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Program increases collaboration for rural engagement

During the final session of the 2024 Rural Engagement Workshop cohort members had time to interact with some of the animals at the UGA Livestock Instructional Arena. (Photo: Baker Owens)

The interdisciplinary Rural Engagement Workshop for Academic Faculty, launched by Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost S. Jack Hu and Vice President for Public Service and Outreach Jennifer Frum, brings together academic faculty and  public service faculty. This partnership expands the impact of UGA’s research and ties it to practical applications in rural communities across Georgia.

UGA Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost Jack Hu talks with cohort members during a workshop session. The provost’s office provides seed grant funding for up to 10 proposals developed by faculty teams through the workshop. (Photo: Shannah Montgomery)

The workshop helps academic faculty gain a greater understanding of Georgia’s rural demographics and trends, obtain key information on developing sustained relationships with communities, develop partnerships with public service faculty and enhance their ability to engage in rural research in the state.

One benefit workshop participants had was the opportunity to interact with alumni of the program. Here, current cohort member Doris Miller, left, talks with Maria Ferrer, a member of the 2023 cohort, during a networking event with workshop alumni. Miller and Ferrer are both faculty in the College of Veterinary Medicine. (Photo: Shannah Montgomery)

“The Rural Engagement Workshop for Academic Faculty stands as a vital link between the University of Georgia and the communities that we pledge to serve as the state’s land-grant and sea-grant institution,” said Hu. “The program strengthens our connection to the state of Georgia and broadens the statewide impact that UGA delivers through Public Service and Outreach and Cooperative Extension.”

The workshop has had 49 participants in the first three years. The 2024 cohort, which graduated April 12, includes 14 faculty from nine UGA colleges and schools.

The 2024 workshop participants include:

Each year, the Office of the Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost provides seed grant funding for up to 10 proposals developed by faculty teams through the workshop. More than $180,000 in funding supporting 25 proposals has already been awarded. This year, up to $70,000 in seed grants is available to fund a maximum of 10 proposals. Grants will range from $5,000 to $10,000.

One benefit workshop participants had was the opportunity to interact with alumni of the program. Current cohort members Yingying Zeng of the College of Pharmacy, left, and Lu Fan of the College of Family and Consumer Sciences talk with 2022 cohort member Lilong Chai of Cooperative Extension during a networking event. (Photo: Shannah Montgomery)

Since the program began in 2021, workshop alumni have secured more than $7.9 million in subsequent funding that stemmed from projects started in the Rural Engagement Workshop.

As an assistant professor with the Department of Food Science and Technology in the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, current cohort member Kaitlyn Casulli has experience working in rural Georgia through her role with Cooperative Extension. She wanted to be in the workshop to learn the most effective ways to engage with rural communities.

Cohort members are all smiles after the 2024 Rural Engagement Workshop for Academic Faculty wrapped up with a graduation ceremony April 18 at the UGA Livestock Instructional Arena. (Photo: Baker Owens)

“This has been a really good opportunity, and I’m appreciative that it’s offered to faculty, especially for those who don’t have Extension roles or rural connections,” Casulli said. “I think it’s just a really beneficial way to bring UGA faculty into a rural community and help them carve out an applied research opportunity.”

Casulli received a $1.5 million Agriculture Innovation Center grant from the USDA that started in January. Centers use the funding to provide technical assistance to growers to market value-added agricultural products. For Casulli, that means trying to create products from blemished peanuts.

Casulli sought to amplify the research idea after she started working with a peanut farmer in middle Georgia, a connection established through the UGA Archway Partnership, a unit of PSO. The farmer is throwing away peanuts because of blemished shells that make them undesirable as boiled peanuts. With her workshop research proposal, Casulli wants to develop new products using the affected kernels. By building a partnership with the farmer, she can leverage the relationship into expanding her USDA grant work.

“What we’re proposing is taking the shell off and using the kernel inside to produce something else in our value-added food processing product,” Casulli said.

As a member of the 2022 workshop cohort, Puneet Dwivedi learned how to leverage the connections already established by the units of Public Service and Outreach and by Extension to first access communities and then gain a better understanding of rural issues and related potential solutions from community members only.

Dwivedi, an associate professor at the Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources, is still cultivating opportunities created through the workshop as he conducts research related to forest sustainability and family land ownership across the state.

“Through the workshop, I realized how well the UGA community, especially Public Service and Outreach and Extension, is embedded into the rural system of Georgia,” said Dwivedi.

Dwivedi used his seed grant to host community workshops and gather information on forest carbon at the Mary Kahrs Warnell Forest Education Center near Savannah. Soon, Dwivedi had what he needed to submit grant proposals. He has received a combined $2.1 million in grants from the USDA Farm Services ($2 million) and the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service ($100,000) to further his work.

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