysts

Extension in the 21st Century: A conversation with Chuck Hibberd

Extension, Innovation, News, Newsroom

Charles “Chuck” Hibberd is an emeritus professor of the University of Nebraska, where he held several academic positions, including Dean of Cooperative Extension. His email tagline reads “Chuck Hibberd, retired Extension Director (but not done yet).”

Dr. Chuck Hibberd. Image credit: University of Nebraska-Lincoln.

He directed the University’s Panhandle Research and Extension Center for 13 years. Chuck also served as Extension director, associate dean of agriculture, and assistant vice president of engagement at Purdue University. He began his career at Oklahoma State University as a faculty member in the animal science department. A former chair of the Extension Committee on Organization and Policy (ECOP), Chuck was inducted into the NIFA Hall of Fame in 2019. Chuck currently serves on the board of the Nebraska Community Foundation.

A native of Lexington, Nebraska, Chuck received his BS in agriculture (animal science) from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and his MS and Ph.D. degrees (animal science and animal nutrition, respectively) from Oklahoma State University. 

Chuck recently finished his first year as an Extension Foundation Catalyst. Catalysts are Extension experts who support New Technologies for Ag Extension (NTAE) projects chosen to participate in Extension Foundation’s project accelerator program. This program is part of a cooperative agreement with USDA-NIFA. In Year One (2019), the Extension Foundation selected 4 projects for participation. In Year Two (2020), 8 projects were chosen from among 33 competitive nominations across the Cooperative Extension system. Year Three projects will begin in Fall 2021. You can learn about past NTAE projects here.

We recently sat down for a conversation about his work as a Catalyst and what he thinks might lie in Extension’s future.

 

Can you tell us a little about your work as an NTAE Catalyst?

This was my first year as a catalyst. I enjoy working and interacting with people and helping them achieve their dreams and goals. Early in my career, I was an advisor for undergraduate students at Oklahoma State University. I learned early that these kinds of conversations are never about me but rather always about the person I am interacting with. It takes sincere listening and seeking to understand and connect in some genuine way to know where people are and where they want to go. 

I used the same approach with my leadership team in Extension (twice in Nebraska and once in Indiana). I don’t believe in top-down leadership; I believe in consultative leadership, and I want decisions to be informed by the best thinking of the team of people I surround myself with. 

I learned a great deal about coaching and mentoring while serving in Nebraska Extension. About twenty years ago, the organization decided it wanted administrators to be better coaches and mentors. We went about the business of identifying three employees who became certified professional performance coaches. These individuals led workshops for those who desired to be a more effective coach/mentor. I was in the first cohort. That experience changed my view of the way we should interact with people genuinely. It’s not only being authentic but having a method and process. 

Performance coaching has three components. First is clearly identifying and articulating the problem, issue or opportunity. Then, listening, seeking to understand. Asking powerful questions to help individuals find their own solutions is critical. I don’t propose solutions but rather ask the kinds of questions that encourage people to dig deep to consider what they want to do and how they might accomplish their work. A third and essential part of coaching is accountability. As I draw near to the end of the first conversation, I might ask, “When can I check in to see your progress?” There is a scientific method to coaching and mentoring that I bought into early, which I’ve tried to use throughout my career. I’ve used this same approach in interviews with potential employees and when working with constituents. It’s an integral part of my interactions with NTAE fellows and teams: asking reflective questions that encourage them to consider their challenges, experiences, and opportunities. I have found these sorts of reflective practices one of the most potent ways to connect with people.

 

What results/impacts have you seen?

Every fellow and every team is different. They have different project aspirations and are starting in a different place. One team I worked with initially designed, developed, and delivered the project four years ago; another team worked together for two years before NTAE. Two of the teams [I worked with] are relatively new and, in one case, are really still in the formation phase of their development. 

It’s a fun thing for me to interact with these people, listen, coach and mentor them, and ask powerful questions that help them get from their point A to their point BCD. While every team is unique, each has progressed in this NTAE project year. They have progressed differently because they have other interests and aspirations. That’s what this experience is about.

Some have struggled. This is hard work. I’ve seen people be emotional and have experienced their deep questioning of themselves, their team, and their project. I’ve also seen them all move forward. One of the things Extension Foundation is doing is pushing these teams to achieve their potential, whatever that is for them. One of the most rewarding things for me is to watch a fellow/team take what was an idea, aspiration, or hope and turn it into something better than they ever could have imagined because of the input and resources that the Extension Foundation offers. I don’t think many people thought about market research as a real thing they could do. Instead, they’ve had a chance to use market research to better design how they engage learners, improve program delivery, or the circumstances under which they create learning examples. That’s just one example. There are many more services that our key informants (KIs) offer. They really inspire fellows and teams to think differently about their work. 

Every one of our KIs is an Extension professional. They are well-trained, well-educated, highly experienced with great insight. They have so much to offer fellows and teams. While each KI has a specific role, they may also have perspectives and experiences beyond that that add value. Extension Foundation is surrounding fellows and teams with people who care, are smart, and are experienced. These folks have a servant mentality: they do whatever they can to help fellows and teams achieve their dream, their aspirations. It’s an enjoyable environment to work in.

