URBANA, Ill. – University of Illinois Chancellor Robert Jones was recently elected to the National 4-H Council Board of Trustees. Jones joins celebrity chef and author Carla Hall as new trustees for the national youth development organization of which they are alums. Both share a passion for diversity in agriculture and food equity and will further support the organization’s diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts.
A Georgia native and 4-H alumnus, Jones earned a bachelor’s degree in agronomy from Fort Valley State College, a master’s degree in crop physiology from the University of Georgia, and a doctorate in crop physiology from the University of Missouri, Columbia. He began his academic career as a faculty member at the University of Minnesota in 1978 where he spent 34 years before becoming the president of the University at Albany, one of SUNY system’s leading research universities. Jones now serves as the first African-American chancellor of Illinois' Urbana-Champaign campus.
“It is no exaggeration to say that the first step in my career was joining my local 4-H club,” Jones says. “Those meetings were the first organized events in my life, outside of church or school, and they set me on a course that changed the trajectory of my life.”
Jones says he believes the 4-H mission is even more vital and critical today when limited access to childhood educational opportunities leads to unacceptable upper limits on a life and career.
“I found educational opportunities that opened up a world that I never knew existed,” Jones says. “4-H taught me to dream big, and it is my privilege to be able to pay that gift forward today,” added Jones.
Jones is an experienced and accomplished scientist and researcher, a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and a fellow of the American Society of Agronomy and the Crop Science Society of America. During his distinguished, 34-year career at Minnesota, Jones had administrative and budgetary responsibilities for the offices for public engagement, equity and diversity, and played a leadership role in establishing the nation’s first urban research and outreach engagement center which was designed to help find a solution to complex challenges in economically depressed urban communities. The center was named in Jones’ honor in 2015.
As trustees, both Hall and Jones will support National 4-H Council’s strategic priorities, which include growing investment and participation in Cooperative Extension’s 4-H program from six million to 10 million youth by 2025, as well as a collaboration with Historically Black Colleges and Universities.
“As passionate advocates for young people, agriculture, and promoting diversity, equity, and inclusion, both Dr. Jones and Ms. Hall will move us even closer to our goal of providing all children with the opportunities they deserve so they can reach their full potential,” says Jennifer Sirangelo, president and CEO of National 4-H Council. “Our new trustees’ expertise will help us to drive National 4-H Council’s new campaign, Opportunity4All, which aims to rally support for Cooperative Extension’s 4-H program and eliminate the opportunity gap that affects 55 million kids across America.”
ABOUT 4-H: 4-H, the nation’s largest youth development organization, grows confident young people who are empowered for life today and prepared for career tomorrow. 4-H programs empower nearly six million young people across the U.S. through experiences that develop critical life skills. 4-H is the youth development program of our nation’s Cooperative Extension System and USDA and serves every county and parish in the U.S. through a network of 110 public universities and more than 3,000 local Extension offices. Globally, 4-H collaborates with independent programs to empower one million youth in 50 countries. The research-backed 4-H experience grows young people who are four times more likely to contribute to their communities; two times more likely to make healthier choices; two times more likely to be civically active; and two times more likely to participate in STEM programs.
Illinois Extension leads public outreach for University of Illinois by translating research into action plans that allow Illinois families, businesses, and community leaders to solve problems, make informed decisions, and adapt to changes and opportunities.