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Providing Support to Extension Agents:
The Rapid Response Center in Kansas
Robert Brannan
Coordinator, FACS Rapid Response Center
Kansas State University
Manhattan, Kansas
Internet address: rbrannan@oz.oznet.ksu.edu
Mary McPhail Gray
Associate Director (Programs)
Colorado State University
Fort Collins, Colorado
(formerly Assistant Director,
Extension Family and Consumer Sciences,
Kansas State University)
Introduction
Staffing Extension to meet the needs of our clientele is a
challenging task. Limited budgets and "rightsizing" the system
are topics of much discussion. One important element is support
to local Extension programs as they provide information to
clients on a daily basis. Harriman and Daugherty (1992) advise
that "(Success) will require a clear vision, with careful
attention to a market niche within a defined vision." The Family
and Consumer Sciences (FACS) Rapid Response Center within the K-
State Research and Extension Service was created with these
concepts in mind.
With a staff of 15 FACS specialists supporting 120 FACS
county agents serving all 105 Kansas counties, FACS agents felt
that they were not always able to make contact with a specialist
in time to provide a timely answer to a client's non-routine
question. They were not unhappy with the programming provided by
specialists, but they were concerned with their ability to
provide timely answers to unusual questions that occur on a day-
to-day basis. In a recent study of Extension agents' use of
information sources, it was found that 77% of agents searched for
information that they needed the same day (Radhakrishna and
Thomson, 1996).
This study also reported that 94% of agents used information
searches to answer a client's inquiry. Information from Kansas
FACS agents reflected this desire to provide information to an
inquiry within 24 hours, however many felt limited by the level
of technology in their local office. If a subject-matter based
response system that facilitated information transfer could be
put in place to help agents with these information searches, more
time could be spent on pro-active programming. These
observations, coupled with the frustration that agents felt
concerning access to specialists, led the FACS administration to
the decision to create the FACS Rapid Response Center, with the
primary responsibility of the Center being to provide "timely
support" to day-to-day FACS agent inquiries.
Developing the Rapid Response Center
Careful planning was needed to develop a center to meet the
needs of the county-based Kansas Extension system. County agents
are hired by locally-elected Extension Boards and resources are
allocated by these same boards. Thus county
ownership/identification with the county office is great.
Unfortunately, this can lead to an "uneven playing field" from
county office to county office. Though Kansas has had success in
building state-wide Extension hotlines (Sisk, 1991), the Rapid
Response Center was to have a slightly different focus. The FACS
administration did not want to inadvertently send the message to
Kansas citizens that "better" information could be obtained by
calling a university hotline as opposed to contacting a county
agent. Thus, access to the Rapid Response Center is limited to
FACS County agents and others within the Extension system. While
calls from the general public would not be turned away, the
center would not be publicized outside the K-State Research and
Extension system.
At the state level, Extension Family and Consumer Sciences
consists of three major program areas: Foods and Nutrition (F&N),
Clothing/Textiles and Interior Design (CTID), and Family Studies
and Human Services (FSHS). The decision to hire a coordinator
with experience in the F&N area was based on two factors. Partial
funding for the center was to come from an existing salary line
in F&N and agents indicated that the most frequent consumer
requests were in this subject area. A coordinator was hired who
has a Master's degree in food science with college,
instructional, and food industry experience, and who was
competent in and motivated by electronic information retrieval
and translation. The initial focus of the center would be to
provide Kansas FACS agents with timely information to their
inquiries in the Foods and Nutrition area, with resources from
other FACS subject-matter areas to be developed over time.
To determine what subject materials were considered vital,
interviews were conducted between the center coordinator and each
specialist. Once a list was compiled, materials were obtained for
the center within the constraints of the initial start-up budget.
These materials included hard cover books, periodic literature
from reliable sources, software, and Extension and USDA
publications.
