About Us

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We believe in you.

We believe in Illinois: Its people, its diverse neighborhoods and communities, and our shared future. We believe that health and wellness are the foundation for individuals, families, and communities to reach their full potential. We believe in and promote a culture of service as fundamental to strong and healthy families, neighborhoods, and state. We believe that the long-term sustainability of the environment and agricultural productivity requires stewardship and care. We believe in and respect youth’s potential to change the world and work to support nurturing communities and opportunities to learn and grow.

We believe in the state of Illinois, and we are committed to our mission linking local communities to University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, to develop programs, tools, and knowledge that will support needed change. Our mission is to develop educational programs, extend knowledge, and build partnerships to support people, communities, and their environments as part of the state’s land-grant institution. 

Learn more about Extension's statewide impact and our strategic plan for the future.

We address key issues in Illinois through eight strategic priorities.

Community
Support strong and resilient youth, families, and communities.
Economy
Grow a prosperous economy through lifelong learning and development.
Environment
Sustain natural resources in home and public spaces.
Food and Agriculture
Maintain a safe and accessible food, fibers, and biofuel supply.
Health
Maximize health equity and access and support health promotion.
Partnerships
Create and nurture strategic partnerships and share statewide resources to advance our mission and vision.
Technology and Discovery
Integrate research, technology, and engagement to close opportunity gaps and build capacity.
Workforce Excellence
Develop Illinois Extension staff and teams to advance collaborative impact and strengthen a culture of inclusiveness and belonging.
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We are dedicated to helping people find solutions to life's challenges.

Our work focuses on these priorities. Illinois Extension leaders work with a network of local stakeholders to define annual goals that allow us to respond to evolving and emerging needs while still ensuring meaningful progress toward key outcomes in each of the strategic priority areas. This blend of long-range focus and local accountability is a powerful strategy that ensures we stay true to our mission while we serve communities across the state.

While most Extension programs are offered on an informal, non-credit basis, Illinois Extension does offer continuing education credits in some fields of study. Extension programs may be offered as hands-on workshops, field days, online self-paced tutorials, or in other formats that are suitable for the audience and subject matter.

University of Illinois Extension

As part of the land-grant system, University of Illinois was established not only to provide world-class education and pioneer research and discovery, but to put learning and discovery into practice, to benefit the health and wellbeing of residents and communities in every part of Illinois. Extension is the university’s statewide network of educators, faculty experts, and staff dedicated to that mission.

Communities are directly served by Extension staff in 27 multi-county units located throughout Illinois. Extension educators in local offices and specialists located on University of Illinois' Urbana-Champaign campus develop and deliver in-depth programming locally, in regional venues, and through distance-learning technologies.

As part of the nationwide Cooperative Extension System, Illinois Extension is able to draw on research-based expertise from land-grant universities all across the country. Volunteers who serve on local advisory councils provide direction for Illinois Extension programming, ensuring that programs continue to meet critical needs.

Illinois Extension is based in the College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences (ACES) and works with all colleges and units of University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.

The Extension Worker's Creed

"I believe in the people and their hopes, their aspirations and their faith, and their right to make their own plans and arrive at their own decisions and their ability and power to enlarge their lives and plan for the happiness of those they love.

I believe the education, of which Extension is an essential part, is basic in stimulating individual initiative self-determination and leadership that these are the keys to democracy and that people, when given facts they understand, will act not only in their self-interest but also in the interest of society. 

I believe that education is a lifelong process and the greatest university is the home that my success as a teacher is proportional to those qualities of mind and spirit that give me welcome entrance into the homes of the families that I serve.

I believe in intellectual freedom to search for and present the truth without bias and with courteous tolerance to the views of others. I believe that Extension is a link between the people and the ever-changing discoveries in the laboratories.

I believe in the public institutions, of which I am part of. I believe in my own work and in the opportunity I have to make my life useful to humanity.

Because I believe these things, I am an extension professional."

The creed was written by W.A. Lloyd, founder of Epsilon Sigma Phi, an honorary Extension professional association, as a New Year's greeting to county ag agents in 1922. North Carolina State University