 

You spent decades in Extension, in many places, working at many levels. What have been the most significant changes you’ve seen during your career? 

In my first twelve years as a faculty member at Oklahoma State, I did not have an Extension appointment. I had a research and teaching appointment. Yet, I did a lot of Extension work because the research, experiences, and relationships built in the classroom put me in a position to share in various settings – mostly Extension settings – our research and what we were learning from that work. 

My first job in Extension was as a director/administrator of an Extension and research center in Scottsbluff, Nebraska. It was a natural and easy transition from my work in a teaching and research role. I will always be a teacher. It doesn’t matter whether I’m working with an NTAE fellow and team, a student, an employee, or interviewing someone for a job…I’m teaching and learning. That drives me forward. 

In retrospect, much of my early Extension work – in 1994 in the Panhandle region of western Nebraska –  was very transactional. It was important work, but it was transactional, characterized by “sage on the stage,” one-way delivery, here’s the answer/strategy/method, take it or leave it kind of work. It was low engagement with learners and constituents. 

A fascinating thing happened about five years into my tenure at Scottsbluff. We had a crackerjack research and Extension team working on sugar beets. They were globally known for their expertise and accomplishments.  A sugar company approached us with a request to run trials to demonstrate our technology side-by-side with twelve farmers growing sugar beets using the company’s guidelines. We applied our technology and equipment, using our research knowledge and experience. Not a perfect scientific method, but that’s what we had. At the end of the season, the farmers beat us in eight of the twelve trials. 

Humbling, right? What it really meant is if we were going to be effective in our roles, we couldn’t do to or for, but with. We needed to expand our relationships, build trust, and find ways to engage people. That kind of strategy has been a theme of mine throughout my career: it’s an engagement and transformational practice based on relationships, trust, and mutual benefit –  all those things that make the work more powerful. 

In my last eight years as dean and director of Extension in Nebraska, we hired about 80 people. In the old days, most of these folks would have come with some sort of Extension or 4-H experience, which gave them a good sense of the job they were interviewing for. By 2012, that was not the case. People were coming to Extension because they saw an opportunity to engage people; co-develop solutions and strategies; work together with clients and constituents, and develop more robust solutions than ever before. The people we hire now are very aspirational, are continuously learning, are very entrepreneurial in how they approach and resource their work, and create things that have never been created before. 

If you want to change the world, Extension is a good place for you to work. You will have that opportunity to do work that matters. I see incredible talent, inspiration, and drive in Extension today. I see that everywhere. Extension organizations are finding and hiring people that have this mindset. It’s exhilarating.

 

How can Extension best prepare for periods of disruption? Are there particular skill sets or mindsets that you think Extension professionals should develop?

The first and most crucial part is that we focus our efforts on things that matter. We need to bring diverse resources (people and expertise) from inside and outside of the organization to bear on those really critical questions, challenges, and opportunities facing our constituents. And we need to do it in partnership with them. That has been one of the most powerful innovations I’ve seen in Extension: creating co-learning environments. If we discount the knowledge and experience of those in the communities we work with, we’re going to get it wrong most of the time. So let’s work together and learn together. We’ve changed our field days in Nebraska. We’ll put together a panel of 4-5 people, and 3-4 of those will be non-Extension folks: farmers, industry representatives, or other partners. Everybody has knowledge, perspective, and experience.

I think we build resilience by working on important issues, by working together in partnership with our constituents to build trust and create mutual benefit. At the end of the day, we want to say that we couldn’t have done what we did without our partners and have them say the same about us. That creates true mutual benefit and value.

COVID has challenged us to do that better than ever before. We had to prove that we could pivot. In Nebraska – and I would guess it was the same in most places  – there was a cadre of Extension professionals who took what they always did and just moved it to Zoom. But there were a large number of Extension professionals who created something new. They figured out how to use technology in really engaging ways and how to do blended programs using technology and engagement strategies that protected people from the pandemic and created robust learning experiences. So many inventive solutions and techniques were developed, deployed, and learned from during the pandemic. This has been another way Extension demonstrated that we could pivot. I’m not sure we could have done this thirty years ago. It’s partly due to hiring, ingenuity,  and the bottom-up approach most Extension programs are using today. We can pivot, adapt, and keep going.

The Scott Reeds of the world have figured out that Extension can’t just be for the college of agriculture. It needs to be for the entire university and function as the land-grant universities’ lead engagement arm. Extension should strive to build partnerships and capacity across the whole campus. Doing that well means Extension is positioned as the go-to organization and not just focused on outreach. Extension work should be about genuine engagement that results in deep relationships and reciprocal benefit. We have to engage locally in trust-based opportunities.

The land-grant universities that are taking advantage of those ideas are the ones that are positioning Extension to be highly valued as a critical component of the larger university.

 

Where do you think opportunities lie for Extension now and in the future?

The pace of change is so fast that we really need to design ways to stay even with – or get in front of (when possible) – the kinds of advances that are occurring. We have to be open to the reality that advances that will benefit Extension and our constituents are not all coming from the university system. How do we build deep partnerships and collaborations with others? We may not be the leaders; we may be key participants or play another role.  