Although the Rapid Response Center does not have a
programming mandate, it was created with the belief that it could
have a role to play in program development. One of the advantages
of a hotline service is that data generated by a hotline could
benefit specialists by pinpointing subject areas of information
for possible programming (Molgaard and Phillips, 1991). Although
the Rapid Response Center would be more limited in scope than a
hotline, it was created with the belief that this aspect of the
hotline model could be utilized if a proper database was
developed and maintained.
Other responsibilities of the Rapid Response Center as
conceived include acquisition and maintenance of database
materials, literature reviews, writing informational pieces and
contributing to newsletters, and training relating to information
retrieval.
Operations Begin
The Rapid Response Center became an official component of
Extension Family and Consumer Sciences on August 8, 1995. There
was an expected lag time in announcing the center to the agents
while equipment and resources were acquired and the coordinator
oriented. One of the first tasks was to create an advisory
committee that included the center coordinator, Extension
administrators, state specialists, members of the Information and
Educational Technology unit of the Department of Communications,
and county FACS agents. The committee meets regularly to review
the center's progress and to plan appropriate strategies for
marketing and improvements of the center.
The official announcement introducing the Rapid Response
Center occurred in September 1995. During the first four months
of operation, information requests increased from 52 to 109
inquiries per month. From October 1995 to May 1996 the center
averaged over 100 requests per month. This average increased to
more than 160 requests during the summer months (June-September
1996). As expected, the average from October 1996 through June
1997 fell, jumped again during the summer of 1997, and fell again
in fall 1997.
Data generated from the center shows no significant
difference between inquiries from each day of the week or between
mornings or afternoons. County Extension staff account for 85
percent of the inquiries, with the remainder from private
citizens, other professionals, or specialists. Even though every
Kansas county Extension office is equipped with electronic mail,
four out of five inquiries are made by telephone, with E-mail
accounting for most of the remaining inquiries. To date, the
Rapid Response Center has responded to inquiries within 24 hours
90 percent of the time, and almost one in four calls are answered
immediately upon receipt. All 105 Kansas counties sent at least
one inquiry to the center.
Evaluating the "Niche Effectiveness"
After six months, the advisory committee decided to evaluate
the center's effectiveness. An evaluation was developed by the
advisory committee and sent electronically to FACS agents in
February 1996. Electronic mail surveys have been shown to be as
effective as regular mailings as a survey tool (Kawasaki and
Raven, 1995). While the survey was delivered by electronic mail
via an agent LISTSERV, agents were given the choice of replying
electronically or through regular mail. Sixty-two surveys were
returned representing 58 Kansas counties (55% of all counties).
Of these, 66% were returned electronically, with the remaining
34% returned via regular mail. This return rate is higher than
the 61% electronic return rate reported by Kawasaki and Raven.
Ninety-nine percent of the respondents stated that the
center usually or always provided them with a usable answer to
their inquiry. The data shows that the center has been very
helpful to agents in dealing with their day-to-day questions. For
example, 68% of agents responding feel more confident in
answering questions from clients now that the Rapid Response
Center is in place. Furthermore, 79% of respondents indicated
that they now provide their clients with information quicker than
before the Center was in place.
There was a concerted marketing effort during the first few
months of the center's operation to assure agents that they would
still have access to specialists and their resources. This effort
was proven effective by the evaluation as no agent said that the
center was a barrier between agents and specialists. In fact, 93
percent of agents' responses classified the Rapid Response Center
as an information clearinghouse or a bridge to FACS specialists
information bases. Additionally, 90 percent judged the Rapid
Response Center to be a good use of FACS financial resources.
Future Directions for the Rapid Response Center
The Rapid Response Center initially supported the foods and
nutrition area. In addition to answering inquiries to day-to-day
questions, the Center coordinator is involved in many different
aspects of F&N, including serving as departmental Web-site
coordinator, editor of the departmental newsletter, and
contributing to the departmental fact-sheet series. Expansion
into the other FACS areas was the next logical step.
