QA with Chuck Hibberd, Part 2
Seven years ago, we asked our Extension educators to spend 80% of their time in either beef systems or community development or early childhood development, or 4-H — we had seven different programs. Where some states have gone to more of a regional system or a hub-and-spoke model, we've really...
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description | Seven years ago, we asked our Extension educators to spend 80% of their time in either beef systems or community development or early childhood development, or 4-H — we had seven different programs. Where some states have gone to more of a regional system or a hub-and-spoke model, we've really stuck with the local county Extension office model. [...]in part because of the flood of 2019, we're now closely connected with Nebraska Emergency Management Agency and the Governor's Flood Recovery Task Force. [...]142,000 youth in Nebraska are involved in some kind of 4-H, and that's one in three kids. |
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Where some states have gone to more of a regional system or a hub-and-spoke model, we've really stuck with the local county Extension office model. [...]in part because of the flood of 2019, we're now closely connected with Nebraska Emergency Management Agency and the Governor's Flood Recovery Task Force. 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issn | 0194-0945 2161-9301 |
language | eng |
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source | EBSCOhost Business Source Complete; Alma/SFX Local Collection |
subjects | Careers Children Community development Deans (Education) Deans (in schools) Disasters Education Emergency management Emergency preparedness Flood management Floods Four H clubs Interviews |
title | QA with Chuck Hibberd, Part 2 |
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