The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) enlisted Extension Foundation to work on vaccine hesitancy as one of its partners. These kinds of things happen because of relationships. The CDC has deep expertise but doesn’t have the 3,000+ county network to deliver the education and engagement pieces necessary to address this question of vaccine hesitancy. Extension does.

I serve on the Nebraska Community Foundation (NCF) board. NCF – unfettered by any of the rules or regulations of working for a university – is doing fantastic development work on the ground in communities across Nebraska. Nebraska Extension has developed a powerful collaboration with the NCF, sometimes in partnership with and sometimes in service to that organization. 

I think we’ll find going forward, if we want to continue to be a key player and to be viewed as resourceful, we’ll ask this: “What does it mean to be an Extension professional with a  true entrepreneurial mindset?” That’s what we’re talking about here: we’re not sitting back waiting for things to happen. We’re pushing the edge and taking risks. Our most progressive constituents want us to take risks and try things on their behalf. How do we do that in a way that takes advantage of opportunities, technologies, tools, and different ways of thinking out there right now? 

One way is to continue to remain current (and get ahead of the curve) and keep hiring people with that entrepreneurial mindset, who don’t mind failing forward, going for it, and asking for forgiveness rather than permission. Those are our opportunities. One of the things about those kinds of ideas is that it’s going to ask us as leaders to also change how we think about the work we do and how we lead our organization. The Extension organization of the future will be much more driven by our employees, the people on the ground doing the work. Our job is to create a culture and hire people who can do this kind of work. We need to try to catalyze where we can and where we can’t, get out of the way because they’re going to figure it out.

 

What are you particularly excited about right now?

I’ve been doing this work for almost a year. The catalyst’s role for me was deer in the headlights from August through November or December. Now I feel as if I have my arms around it. But that doesn’t mean I’m entirely comfortable in the role because I always push myself to be better in my work. But it’s incredibly fun.

I’m very curious about the next group of NTAE fellows and teams. I think there may be some very different kinds of topics and themes. Just like this year, I think we will find some fellows who push us as much as we push them and who really challenge us to think differently about how we do this work and how we support high-impact teams. This is awesome.  

Scott Reed and I have been working on framing what a new catalyst onboarding might look like. That’s been a blast. Scott, Fred [Schlutt], and Jimmy Henning created the catalyst role two years ago from scratch. Thank goodness they did that for Rick Klemme and me. We have new catalysts coming in, and I’m excited to work with them. We don’t ‘train’ new catalysts, but we try to inform and inspire (two “I” words I really like). The goal is to help them achieve what they would like to accomplish in their role as catalysts. We will continue to diversify our team and expertise.

On a different note, we were involved this week in an ECOP meeting and some APLU meetings with the APLU Board on Agriculture Assembly, composed of the deans and vice-chancellor leads for agricultural and natural resources across the country. We’ve also been in conversation with the new director  – Carrie Castille – of the National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA). The discussions in this space and especially in the context of the Extension Foundation’s work are more exciting than ever before. There is a genuine openness to collaborating and working together without concern about who gets the credit. There seems to be a strong interest in invention and innovation and addressing the challenges we face trying to figure out how to do that in this complex environment in Washington DC, our land-grants, ECOP, and the Extension Foundation.

I’m really energized and very hopeful. I did that role: I was ECOP chair four years ago. One of the things we talked about a lot is that we have these big ideas. How do we make them happen? 

This year NIFA provided funding through the Extension Foundation to ECOP program priorities that will be led by people who have thought a lot about the area they are going to work in. This is new ground, a new opportunity, and a way to provide national leadership to an Extension system that needs strong, informed, and opportunistic national leadership. I’m optimistic about that as well.

 

What books, podcasts, etc., are currently informing your thinking?

I’m currently reading four books, including How to Be an Antiracist by Ibram X. Kendi. We just drove to and from Colorado and listened to Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents by Isabel Wilkerson. I’m also reading Forty Chances: Finding Hope in a Hungry World, written by Howard Buffet. If you want to learn to think differently about how we work with impoverished people and countries to help them improve subsistence farming and food production, you’ll find this a fascinating book.

I just finished Once a Warrior: How One Veteran Found a New Mission Closer to Home by Jake Wood. Jake is a combat veteran and the founder of Team Rubicon. This non-profit organization has created a way to mobilize veterans to respond to disasters to communities in a deliberate and organized manner. Veterans are highly skilled, and the Team Rubicon model enables them to deliver very high-level service and engagement with people suffering from disasters. It’s a fascinating book.

I also have a circle of friends and co-workers who challenge me regularly. We ask each other hard questions. I’m a continuous learner…that’s what I do! I’ve learned so much from the fellows and teams, too. Their ideas and inventiveness are part of why this work is so rewarding.

 

Related Reading:

A Conversation with Dr. Scott Reed, Extension Foundation Catalyst

Accelerating Success: Q&A with Dr. Fred Schlutt

August 9, 2021/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 Weibe2021-08-09 19:43:212021-08-09 19:43:21Extension in the 21st Century: A conversation with Chuck Hibberd

Extension Foundation 2021 Mid-Year Update

News, Newsroom

We are excited to provide you with a mid-year update about the Extension Foundation and our progress towards helping Cooperative Extension (CES) make a greater impact on local issues. 

