- Search News
- Categories
- Crops
- Forestry
- Entomology
- Horticulture
- Awards
- Community Development
- Fine Arts
- Equine Initiative
- Livestock
- Research
- 4-H Youth
- Events
- Family and Consumer Sciences
Special features
- Ag Information Center
- Ag Magazine
- Publications
- Office of Diversity
- Ag Weather
- Ag Faculty Council
- Staff Links
- College Store
College Highlights
eXtension recognized with prestigious national award
LEXINGTON, Ky., (Oct 31, 2008)The eXtension Initiative, on behalf of the Cooperative Extension System, was presented with a Secretary's Honor Award from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The Secretary's Honor Awards are the highest and most prestigious awards offered by the USDA.
The UK College of Agriculture and Cooperative Extension Service are partners in eXtension, a web-based arm of the Cooperative Extension System that draws on an extensive knowledge base from the nation's land-grant universities. Information-seeking consumers can connect with experts through various online Communities of Practice that include, among others, equine, entrepreneurship, livestock, horticulture and parenting information.
The 61st Annual USDA Honor Awards Ceremony honored 26 groups and six individual winners from across the country for exemplary service and achievements. Cooperative Extension was honored in the category of Supporting the President's Management Agenda and Civil Rights. The citation for the eXtension award reads, "For excellence in leadership and commitment to bringing Americans the best research-based, objective and reliable information and education resources 24/7/365 online through eXtension and the Cooperative Extension System."
The eXtension award went to a team of 25 people. UK team members who were on hand to receive the award were Craig Wood, associate director of eXtension, Carla Craycraft, former associate director of eXtension and now on a post-retirement contract with the initiative, and family of the late Larry Turner, who was associate dean for extension in the University of Kentucky College of Agriculture and director of the Kentucky Cooperative Extension Service. Turner was instrumental in the initiative's beginnings and served on the eXtension financial task force in Washington, D.C. that worked to acquire the necessary federal funds. His wife Lois and son Clay were present to accept the award on his behalf.
"This was a great honor," Wood said. "We should also recognize others in the college who, through their work with eXtension, have contributed to our receiving the award. That's the leaders and the members of the Communities of Practice who have contributed content for the live site. It's not just the 20-some people who were listed on the award. It's a much broader group that contributed."
Those in the college who have contributed to the success of eXtension include Amy Aldenderfer, Donna Amaral-Phillips, Les Anderson, Paul Bachi, Ty Back, Lynn Blankenship, Nick Broady, Fernanda Camargo-Stutzman, Jeanne Davis, Ivelin Denev, Winston Dunwell, Rick Durham, Ashley Griffin, Candace Harker, Martha Jackson, Mike Klahr, Chad Lee, Lisa Lewis, Jack McAllister, Henrietta Ritchie-Holbrook and Kenny Seebold.
More information about eXtension is available online at http://www.extension.org.
More News
Extension helps vegetable growers branch out into hydroponics
Matt and Jerry Wyatt of Heartland Hydroponics in Marshall County, always had been traditional vegetable producers but wanted to better utilize...
read more
For tree farms, less is more when it comes to pesticides
Some commercial tree farm managers who are used to applying large volumes of pesticides to control insects and diseases on their operations are trying a new management system using half the amount.
Horticulturalists with the University of Kentucky College of Agriculture are part of an effort led by The Ohio State University (OSU) to teach nursery and farm managers...
read more
Blame cool July on El Niņo
With less than one week left in July, no hurricane has formed in the Atlantic Ocean. Meteorologists at the University of Kentucky College of Agriculture largely attribute this anomaly to El Niño, which also may be the reason July 2009 will be one of the coolest Julys in the past 100 years.
"The Climate Prediction Center defines El Niño as...
read more
