Cooperative State Research, Education, and Extension Service explained

Cooperative State Research, Education, and Extension Service
Type:Agency
Preceding1:Cooperative State Research Service
Preceding2:Extension Service
Preceding6:-->
Superseding1:National Institute of Food and Agriculture
Superseding6:-->
Agency Type:Extension
Parent Department:United States Department of Agriculture
Jurisdiction:Federal government of the United States

The Cooperative State Research, Education, and Extension Service (CSREES) was an extension agency within the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), part of the executive branch of the federal government. The 1994 Department Reorganization Act, passed by Congress, created CSREES by combining the former Cooperative State Research Service and the Extension Service into a single agency.[1]

In 2009, CSREES was reorganized into the National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA).[2]

Mission

CSREES' mission is to "advance agriculture, the environment, human health and well-being, and communities" by supporting research, education, and extension programs at land-grant universities and other organizations it partners with. CSREES doesn't conduct its own research; it provides funding and leadership to land-grant universities and competitively granted awards to researchers in partner organizations.CSREES' areas of involvement span across 60 programs in the biological, physical, and social sciences related to agricultural research, economic analysis, statistics, extension, and higher education.[3]

Funding

CSREES administers federal appropriations through three funding tools: competitive grants, formula grants, and congressionally directed funding.[4]

Competitive Grants

Competitive grants are awarded to applicants upon the recommendation of a peer-review panel. CSREES' competitive programs include the National Research Initiative, the Small Business Innovation Research Program, the Biotechnology Risk Assessment Program, and Outreach and Assistance for Socially Disadvantaged Farmers and Ranchers.

Formula Grants

CSREES supports research and extension activities at land-grant institutions through federal funds that are appropriated to states on the basis of statutory, population-based formulas. CSREES' formula grants are directed to state experiment stations, the Cooperative Extension System, and Cooperative Forestry Programs. In most cases, the states are required to match the federal formula dollars with nonfederal contributions.The four CSREES research funding programs for land-grant universities are (1) Hatch, (2) Multistate Research (a subset of Hatch), (3) McIntire-Stennis, and (4) Animal Health.[5]

Congressional Directed Funding

Congress directs CSREES to fund and administer certain programs each year through special appropriations accounts. In general, the Executive Branch does not support the inclusion of these programs in the president's annual budget submission to Congress. Examples of projects include: the Expert Integrated Pest Management (IPM) Decision Support System; Global Change, UV-B Monitoring; IPM and Biological Control; Minor Crop Pest Management, IR-4; and Minor Use Animal Drugs.

Research

CSREES is the USDA's extramural research agency, funding individuals; institutions; and public, private, and non-profit organizations. Its research programs address issues affecting 13 national emphasis areas:[6]

Supported research falls into three categories:

Education

Education programs support all CSREES emphasis areas and promote teaching excellence, enhance academic quality, and help develop the scientific and professional workforce. CSREES continues a federal-state teaching partnership started in 1977 by strengthening agricultural and science literacy in K-12 education, improving higher education curricula, and increasing the diversity and quality of future graduates to enter the workforce.[7]

In 1981, Agriculture in the Classroom (AITC) was established to promote agricultural literacy in classrooms across the country. Today, AITC provides lesson plans, professional development opportunities, and teacher recognition programs for teachers, as well as maintains a national resource directory and other sources of public information on K-12 agricultural education issues.[8]

Cooperative Extension System

The Cooperative Extension System is a non-formal educational program implemented in the United States designed to help people use research-based knowledge to improve their lives. The service is provided by the state's designated land-grant universities. In most states, the educational offerings are in the areas of agriculture and food, home and family, environment, community economic development, and youth and 4-H. The National 4-H Headquarters is located within the Families, 4-H, and Nutrition unit of CSREES.

The Smith-Lever Act, which was passed in 1914, established the partnership between agricultural colleges and the USDA to support agricultural extension work. The act also stated that USDA provide each state with funds based on a population-related formula. As of around 1929, African Americans made up 24 percent of the South's population, but only 12 percent of the southern extension staff. Additionally, the New Mexico extension service hired only one temporary part-time bilingual home demonstrator in its first 15 years, even though half the population only spoke Spanish.[9] Today, CSREES distributes these so-called formula grants annually in cooperation with state and county governments and land-grant universities.

Traditionally, each county of all 50 states had a local extension office. This number has declined as some county offices have consolidated into regional extension centers. Today, there are approximately 2,900 extension offices nationwide.