Funding to the Cooperative Extension System (2020-2021)

  • $22.4M in 2020-2021
    • 85% to LGU’s
    • Total of $19M to LGU’s across Extension program areas

Funding Sources (2020-2021): 

  • $2M EPA Pesticide Safety Education Funds Management Program (PSEFMP)
    • 85% to LGUs
  • $4.9M USDA-NIFA New Technologies for Ag Extension (NTAE)
    • 45% to to LGUs
    • 55% to capacity-building solutions
    • Including over $800K to the 7 ECOP Priority Action Teams
  • $8.9M CDC/USDA-NIFA Extension Collaborative on Immunization Teaching & Engagement (EXCITE)
    • 95% to LGUs
  • $6.6M received by NTAE and Impact Collaborative teams across health, workforce and Ag & Natural resources
    • 100% to LGUs

Our Impact

  • Allied with ECOP, CDC and USDA-NIFA for the EXCITE $9.9M interagency effort–the Foundation is providing solutions to the programmatic needs for 96 projects; seamlessly delivered 95% of funding to the Cooperative Extension System (CES)–enabling critical education outreach through 72 LGUs for underserved and vaccine-hesitant populations. 
  • Delivered NTAE program acceleration and Key Informant services funded by USDA-NIFA through OK State with nine LGUs; Twelve CES projects to date unleashed new funding, expanded resources and private sector partnerships–returned to institutions stronger and ready to deepen community impact. 
  • Developed digital infrastructure to support CES during the pandemic–enabling user-generated content, resource-sharing and advertising; created 5K accounts, advertised 2K+ events–engaged 2.1M public with CES content across the country.
  • Launched first ever National Registry of CES Programs and Assets–registered 150 programs in the first two months to speed up collaboration and access to a living database of efforts nationwide–supports rapid-response to system-wide funding opportunities (e.g., EXCITE).
  • Bolstered collaboration among 52 LGU Pesticide Safety Education Programs–delivered $1M in EPA funding to 52 LGUs, average award of $18K while expanding capacity for applicator training and safe application.
  • Actively supporting the incubation of innovation for 57 member institutions; 250+ CES project teams served; 175 facilitators trained; $6M+ in funding awarded to Impact Collaborative teams.
  • Connecting three institutions to realize 1890’s capacity-building academy; coordinated 24 innovation coaches to assist 15 teams; presented 20 virtual sessions for 2nd cohort–improved five aspects of team effectiveness by 6.2% average in six months, hit 96% satisfaction rating; offering regional assistantship for 3rd cohort.

Extension Foundation History

Created by Extension Directors and Administrators starting in 2001, Extension Foundation facilitates and supports the success of Extension professionals and systems. The bylaws state the Foundation’s purpose is: Helping Cooperative Extension professionals make a visible and measurable impact on local issues. A timeline of our history including the logo change from eXtension to the Extension Foundation is available here. 

July 28, 2021/by Aaron Weibe
0 0 Aaron Weibe https://extension.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/Extension-Foundation-Logo-padded.png Aaron Weibe2021-07-28 12:54:292021-07-28 12:54:29Extension Foundation 2021 Mid-Year Update

New Extension Foundation Report Available: Technologies Impacting the Cooperative Extension System

Announcements, Extension, Innovation, News, Newsroom, Technology

The Extension Foundation, in partnership with a research team from Ohio State University, has released a new report on emerging technologies. The “Extension Foundation Report on Emerging Technologies Impacting the Cooperative Extension System” was supported by funding from the New Technologies for Agricultural Extension (NTAE) project. 

The report was developed by the research team in part through interviews with a panel of thirteen experts representing all five Extension regions, as well as non-Extension personnel. Panel participants were selected based on their background and experiences in adult learning and development, applied technology use, and innovation. 

The research team was led by Dr. Jerold Thomas, an associate professor with Ohio State University Extension/Department of Agricultural Communication, Education, and Leadership (ACEL). Dr. Thomas is also affiliated with OSU’s Leadership Center, where he serves as a leader for innovation and change. Other members of the team include Dr. Julie Aldridge, Assistant Research Professor, Ohio State University, College of Engineering; and Emma Newell, Communication Specialist and Researcher, Department of Agricultural Communication,  Education, and Leadership, Ohio State University.

The research goals were to identify emerging technologies, and to propose impacts on Extension  programming, professional development, and policy through 2025. The research process was impacted by the pandemic and first-hand experiences of the research team and panel, who, like other professionals across the nation, were thrust into work-at-home environments. Research for the report included primary and secondary sources, and focused on the following questions:

  • What emerging technologies will be most important to Cooperative Extension programs over the next three to five years?
  • What key trends do you expect to accelerate the adoption of emerging technology across Cooperative Extension programs?
  • What significant challenges may impede the adoption of emerging technologies across Cooperative Extension programs?

