Agricultural Communications Documentation Center, Funk Library, University of Illinois Document Number: C21148
Notes:
Spring Hill Conference Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota, June 9-11. 384 pages., This report is a compilation of unedited papers, discussions and reports from concurrent workgroups presented or developed at the initial workshop of the Social Science Agricultural Agenda Project. National Center for Food and Agricultural Policy and Michigan State University provided seed money for planning the workshop.
Reports results of a national survey among experiment station editors about their present information organization and their suggestions about how they would like their present setup changed for more efficient operation. Seventy-eight percent cast their vote for a coordinated setup (involving agricultural research, extension and possibly resident instruction). Fifty-four percent of respondents operated currently in a coordinated setup and like it; 24 percent operated in a decentralized arrangement but wanted to change.
Survey report at annual AAACE meeting. "About 40 per cent of the county extension agents now furnish extension information to their local newspapers regularly, only a very few altogether neglecting to do so, but there is a distinct need for editorial training for agents." Among the training means proposed: journalism courses for prospective agents while in college, state news-writing training meetings held by the college editor for county agents, correspondence courses in news writing, and bulletins on news writing. American Association of Agricultural College Editors.