Since 2005, the Extension system has collaborated in developing eXtension.org (pronounced "e-extension"). eXtension is an Internet-based learning platform where Extension professionals and citizens nationwide and beyond have 24/7 access to unbiased, research-based, peer-reviewed information from land-grant universities on a wide range of topics. Information is organized into articles, professional development resources, news, frequently asked questions, and blog posts that provide a knowledge-to-action service that has become an integral part of the Cooperative Extension System. In 2015, the nonprofit, member-based eXtension Foundation was created to advance innovation and technology-enhanced professional development going forward.[10] [11]

This table summarizes the cooperative extension programs in each state. (Under the 1890 amendment to the Morrill Act, if a state's land-grant university was not open to all races, a separate land-grant university had to be established for each race. Hence, some states have more than one land-grant university.)

Cooperative Extensions[12] !State!!University!!Extension website
Alabama A&M University
Auburn University
Tuskegee University[13]
Alabama Cooperative Extension System
Alaska University of Alaska Cooperative Extension
Arizona Arizona Cooperative Extension
Arkansas University of Arkansas Cooperative Extension Service
California University of California Cooperative Extension
Colorado Colorado State University Extension
Connecticut Cooperative Extension System
Delaware Delaware Cooperative Extension
DSU Cooperative Extension
District of Columbia University of the District of Columbia Cooperative Extension Service
Florida University of Florida IFAS Extension
Georgia University of Georgia Cooperative Extension
Guam University of Guam Cooperative Extension
Hawaii University of Hawaii Cooperative Extension Service
Idaho University of Idaho Extension
Illinois University of Illinois Extension
Indiana Purdue University Extension
Iowa Iowa State University Extension
Kansas Kansas State University Research & Extension
Kentucky University of KentuckyKentucky State UniversityUniversity of Kentucky Cooperative Extension Service
Louisiana Louisiana Cooperative Extension Service
Maine University of Maine Extension
Maryland University of Maryland[14]
University of Maryland Eastern Shore
Maryland Cooperative Extension
Massachusetts University of Massachusetts Extension
Michigan Michigan State University Extension
Minnesota University of Minnesota Extension
Mississippi Mississippi State University Extension
Missouri University of Missouri Extension
Montana Montana State University Extension Service
Nebraska University of Nebraska Cooperative Extension
Nevada University of Nevada Cooperative Extension
New Hampshire University of New Hampshire Cooperative Extension
New Jersey Rutgers Cooperative Extension
New Mexico New Mexico State University Cooperative Extension Service
New York Cornell Cooperative Extension
North Carolina North Carolina Cooperative Extension Service
North Carolina A&T State University Cooperative Extension Program
North Dakota North Dakota State University Extension Service
Ohio The Ohio State University Extension
Oklahoma Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service
Oregon Oregon State University Extension Service
Pennsylvania Penn State Cooperative Extension
Rhode Island University of Rhode Island Cooperative Extension
South Carolina Clemson University Cooperative Extension Service
South Dakota South Dakota State University Extension
Tennessee University of Tennessee Extension
Tennessee State University Cooperative Extension Program
Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service
Utah Utah State University Extension
Vermont University of Vermont Extension System
Virginia Virginia Cooperative Extension
Washington Washington State University Extension
West Virginia West Virginia UniversityWest Virginia State UniversityWest Virginia University Extension ServiceWest Virginia State University Extension Service
Wisconsin University of Wisconsin–Madison[15] UW–Madison Division of Extension
Wyoming University of Wyoming Cooperative Extension Service

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.csrees.usda.gov/about/about.html About CSREES
  2. Web site: NIFA Guidelines. usda.gov.
  3. http://www.csrees.usda.gov/about/background.html CSREES Overview
  4. Web site: Federal Assistance. usda.gov.
  5. Web site: Improving people's lives | Cornell University Agricultural Experiment Station . https://web.archive.org/web/20070701080016/http://www.cuaes.cornell.edu/CUAESWeb/funding.htm. 2007-10-22. 2007-07-01.
  6. Web site: Research. usda.gov.
  7. http://www.csrees.usda.gov/nea/education/education_all.html Overview
  8. Web site: Education Overview . CSREES website . 2008-04-26 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080512153555/http://www.csrees.usda.gov/nea/education/education_all.html . 2008-05-12 .
  9. Book: Dreilinger, Danielle. The Secret History of Home Economics. W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.. 94–99. 2021. New York. 9781324004493.
  10. Web site: Extension. usda.gov. 2008-03-21. 2014-03-28. https://web.archive.org/web/20140328233541/http://www.csrees.usda.gov/qlinks/extension.html. dead.
  11. Web site: New eXtension . The Association of Public and Land-grant Universities . August 20, 2016.
  12. Web site: Partners and Extension Map . United States Department of Agriculture . National Institute of Food and Agriculture . August 20, 2016.
  13. Although Tuskegee University has been a private university, it began to receive Cooperative Extension funding in 1972.
  14. Web site: Collection: Cooperative Extension Service (CES) records Archival Collections. 2020-12-17. archives.lib.umd.edu.
  15. https://www.wisconsin.edu/uw-restructure/overview/ UW System Restructuring