The panel and research team identified seven emerging technologies of critical importance: 

  • 5G mobile wireless technologies
  • Artificial intelligence (AI)
  • Adaptive learning
  • Assistive learning technologies
  • Block-chain
  • Internet of things (IoT)
  • Adaptive/Virtual technologies 

The report provides a helpful summary of each technology and includes a discussion of the potential impacts and possibilities represented by each for Extension work. The digital divide and larger equity issues (including algorithm bias) emerged as a major challenge and critical issue to consider with all emerging technologies. Other recommendations from the report center on professional development, and policy. 

Dr. Thomas noted that “This report is a good starting point for Extension professionals to learn about the impacts of emerging technologies on the Cooperative Extension System. This includes understanding changes in our systems of professional development, how we work, policies, and others. Online discussions about the report are being planned to share the findings, seek input, and develop conversations about the report’s implications for Extension.”

Dr. Thomas will hold a webinar discussing the report and its findings on Tuesday, October 20th, 2021 at 2:00 p.m. ET. Look for more details in early fall. 

 

Extension Foundation has a long tradition of investigating new and existing trends around innovation and technology. The 2016 Horizon Report (Freeman, et al., 2016) focused on emerging technologies in the Cooperative Extension Service (CES) through 2021. That report is available here. In 2020, Extension Foundation published an eFieldbook on using digital technology in Extension education. The Extension Foundation’s Connect Extension platform provides an opportunity for Extension professionals interested in technology to participate in the technology in Extension education virtual subgroup. Join Connect Extension here.

Photo by Firmbee.com on Unsplash

July 9, 2021/by Aaron Weibe
0 0 Aaron Weibe https://extension.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/Extension-Foundation-Logo-padded.png Aaron Weibe2021-07-09 15:10:082021-07-09 15:10:08New Extension Foundation Report Available: Technologies Impacting the Cooperative Extension System

Now Available: The National Registry of Cooperative Extension Programs and Assets

News, Newsroom, Uncategorized

This tool is now available to Cooperative Extension. Join 50+ other Extension programs that have already registered!

Responding to specific requests in regional meetings and through various projects including EXCITE, the Extension Foundation has developed a National Registry of Cooperative Extension Programs and Assets (NRCEPA). This tool will enable Cooperative Extension professionals to register their projects, programs, or curriculum for nationwide collaboration among Cooperative Extension colleagues.

  • The intent of this tool is to assist Extension professionals to quickly find other like-programming efforts across the system to reduce duplication of work, and help speed up access to digital assets that would be useful to the development of new programs.
  • At the request of Extension leaders, the NRCEPA provides ready-access to a living database of efforts across the system in order to rapidly respond to system-wide funding opportunities. 

The NRCEPA was co-designed with a number of individuals and organizations across Cooperative Extension including the ECOP Health Innovation Task Force, and the National Urban Extension Leaders (NUEL).

Check it out at extension.org/registry



The National Urban Extension Leaders (NUEL) has been talking about the need to have a national database that allows for the collection of current Extension program efforts in urban and metropolitan spaces to better allow Extension to tell it’s ‘Urban Impacts’ story. The National Registry is what we had been hoping for…and so much more!

– Marie Ruemenapp, Extension Specialist & Co-Director Urban Collaborators, Michigan State University Extension


Features

  • When registering a project, program, or curriculum, users are invited to add any digital assets they feel may be helpful to their peers nationally for download. This includes evaluation tools, images, videos, text for campaigns, and more.
  • Auto-segments Cooperative Extension programs by program area including Ag & Natural Resources, 4-H/Youth Development, FACS, Community Development, Immunization Education, and Urban Extension.
  • After submitting your program, project, or curriculum to the registry, you’ll be able to return anytime to make updates.
  • Dynamic search helps users find what they need quickly by keyword.

The Extension Collaborative on Immunization Teaching and Engagement (EXCITE) piloted the NRCEPA as a means of taking a landscape assessment of immunization education programs across Cooperative Extension. This enabled EXCITE to see the scope of efforts already happening across Cooperative Extension on capacity funds, identify potential collaborations, share curriculums and materials, and lift up the work happening in this area to our CDC and USDA-NIFA partners.

– Michelle Rodgers, Associate Dean and Director, University of Delaware, EXCITE Project Director


Follow the National Registry on Twitter at @NRCEPA for real-time updates with new program, project, and curriculum submissions. 


This work is supported in part by New Technologies for Ag Extension grant no. 2020-41595-30123 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.

June 24, 2021/by Aaron Weibe
0 0 Aaron Weibe https://extension.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/Extension-Foundation-Logo-padded.png Aaron Weibe2021-06-24 15:41:262021-06-24 15:41:26Now Available: The National Registry of Cooperative Extension Programs and Assets

New Technologies for Ag Extension (NTAE) Year 3 Application Workshop

News, Newsroom

NTAE acceleration projects are selected to align with the USDA Strategic Plan and are early stage (have goals, expected impacts, some project start up activities) and have high potential for impact.  Selected projects will receive support from a catalyst team to advise and mentor projects and support from Key Informants who will work with the team to increase skills and capacities in leadership, partnership, marketing and communications, publishing and digital engagement, evaluation, professional development and project management.

