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Cooperative Extension and the Land-Grant University: A Futures History
Maria Maiorana Russell
Specialist
Program Evaluation, Staff and Volunteer Development
Cooperative Extension System
University of Connecticut-Storrs
If we in Extension expect to transform vision into reality for a
Cooperative Extension System in transition, we must more forcefully
address the issue of Extension's relationship to the land-grant
university.
Four years ago, the Futures Task Force of the Extension Committee on
Organization and Policy (ECOP) recommended that "compelling issues
facing people must drive the system" and "must constitute the basis upon
which all decisions...are made" to "deliver issue-oriented educational
programs." This would require the land-grant university system "renew
its dedication to the tripartite mission," and for each member to
"strive for comprehensive excellence in those areas which reflect the
issues of concern to the state it represents." Commitment to that policy
might allow the Extension System both access to and use of "all
appropriate expertise related to relevant issues from throughout the
land-grant university."1
A Dream-Vision
One dream-vision of what progress toward these goals might mean starts
by imagining a national discussion emanating from congressional and
educational circles that prompts land-grant universities to re-examine
their missions. They see that the undernourished child called Public
Service requires not only survival, but maturity. Both "Father Research"
and "Mother Teaching" agree their purposes would be greatly served by
the offspring Public Service mission.
My dream-vision continues as leaders of the National Association of
State Universities and Land-Grant Colleges (NASULGC), state
legislatures, institutional administrators, and university senates ask
whether the current situation reflects a true commitment to the
tripartite mission mandated by federal and state policy. Land-grant
universities are charged with abandoning their public sector mission.
Suddenly, I realize this isn't a current dream-vision. It's the year
2000 and the land-grant universities are reporting what they've done
since this charge of abandonment:
- Land-grant public service programs changed considerably
since NASULGC initially embraced the policies proposed by Frank
Newman in the 1980s as president of the Education Commission of
the States.2 He advocated attending to the public service mission
by expanding the university's effect on public discourse in the
state it serves, and by identifying and addressing issues
important to the state with public education programs using
research results.3
- Taking up this challenge, all land-grant universities
reviewed their public service missions to create policies, plans,
and budgets for meeting their objectives of addressing issues
prominent in the state.
- A NASULGC national committee established standards for
public service and designed recommendations for institutional
reward systems. Each land-grant university reviewed the reward
systems to define the differences between paid consulting,
institutional contracts, and nonpaid public service
contributions, as well as noncredit programs provided by
continuing education units for a fee. Professorial ranks in
public service became valued equally with those in research and
teaching, in most cases.
- Several state legislatures encouraged university presidents
to empower Cooperative Extension to pursue a more complete public
service mission. In some states, Boards of Higher Education
required biennial evaluation of the public service contributions
of public higher education institutions.
- In 42 states, a Center for Faculty Public Service or similar
entity was created to match requests and defined community needs
with university expertise.4 Evaluative data were reported to
university-level administrators. Schools and colleges assigned at
least one faculty member as the public service contact for their
centers. Liaisons encouraged faculty to provide a minimum of 10
days annually to public service. Using these centers, faculty
with Extension assignments gained access to expertise throughout
the university.
- Many institutions centralized access to university expertise
by establishing an 800 hotline for public service requests.5
- A revolving fund or similar budgetary mechanism, established
by most of the institutions, allowed flexible funding to support
specific projects of statewide public service.
- Seventy percent of the land-grant universities established
departmental awards for unique contributions to the institution's
public service mission. A common pattern was to have the governor
present awards at annual faculty-trustee dinners held at the
institutions. Alumni associations offered annual individual
excellence awards for public service at most institutions.
- ECOP, ESCOP, and RCOP subcommittees of the NASULGC's
Committee on Agriculture came to understand it was time to let
their offspring (Extension) realize its mature role of
coordinating issues-based public service programs best serves
agricultural education by operating from a total university base.
- In the following two years, 96% of the institutions
presented accountable reports for the state legislative
appropriations process, showing the intimate relationship between
the main issues facing the state and the public service
contributions of their land-grant institutions.
