I would like to
clarify again that ALL OSU Extension program and support staff are included and encouraged to attend
this year’s Annual Conference. We are ONE organization, with one mission - and
this year’s conference theme of “A New EERA in Extension” is specifically
planned with all of our personnel in mind.
In these times of extreme change throughout our
organization, we will all benefit from attending the conference - and this is
designed to be an all-inclusive meeting. Every Extension employee is important
to this organization, and I believe it is valuable to have all of us learning
together when possible.
At all times, everyone in your office should be working
together for the good of the entire organization. While educators are often
involved with more in-depth projects and interactions with specific clients,
our support staff are quite often the face of Extension to anyone who walks in
your office front door or contacts your office with a question.
Extension Administrative Cabinet has agreed that county offices may
choose how to handle their office hours during these two days. Options
include:
Closing the office for the two days with a sign indicating
that everyone is participating in the annual conference and recognition
event and that the office will reopen on December 18. Remember to
change your voice mail or answering machine message also.
Utilizing volunteers to keep the office open.
Using students who are home from college to keep the office open.
Using a temp agency or temporary employee to assist during these two days.
I look forward to a great exchange of insight and ideas
at this year’s Annual Conference, and I’m excited about continuing the
implementation of “A New EERA in Extension."
Best regards, Keith Smith - Associate Vice President, Agricultural Administration and Director, OSU Extension
The OSU Extension Administrative Cabinet met recently in retreat and discussed at length how the administrative team should be organized to better serve employees, as well as serve the organization efficiently and effectively. The Administrative Cabinet is responding to changing organization needs as the counties and EERAs continue to undergo major adjustments in work patterns and programming. The Cabinet discussion was facilitated by a moderator from Ohio State Human Resources. This discussion will be summarized and revisited at the November Cabinet meeting for a final decision about the Cabinet structure as we move into 2010.
We will keep you informed.
Recently, your colleagues responded to the monthly pulse
survey in the following way:
*Mean scores could indicate strong agreement:
I am
aware that my annual performance review in 2010 will include consideration
of my contribution to a Signature Program. (mean of 7.42)
My work
is valued by my supervisor. (mean of 7.91)
*Mean scores could indicate agreement:
OSU Extension has been willing
to let go of programs as new needs emerge. (mean of 6.12)
I am experiencing a
significant amount of work-related stress. (mean of 6.57)
My work is valued by the
organization. (mean of 6.90)
*Mean scores do not clearly indicate agreement or
disagreement:
Current investments in
technology are adequate. (mean of 5.06)
*Mean scores could indicate strong disagreement:
The non-agriculture public
is aware of OSU Extension’s potential. (mean of 4.71)
Personnel at all levels
within OSU Extension are well-acquainted with what others are doing. (mean
of 4.52)
Using a scale of 1
(strongly disagree) to 10 (strongly agree).
Additional information is available at: http://www.zoomerang.com/Shared/SharedResultsPasswordPage.aspx?ID=L23YH5S95GTR.
Please continue to share your opinions through participation in the
pulse survey. Your observations and suggestions provide important insight as
OSU Extension faculty and staff work to implement the strategic plan the
restructuring model, and program updates.
At the request of Dr. Moser and the approval of Drs. Croney
and Botheras, the primary authors of the attached Animal Care Backgrounder,
please use this copy as necessary when distributing animal welfare information.
Again, OSU Extension fully supports this statement by the
College of Food, Agricultural, and Environmental Sciences. This statement - and
Issue 2 on the November ballot - relates to quality animal care, safety of
animals and workers, and maintaining an affordable food supply. Remember, an
unbiased approach from CFAES and OSU Extension does not mean we are ambivalent;
we simply must take an educational approach in regard to political issues.
Although you may not endorse the issue on work time, you may have copies of the
college statement, as well as the Issue 2 ballot language, available in your
Extension office for those who request more information. You can also direct individuals to www.ohiolivestockcare.com.
Again this year we will reward great work in cost recovery.
We need your help with finding programs that merit recognition in two
categories - New Cost Recovery Award and Continued Excellence in Cost
Recovery Award. You may nominate yourself or others. This year,
we invite program teams and unit teams to apply. Guidelines and
application forms are available online. Winners
will be announced at Annual Conference during the awards dinner and will be
highlighted in an issue of the Communiqué. The deadline for
electronically submitting applications to Micki Daniels at daniels.14@osu.edu is Monday, November 30.
