NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 8 results Save | Export
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Page, Christopher S.; Kern, Michael A. – Journal of Extension, 2018
Declining government funding for higher education requires colleges and universities to seek alternative revenue streams, including through philanthropic fund-raising. Extension-based subject matter centers and other programs can benefit from the thoughtful supplementation of traditional revenue sources with individual, corporate, and private…
Descriptors: Extension Education, Program Development, Educational Finance, Private Financial Support
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
PDF on ERIC Download full text
Elliott-Engel, Jeremy; Westfall-Rudd, Donna; Seibel, Megan; Kaufman, Eric; Radhakrishna, Rama – Journal of Extension, 2021
Extension administrators discussed the competencies and characteristics of Extension professionals as they explored how Extension will need adapt to changing clientele, both in who they are and how they want to receive information. Extension education curriculum is not fully preparing future Extension employees in all required competencies,…
Descriptors: Extension Education, Administrator Attitudes, Extension Agents, Competence
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Dzubak, John; Shaw, Angela; Strohbehn, Catherine; Naeve, Linda – Journal of Extension, 2016
The number of school gardens and university farms is increasing in the United States. Produce grown in these venues is often sampled in the classroom or incorporated into the food chain. Food safety education for students and workers is needed to ensure that produce is safe. Two 1-hr food safety curricula were developed to inform K-12 students and…
Descriptors: Extension Education, Food Standards, Safety, Gardening
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
LaBelle, Chris; Anderson-Wilk, Mark; Emanuel, Robert – Journal of Extension, 2011
This article looks at how Extension faculty and administrators perceive digital scholarship in relation to their institutions' reward systems. Our survey data suggest that even when land-grant institutions have policies in place to reward alternative or new forms of scholarship, these policies are often unclear or inaccessible, are not reflected…
Descriptors: Scholarship, Rewards, Incentives, Extension Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Zanolini, William F.; Rayfield, John; Ripley, Jeff – Journal of Extension, 2013
Selected 4-H youth participated in the Texas 4-H Livestock Ambassador program. Forty-five youth participated in the 3-day program delivered by university professors and staff, Texas AgriLife Extension faculty and industry representatives. An instrument was developed and administered to the Texas 4-H Livestock Ambassadors at the end of their first…
Descriptors: Career Development, Higher Education, Leadership Training, State Programs
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Rosson, C. Parr, III; And Others – Journal of Extension, 1991
"International Programming Issues for Extension Education" (Rosson, Sanders) describes a survey of extension personnel identifying global competition and agriculture as a key issue. "Expanding Our Horizons Internationally" (Richardson, Woods) discusses North Carolina Extension's staff development on global issues. In…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Agricultural Education, Community Development, Evaluation Methods
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Conklin, Nikki L.; Hook, Laryssa L.; Kelbaugh, Beverly J.; Nieto, Ruben D. – Journal of Extension, 2002
A survey of 73 extension professionals who coordinate inservice training found that only 16% of their audience is support staff. Responses from 305 extension employees indicated barriers to participation: time, scheduling conflicts, lack of relevance, and distance. Although 90% of employees were interested in distance deliver, only 22% of…
Descriptors: Extension Agents, Higher Education, Inservice Education, Needs Assessment
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Russell, Earl B. – Journal of Extension, 1993
Because of declining enrollments in colleges of agriculture and the pressures for youth to pursue academic tracks, colleges must expand their role by focusing resources on youth development needs by communicating a more positive image of agriculture to young people. (JOW)
Descriptors: Agricultural Education, College Role, Higher Education, Public Opinion