Projects with these types of support are able to accelerate their project’s targeted impact, scope, digital presence and provide excellent training for CES professionals.  Projects not selected for Year 3 projects will have an opportunity to debrief their applications with the review team.


The purpose of this workshop is to help teams create informed, strong, viable NTAE project proposals for the NTAE Year 3 funding cycle.

In this workshop, teams will:

  • Learn about project selection criteria and specific application components.
  • Receive hands-on application development time in addition to instructions and tips,
  • Learn next steps for completing your application.

Registration Information:

  • All team members should attend together.
  • All team members need to register individually, and under the same Team/Project Name.
  • All project teams planning on applying for NTAE Year 3 are strongly encouraged to participate.

Teams Should Come with the Following Information About Their Proposed Project:

  • Targeted audience
  • A current project that is ready for acceleration and growth
  • Be ready to work collaboratively using an application template (Join the Workshop using a computer with video, not phone).

Register Here

June 14, 2021/by Aaron Weibe
0 0 Aaron Weibe https://extension.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/Extension-Foundation-Logo-padded.png Aaron Weibe2021-06-14 12:50:272021-06-14 12:50:27New Technologies for Ag Extension (NTAE) Year 3 Application Workshop

Extension Collaborative on Immunization Teaching & Engagement Announces Funding Recipients for Activities 1 and 2

News, Newsroom

The Extension Foundation, in cooperation with the Extension Committee on Organization and Policy, through an Interagency Agreement with the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) are funding the Cooperative Extension System to address health disparities among rural and other underserved communities. This initiative is called the Extension Collaborative on Immunization Teaching & Engagement (EXCITE).
The EXCITE program serves all Land-grant universities through two sets of activities: system-wide engagement with the CDC’s Vaccinate with Confidence communication campaign (Activity 1) and selected adult immunization education pilot projects (Activity 2).
72 applications for non-competitive Activity 1 funding were received from Land-grant institutions representing all six regions of Cooperative Extension. 30 applications were received for competitive Activity 2 funding involving 38 Land-grant institutions representing five regions of Cooperative Extension; 24 were selected for funding.


Below is a list of institutions receiving funding for Activity 1 and Activity 2:

Activity 1 Recipients:

Alabama A&M University
Alcorn State University
American Samoa Community College
Auburn University
Bay Mills Community College
Cankdeska Cikana Community College
Central State University
Clemson University
College of the Menominee Nation
College of the Muscogee Nation
Colorado State University Extension
Cornell University
Delaware State University
Florida A&M University
Fort Valley State College
Iowa State University
Kansas State University
Kentucky State University
Keweenaw Bay Ojibwa Community College
Langston University
Lincoln University
Louisiana State University
Michigan State University
Mississippi State University
Montana State University
Nebraska Indian Community College
New Mexico State University
North Carolina A&T State University
North Carolina State University
North Dakota State University
Ohio State University
Oklahoma State University
Oregon State University
Pennsylvania State University
Prairie View A&M University
Purdue University
Red Lake Nation College
Rutgers University
Southern University
Tennessee State University
Texas A&M University
University of Arizona
University of Arkansas
University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff
University of California System
University of Connecticut
University of Delaware
University of Florida
University of Georgia
University of Hawaii
University of Idaho
University of Illinois
University of Kentucky
University of Maine
University of Maryland
University of Maryland Eastern Shore
University of Minnesota
University of Missouri
University of Nebraska
University of Nevada, Reno
University of New Hampshire
University of Rhode Island
University of Tennessee
University of Vermont
University of Wisconsin-Madison
University of Wyoming
Utah State University
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Virginia State University
Washington State University
West Virginia State University
West Virginia University


Activity 2 Recipients & Collaborators:

Auburn University & Alabama A&M University
Colorado State University
Cornell University
Kentucky State University & University of Kentucky
Lincoln University
Mississippi State University & Alcorn University
New Mexico State University
North Carolina State University
Oregon State University
Pennsylvania State University
Tennessee State University
University of Arkansas
University of Florida & Florida A&M University
University of Georgia
University of Idaho
University of Illinois & Purdue University
University of Maryland & University of Delaware
University of Maryland Eastern Shore & Delaware State University
University of Missouri
University of New Hampshire
University of Tennessee
University of Vermont
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University & Virginia State University
West Virginia State University & West Virginia University

June 2, 2021/by Aaron Weibe
0 0 Aaron Weibe https://extension.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/Extension-Foundation-Logo-padded.png Aaron Weibe2021-06-02 23:35:322021-06-02 23:35:32Extension Collaborative on Immunization Teaching & Engagement Announces Funding Recipients for Activities 1 and 2

Extension Collaborative on Immunization Teaching and Engagement: May 2021 Immunization Education Programs Spotlight

News, Newsroom

Cooperative Extension programs are making an impact on communities across the country with immunization education efforts, particularly with vaccine-hesitant individuals. Activities include mobile vaccination clinics in partnership with local health organizations, social media campaigns, the development of online toolkits promoting research-based immunization information, and more. This month, the EXCITE program is highlighting how an immunization education program in Virginia implemented a hotline phone registration system that now receives 28% of all vaccination registrants in the county, and how a team in Louisiana is using social media to promote COVID-19 vaccination fact sheets.