Contact Ken Martin at martin.1540@osu.edu with questions. Don’t miss out on these reward opportunities - submit your
applications!
Carol Chandler, educator in the Top of Ohio EERA, was recently elected at the NEAFCS national meeting as the national vice president for awards and recognition. Congratulations to Carol!
Think about nominating yourself or a
colleague for the John Stitzlein Diversity Award. The goal of this award is to
acknowledge accomplishments in achieving organizational change to support
diversity, pluralism and innovation in programs that impact our Extension
audiences. Diversity is defined as differences among people with respect to
age, class, ethnicity, gender, physical and mental ability, race, sexual
orientation, spiritual practices and other human differences. Pluralism is
defined as an organizational culture that incorporates mutual respect,
acceptance, teamwork, and productivity among people who are diverse in the
dimensions of human differences listed above as diversity.
The nomination guidelines and
nomination forms are on the Diversity Resources Web page (http://extensionhr.osu.edu/diversity/awards/divawards.htm).
The form is also attached, and the guidelines are listed below. Nominations and
all documentation should be e-mailed to Kathy Lechman at lechman.1@osu.edu by November 27. Hard copies will be accepted and
should be faxed to Kathy Lechman at 614 292-5100 or mailed (2120 Fyffe Road,
Columbus, OH 43210). Please do not send a vita; a
narrative of no more than three pages is all that is needed.
Past
winners include: Janice Hanna, Mahoning County; Steve Brady, Warren County; Connie
Goble, Pike County; and Nikki Eyre, Highland County.
Eligibility: The recipient can be an individual or team. The Award
for Diversity recognizes efforts that go beyond simply meeting EEO/AA program
requirements. Extension efforts that may be recognized should impact one or a
combination of these areas: audience, programs, policies, funding, initiatives,
staff, advisory and decision-making groups, and educational materials and
delivery methods.
Nominations: Nominations can be made by anyone, including self-nominations.
Nominations from last year that were not selected will be considered for this
year. Special attention should be given to nominate efforts that have the
potential to be sustained over time or can be replicated in other comparable
situations.
Justification of the nomination must include:
Purpose(s) of the
effort and the activities involved
Reason(s) the
effort deserves recognition
How is the effort
innovative?
What obstacles
had to be overcome?
What were the
impacts?
Evidence that the
efforts conveyed cultural awareness and organizational change
Evidence that the
efforts conveyed cultural sensitivity, appreciation for diversity and
demonstrated impact
Award Description: Recipient will receive a $1,000 award, his or her name
added to a permanent plaque displayed in the Agricultural Administration
Building, individual plaque, and certificate. OSU Extension Director Keith
Smith will formally present the award at the OSU Extension Annual Conference Awards
Banquet.
The OSU Leadership Center will
be hosting Fran Kick,creator
of KICK IT IN and Mark Henson, sparkspace founder and chief imagination officer, for a workshop that is sure to inspire
your teams to work at their best, get better at what they do, and have fun in
the process. The workshop will be held on November 10 from 9 a.m. to noon at the Nationwide and Ohio Farm Bureau 4-H Center.
Registration* is $75, but there is a special rate of $50 for OSU
Extension employees. E-mail Jody Termeer (termeer.1@osu.edu) or call the OSU
Leadership Center at 614-292-3114 for the group rate.
What to Expect...
Fran
Kick will KICK things off presenting how to capture a group's attention
and actively involve them (without just asking them to raise their hands).
Explore the different perspectives and many perceptions people have as
well as how they influence involvement. This opening session will give you
ideas that you can use to help participants pay attention and respond
appropriately. After all, in any learning situation we know that whether
you're the trainer or the trainee -- the more you put into it, the more
you'll get out of it!
How
can virtual teams, collaborating here-and-now teams, employee teams and management
teams work better together? Especially when there's less hierarchy, more
multi-tasking, flatter organizations all using fewer people who are doing
more work, with less time and less budget? Inspiring and interacting with
people to make things happen (vs. just watching things happen or worse
wondering what's happening), Fran will illustrate experientially what it
takes to nurture emerging leadership in any group, team or organization.
Learn
how you can synthesize and prioritize multiple ideas with any size group
quickly, efficiently and democratically. You'll have a chance to take what
you've learned and apply it immediately -- bringing your ideas and everyone
else's ideas together. Learn and experience how to capture, calculate, document
and measure all the potential application to what you've learned in any
situation.