- In many institutions, public service was coordinated by
Cooperative Extension leaders, who were accountable to university
-level administrators. Union with continuing education units
wasn't uncommon. In seven institutions, the program was
affiliated with the Department of Adult Education (or those of
similar title), since they gave particular value to Cooperative
Extension's roots in "interdependency models" of education,
thereby accounting for both its research-base and adult education
traditions.6 Some states reported some Extension field faculty
were threatened by these new affiliations. In other instances,
field faculty were so stimulated they extended their network to
other institutions of higher learning.
- By the fourth year of transitions, 27 state legislatures
enjoyed, for the first time, university expertise for their
committee work. Legislative committee sessions on campuses
received research results with public policy applications, and
stimulated contact between legislators and faculty. Two states
reported excluding faculty from these efforts who "didn't have
the capacity for public policy education," and developed
recruiting standards and training programs.
- Faculty with Cooperative Extension assignments were invited
to affiliate with specific departments within the university,
outside of the agriculture and natural resources arena. Many
already had both formal and informal arrangements in areas such
as human ecology, nutrition, and community development.
Variations within institutions showed Cooperative Extension
faculty now affiliated with departments of education, psychology,
sociology, pharmacology, community medicine, and economics, to
name a few.
- Non-Extension faculty reportedly served on program
development teams, wrote educational materials, and supervised
student interns in public service programs. Deans in most
institutions saw the affiliations as stimulating to the
professional growth of faculty members, offering unique
opportunities to both faculty and students. In 20 states,
Extension faculty held training meetings for departmental faculty
on educational methods for public volunteer audiences.
Waking Up...Dreaming On...Sharing Vision
When I wake up from dreams like these, I am both exhilarated and
exhausted. My husband wants to know what my new affiliation means. I
just say it doesn't mean anything yet...just dreaming. And he says,
"What is this 1983...1983 you keep mumbling?"
And I say, "Oh, that's just the year somebody wrote a staff development
report that said:
...Today's challenge for Extension is an expanded educational effort to
effectively relate the total expertise and resources of institutions of
higher education to the solution of complex problems of individuals and
society in general.7
And he says, "You've been working too hard again. It's affecting your
mind. Do you have any other dreamers in that organization?"
And I say, "Oh yes!" But I wonder if whoever wrote those 1983 words
talked to the leaders of NASULGC, or the Urban Coalition in Congress, or
the National Association of State Legislatures about what it would take
to educate a people.8 Probably not. I wonder what would happen if all
futurist dream- visioners in Extension finally shared their visions.
Footnotes
1. NASULGC, Extension Committee on Organization and Policy, Futures
Task Force Report, Extension in Transition: Bridging the Gap Between
Vision and Reality (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office,
November 1987).
2. Frank Newman, "The Public Service Mandate" (Notes from a keynote
address at the President's Inaugural Symposium on the Public Service
Mission, University of Connecticut, Storrs, School of Law, 1985).
3. Maria Maiorana Russell, "Proposal for Establishing a CES Critical
Issues List, According to the Leadership of the Connecticut General
Assembly" (Storrs: Connecticut Cooperative Extension Service, 1986).
4. Virginia Polytechnic Institute's Center for Volunteer Development
serves this function for Cooperative Extension. It resulted from a pilot
project funded by the Kellogg Foundation.
5. The University of Maryland has a hotline operated for this purpose;
University of Wisconsin serves business and industry with a central
access phone contact.
6. Claude F. Bennett, "Improving Coordinating of Extension and
Research Through Use of Interdependency Models," in Foundations and
Changing Practices in Extension, D. J. Blackburn, ed. (Guelph, Ontario:
University of Guelph, 1988).
7. Extension Service, USDA, National Policy Guidelines for Staff
Development (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1983),
p. 1.
8. Michael Quinn Patton, "To Educate a People," Journal of Extension,
XXIV (Winter 1986), 21-22.
This article is online at
http://www.joe.org/joe/1991summer/fut1.html.
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