The Extension Foundation, in cooperation with the Extension Committee on Organization and Policy (ECOP), through an Interagency Agreement (IAA) with the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) are funding the Cooperative Extension System (CES) to address health disparities among rural and other underserved communities. This initiative is called the Extension Collaborative on Immunization Teaching & Engagement (EXCITE).

The EXCITE program serves all land-grant universities through two-phases of activities: system-wide engagement with the CDC’s Vaccinate with Confidence communication campaign, and adult immunization education pilot projects.

Those across Cooperative Extension working in the area of Immunization Education have been registering their programs in the National Registry of Cooperative Extension Programs and Assets (NRCEPA). The NRCEPA is a new tool made available through the Extension Foundation to create a living database of Cooperative Extension programs, projects, and curriculums to rapidly identify existing work across the system for national funding opportunities. Currently, the NRCEPA is in pilot with the EXCITE program.

For May 2021, EXCITE is highlighting two programs registered in the NRCEPA that are working in the area of immunization education:

Madison County COVID Vaccination Clinics

The Virginia Cooperative Extension in Madison County worked with the local health districts and hospitals to create a county-wide COVID Vaccine hotline registration system and vaccine clinic to target the county’s underserved population. By implementing a hotline phone registration system, they were able to decrease registration barriers which allowed for farmworkers, elderly with limited or no internet access, and those with limited English proficiency to register for vaccines. Due to this innovative and efficient effort, Madison county has now administered 4466 vaccines at the clinic with 28% of the registrants coming through the vaccine hotline. The Virginia Cooperative Extension will continue to build on its trusted relationship with the public to implement strategies to vaccinate hard to reach and hesitant populations.

In the NRCEPA, this program has offered several digital assets to assist other Cooperative Extension programs. This includes their vaccine appointment form template, COVID-19 Vaccine 101 factsheets, infographics, and sample advertisements.

COVID-19 Vaccine Education/Outreach Initiative – Southern University

In Louisiana, Southern University Extension Agency was facing the issue of low vaccine registration turnout due to medical mistrust among their community members. Being a trusted community resource, Southern University was able to combat this issue by utilizing their social platforms and website to inform and educate on COVID-19 and vaccinations. Southern University used pre-existing information and data from the CDC to create fact-sheets for their website, as well as the CDC social media guide to launch campaigns and webinars on the COVID-19 vaccine. This outreach and education program was an initiative created to educate and advise their underserved population on vaccines and the need for immunization.

In the NRCEPA, this program has offered several digital assets to assist other Cooperative Extension programs. This includes several infographics and fact sheets.

May 25, 2021/by Aaron Weibe
0 0 Aaron Weibe https://extension.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/Extension-Foundation-Logo-padded.png Aaron Weibe2021-05-25 10:34:562021-05-25 10:34:56Extension Collaborative on Immunization Teaching and Engagement: May 2021 Immunization Education Programs Spotlight

Extension.org Email Aliases to be Retired

News, Newsroom

This message is a call to all those using an extension.org email address. As a reminder, everyone who ever created an “eXtension ID” was issued an address such as name@extension.org. Many of you may be using your @extension.org email address as a simple alias or forwarding address. If you are using your extension.org email address in that manner, then you should know that on July 1, 2021, that email redirection will cease because we are retiring the legacy application that manages these aliases. 

What You Can Do

It is important that you check and update your email signature blocks, your reply-to addresses, logins on third party sites, or any other communications and publications to be sure you are no longer using such addresses.

In some cases, there may be very logical reasons why you would want or need to retain this address and use it for an actual email box: 

  • You may represent a working group of some sort that needs an address representing the group and not an individual within the group. 
  • Or, your use of the extension.org email address is so embedded in your history that you would find it difficult to remove.  
  • Or, you are working on a project for the Extension Foundation where you really need to hold yourself out as being a representative of the Foundation.

If you feel it important that you retain this address, then please let us know by email to contact-us@extension.org.  We can accommodate those needs on a case by case basis. Just let us know your needs.

What this Means

The People (people.extension.org) application will be decommissioned (taken offline) on July 1, 2021. This is because the legacy tools this technology once supported have also been decommissioned over the past few years in favor of upgraded tools that do not require eXtension IDs.

Connect Extension (https://connect.extension.org) has provided greatly enhanced capability for bringing together networks, but uses its own authentication system. The new Ask Extension platform (ask2.extension.org) also does not require an eXtension ID.

Questions or Concerns?

Please reach out to the Extension Foundation Solutions Team at contact-us@extension.org.