The evaluation survey was used to provide input for
expansion of the center. When asked "I would like the Rapid
Response Center to next add resources in what area?" 54% of
agents indicated an expansion into topics related to clothing,
textiles, or housing. No other subject matter area received more
than 14% of responses. With this information, the Center's
advisory committee approved expansion into Clothing/Textiles and
Interior Design (CTID) beginning in April 1996. Since the
expansion into CTID would require information not in the
professional preparation of the coordinator, a modification of
the service was needed. Extension textile and housing specialists
identified areas of that could most readily be handled by a
combination of high quality databases and an information
technology facilitator (the center coordinator). The two
specialists provided access to database materials to answer
specific questions relating to (a) stain removal on clothing,
textiles, and on household surfaces; (b) routine care and
maintenance of clothing, textiles, and household items; and (c)
problems with odors, water damage, smoke damage, and so forth. To
date, information requests from CTID account for 15% of all
requests.
The third major program area of the Extension FACS system is
Family Studies and Human Services (FSHS). This is a much more
difficult area to incorporate into a "Rapid Response Center"
because most of the information from FSHS does not require a
rapid response but just the opposite. For example, many FSHS
inquiries involve clinical judgements or value conflict
explorations. In addition, expertise in FSHS more often includes
a "wise guide" role, rather than a definitive best practice rule
based on physical science research. This "wise guide" role is
less appropriate for an information technology coordinator to
assume. This challenge is one of the manifestations of the high
tech/high touch dichotomy in Extension.
However, there are targeted components of FSHS that could be
served by the center. For example, the area of family financial
management has resource material that could be added to the
center and disseminated with specific guidance from specialists.
In any case, this area will require creative thought and much
more discussion before any implementation can be planned.
Conclusions
The Rapid Response Center is not a one-size-fits-all
solution for every state. It was crafted to meet the current
needs of the Kansas Extension system as individual counties
adjust to new technological innovations. Extension systems
looking to better serve agents should consider the Rapid Response
model if (a) there is strong county identification/ownership of
local Extension activities which translates into differing levels
of support from county to county; (b) there is a large
discrepancy between the number of agents and supporting
specialists; (c) state faculty is in close proximity to the
center and willing to identify and share resources; (d) the
coordinator is committed to agent requests and is not distracted
with travel or programming.
In 1992, Harriman and Daugherty gave us their glimpse into
the future of Extension: "Envision Extension information centers
that provide immediate access to national subject-matter
databases to answer both common and uncommon questions ... Future
Extension staffing patterns should reflect the difference between
clients' needs for information versus education, and provide for
a staff with skills, facilities, and strategies to meet those
needs effectively."
The Rapid Response Center is a manifestation of this vision.
It is targeted to an appreciative clientele (FACS agents),
attends to the day-to-day informational needs of this clientele,
and is designed to be adaptable to the changing conditions that
exist in the system.
Clearly one of the future demands the Center will need to
meet is how to better equip agents to perform data searches on
their own. How much of this function can be assumed by the county
agent and how much this "new vision" demands a new professional
role that blends technology and subject matter expertise is a
challenge to all systems. Indeed, it is the Extension version of
the paradigm change in higher education.
References
Harriman, L.C. & Daugherty, R.A. (1992). Staffing Extension
for the 21st century. Journal of Extension, 30(4).
Kawasaki, J.L. & Raven, M.R. (1995). Computer-administered
surveys in Extension. Journal of Extension, 33(3).
Molgaard, V,K, & Phillips, F. (1991). Telephone hotline
programming: serving many people on multiple issues. Journal of
Extension, 29(4).
Radhakrishna, R.B. & Thomson, J.S. (1996). Extension
agents' use of information sources. Journal of Extension, 34(1).
Sisk, E.J. (1991). Responding to clients. Journal of
Extension, 29(2).
This article is online at http://www.joe.org/joe/1998june/a1.html.
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