Do
your teams always plan, collaborate, and problem solve as effectively as
they could? What if you could improve every team you lead or work on with some
simple, but highly effective activities? We'll show you how to encourage the kind of trust, creativity, and accountability that leads to highly
productive teams
We
believe fun and playfulness are keys to learning how to become a better team.
You'll be surprised at how a balloon can teach accountability, how a simple
childhood toy can encourage better communication, and how a piece of string can
help you think out of the box. Not only will you learn what makes teams work,
you'll learn how to be the best team player you've ever been.
*Registration
includes: participation in the November 10 workshop, continental breakfast,
and a FREE one-year membership to the OSU Leadership Center library with access to more than 2,500 leadership and management
resources that you can borrow for your personal/professional development (a $50
value!). You'll also get Web access to team-building tips, techniques and resources that you
can use to keep kicking it in and sparking your team long after the workshop.
OSU Extension's Leadership for Tomorrow: Strategies for Resurgence
Conference is scheduled for April 21-22, 2010 in Columbus. The
conference will encourage discussion about skills and strategies needed
for resurgence - leadership needed when the economy rebounds and
recovers. Proposals are due November 30. Topics can include, but are
not limited to: entrepreneurship, innovation, communication/engagement,
prioritizing, diversity, globalization, and creating prominence. To
submit a proposal, visit http://leadershipfortomorrow.osu.edu - Call for Proposals section. The RFP is attached.
Multiple Perspectives on Access, Inclusion & Disability is
celebrating its 10th anniversary - continuing a decade of
community exploration of disability as an individual experience and social
reality that cuts across the dimensions of education and employment;
scholarship and service; business and government; race, gender and
ethnicity. Such milestones are an opportunity to
step back from the demands of day-to-day work and reflect on our goals of social
justice, diversity and excellence.
This year’s theme of Future
History is intended to encourage presentations that
build on past progress, address ongoing
challenges, or share emerging best practices supporting access and
inclusion. The complete call for presentations and additional
conference information are posted at http://ada.osu.edu/conferences.htm.
A highlight of
the annual conference is the Ken Campbell Memorial Lecture on Disability Policy - a free public lecture hosted by the Columbus Advisory Committee on Disability
Issues to honor Campbell’s life work as an advocate, including 20+ years guiding the City of Columbus’ disability policies.This year's lecture will be presented by Andrew J. Imparato, president and CEO of
the American Association of People with Disabilities (AAPD).The complete
2010 conference program and registration will be available in January 2010. Past programs
and conference updates can also be found on the ADA Web site. To be on the
mailing list for the conference, send an e-mail toADA-OSU@osu.edu.
Workshops will be held again this fall to highlight the competitive
programs in USDA-CSREES and to help grant writers improve their overall
success. These workshops will be offered together in Kansas City,
MO on November 10-11 and in Washington, DC on November 16-17.
These workshops are very worthwhile for specialists and educators
who are looking seriously at some of the annual USDA funding
opportunities. If you attended the June 6 grants workshop at Ohio State
and wanted more information about USDA grants than was provided, this
is your chance. Day one will have breakout sessions on the specific
USDA funding areas such as animal programs, AREA, SBIR, nutrition, food
safety, and biotech risk assessment. You will be able to talk
individually with national program leaders and ask questions. A mock
peer review panel will demonstrate how proposals are evaluated. Day two
will be a reinforcement of the June grants workshop with a focus on
USDA types of topics and projects, ethics, and working with your
research foundation.
You'll hear questions and ideas from Extension professionals from
other states. There is always the possibility of linking with someone
who is thinking about a project that fits with your plans...you might
develop a multi-state project. If you are thinking about applying for
USDA funding and want some insight about the whole process, either of
these workshops will serve you well. *These workshops often fill to capacity early, so don't wait until the last minute to register.
The November 10-11 workshop in Kansas City is co-sponsored by the
University of Missouri, the Western Association of Agricultural
Experiment Station Directors, and USDA-CSREES. Visit http://muconf.missouri.edu/usda-csrees/index.htm for information on registration, hotels and the program agenda.
The November 16-17 workshop in Washington, DC is co-sponsored by the
Southern Association of Agricultural Experiment Station Directors, the
Northeast Regional Research Association, and USDA-NIFA (formerly CSREES). Visit http://www.cpe.vt.edu/usdagrant/index.htm for information on registration, hotels and the program agenda.