May 14, 2021/by Aaron Weibe
0 0 Aaron Weibe https://extension.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/Extension-Foundation-Logo-padded.png Aaron Weibe2021-05-14 14:23:052021-05-14 14:23:05Extension.org Email Aliases to be Retired

RFA: New Technologies for Ag Extension Accelerator Program Year 3 Projects

News, Newsroom

 

 

 

REQUEST FOR APPLICATIONS
Accelerator Program Year 3 Projects
Funded by a Cooperative Agreement with the USDA-NIFA New Technologies for Ag Extension Program awarded to Oklahoma State University

SUMMARY: Project/program team leaders are invited to apply to this NTAE Program Accelerator. By the end of one year, accelerated programs are stronger, better-resourced, and more easily adopted or adapted by others across the Cooperative Extension system to serve the needs of people and communities.  For one year, project leaders and teams are partnered with the Extension Foundation and are coached to identify new possibilities and strengthen their planned impact. Each team receives support to create materials and experiences that engage Extension resources to speed development and generate a change where it is desired. In addition to stipend funding, the full value of this program is in the accelerator experience. Awardees can expect robust and productive interaction with a group of catalysts and key informants in a mentoring role to help the leader and their team grow professionally over the course of a one- year partnership. 

AWARD DATES: September 1, 2021 -August 31, 2022

ELIGIBILITY: The RFA for NTAE Year 3 Projects is open to all Land Grant University Cooperative Extension professionals from 1862, 1890, and 1994 institutions. LGUs may submit more than one project nomination. 

AWARD: Approximately eight projects will be awarded.

  1. Awardees receive $10,000 in the form of a stipend and/or salary and benefits of up to 10K. Indirect costs are not allowed on these funds. Recipients of this funding can be the team leader, team members, or support personnel.
  2. Awardees receive the mentorship of an Extension Foundation Catalyst throughout the 1-year Accelerator Program.
  3. Awardees receive support from Key Informants that is customized to each project’s needs including, but not limited to, team leadership development, communications and marketing/market research, evaluation planning, partnership development, digital engagement, professional development delivery, and publishing of project methodologies and support materials.
  4. The one-year journey for the project leader and team will be unique. Please expect the time commitment for the team leader to be as much as 10 to 20 percent (4-8 hours per week) on average over the course of one year. 

REQUIREMENTS: 

  • All applications must align with the USDA Strategic Goals USDA Strategic goals and align with Extension Committee on Organization and Policy (ECOP) program priorities (ECOP) Program Priorities.
  • Projects must be in the early stages of maturity and have a high potential for making a significant local/state impact, and by providing a model for adoption by Extension professionals regionally or nationwide. This means the project is likely to have objectives completed, audiences identified, potential outcomes identified, and implementation planned or in an early stage.
  • Each application should identify a team leader (a Fellow) for the project who will serve as the primary contact.
  • Teams must have at least three (3) members including a project/team leader.
  • All applications must have the support of the Extension Director/Administrator.

TIMELINE: 

  • May 10, 2021 Application Workshop for those interested in strengthening their application
  • May 12, 2021 Application Workshop for those interested in strengthening their application
  • July 16, 2021 Applications Due
  • August 13 Approximate time for award notifications  

AWARD DECISIONS: Award decisions will be considered final. Award decisions will be published on the Extension Foundation Website and emailed to each institution individually.

 

AWARD RECIPIENTS: Awardees will participate in quarterly project meetings along with meetings as needed to work with Catalysts and access Key Informant resources. Quarterly reports are required. 

 

APPLICATION ACCESS: The application is available at https://applyextension.smapply.io/ The proposal will be submitted using an online application linked to  our Application Portal. Applications can be initiated, saved in progress, and completed at a later date. If you do not already have an account in our system, the first step will be to obtain an account by using the registration link in the Application Portal. You can invite other team collaborators to assist in building and submitting your application.

APPLICATION GUIDE: The Application Guide will prepare you to submit your application and provide resources to frame your proposal.  NTAE Application Guide

 

CONTACT INFORMATION: 

Tira Adelman

Extension Foundation

Grants and Project Manager

tiraadelman@extension.org

FURTHER INFORMATION: 

The New Technologies for Agricultural Extension (NTAE) cooperative agreement with the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) through a partnership with Oklahoma State University will enter its third year on September 1, 2021. A key program in the cooperative agreement is the Program Accelerator. The Program Accelerator is a unique partnership between a project/program team and the resources of the Extension Foundation for a year of rapid growth and progress resulting in expanding the team’s local impact and national potential. Our unique methods and team of catalysts and key informants work uniquely with each team to produce scalable, better resourced, and more effective programs and community-based initiatives through a one-year boost of additional support. You can learn more about NTAE projects taking advantage of the Program Accelerator at https://impact.extension.org/ntae/.

Applications for the NTAE Program Accelerator for Year 3 will need to align with the USDA Strategic goals and be early-stage/high potential projects. In Year 3, projects are also sought to align with the Extension Committee on Policy (ECOP) Program Priorities to bring greater support for projects serving multiple national initiatives.  At least one proposal is desired that advances the understanding of an engaged university. Such evidence includes 1) partner programming with nontraditional university units (colleges of liberal arts, engineering, medical school, etc.) and/or 2) co-creation of project design with partners, audience, and/or community members.

 

May 5, 2021/by Aaron Weibe
0 0 Aaron Weibe https://extension.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/Extension-Foundation-Logo-padded.png Aaron Weibe2021-05-05 11:27:022021-05-05 11:27:02RFA: New Technologies for Ag Extension Accelerator Program Year 3 Projects
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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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