
UF/IFAS
Okeechobee County Extension Service
458 Highway 98 North
Okeechobee, FL 34972-2578
Phone: (863) 763-6469
E- mail: indianco@ufl.edu
October
25, 2011
Feature Article -
for immediate release
Florida
Extension Agent gains Global award!
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UF/IFAS Okeechobee County Extension Horticulture Agent Dan Culbert is presented with the ESP International Service award by ESP President Deborah Thompson (Left, South Carolina) and ESP Global Relations Committee Chair Kathleen Tweeten (right, North Dakota State University) at the October 2011 ESP Conference in Syracuse, NY. (photo: Billy Warrick, TAMU) |
University
of Florida Extension Horticulture Agent Dan Culbert was
recently named the Southern Region recipient of the
International Service Award by Epsilon Sigma Phi, the
National Honorary Fraternity of Extension Professionals.
The
recognition was part of the organization’s annual
conference, held in Syracuse NY. Culbert is the
Horticulture Agent in Okeechobee County, FL, and is the
second consecutive Florida Extension Agent to earn this
national recognition. (Bay County Horticulture Agent Ken
Rudisill was the 2010 ESP International Service winner.)
During
the conference, Culbert also presented a seminar on his
involvement in an International Extension Program that
taught 47 Costa Rican landscape horticulture professionals
in 2008. He was part of a team of seven agents that worked
with EARTH University (Costa Rica) faculty to address
landscape conservation and natural resource issues at LaFlor
in the northwest region of that Central American country.
He will return there in 2012 to conduct a program impact
evaluation.
He
also serves as a member of the National
ESP Global Relations Committee that helps build the
capacity of Extension faculty that are involved in
International programs across the US. He is also secretary
of the UF/IFAS
International Programs Advisory Team, an advisory
group that helps to coordinate the many academic, research
and Extension programs conducted by UF’s Institute of
Food and Agricultural Science.
“Why
spend time with international education where there is so
much to do locally?” This common concern was
addressed at the conference by members of ESP. Culbert
reports that as a result of his international work, he has
been better able to relate distant concepts of landscape
horticulture to locals citizens, has improved his ability
to communicate with Hispanic audiences locally, and has
gained valuable contacts with persons who are working in
horticultural industries across the globe that have the
same kinds of needs as those that live and work in
Florida.
Hillsborough
County Family Consumer Science Agent Mary Keith also
attended the Conference. She serves on the National
ESP Awards committee and brought back a Distinguished
Service Award for Osceola County Extension Director
Mary Beth Salisbury. The DSA is provided to
Extension Agents that have provided a lifetime of
dedication to the profession.
The
Florida Chapter of Epsilon Sigma Phi was also presented
with two Platinum
Awards, one for achievement in chapter membership and
a second “Chapter of Merit” award for overall work in
meeting the professional development needs of Extension
agents and Specialists. Under the leadership of last
year’s President Dr. Joan Bradshaw of Citrus County and
this year’s President, Dr. Ray Mobley, who is the Dean
for Extension programs at Florida A&M University, the
“Alpha Delta” Chapter is one of the more active US EPS
Chapters.
ESP
membership is open to current and past Extension Agents
and specialists who are committed to improving the
profession and become more effective Extension educators.
Members subscribe to an Extension
Worker’s creed that has articulated the values of
Extension's professionalism since 1927.
The
Cooperative
Extension Service provides research based information
from Land-Grant universities such as the University of
Florida and Florida
A&M University. Extension programs are
designed to help people find solutions to problems from
local communities to across the globe. Extension is one of
the three essential parts of Land-grant Universities that
trace their origins to the 1862
Morrill Act – almost 150 years old, and the 1914 Smith-Lever
Act, which is nearing its 100 year anniversary of
bringing knowledge to the people.
-30-
Trade
names, where used, are given for the purpose of providing
specific information. They do not constitute an
endorsement or guarantee of products named, nor does it
imply criticism of products not named. The Florida
Cooperative Extension Service - Institute of Food and
Agricultural Sciences is an equal opportunity/ affirmative
action employer authorized to provide research,
educational information, and other services to individuals
and institutions that function without regard to race,
color, sex, age, handicap, or national origin.
Florida Cooperative
Extension Service / IFAS /
University
of
Florida.
Millie
Ferrer-Chancy, Interim Dean. Last
update: 10/25/2011. This page is maintained by Dan
Culbert