Madison County CES Program Indicators and Success StoriesJul 1, 2020 - Jun 30, 2021





2031 - Family Development General
2031.8) 11

Number of individuals reporting improved parenting skills (i.e., skills to prepare child for life; use positive discipline techniques; use of empathy, family rules and effective boundaries; effective self-care techniques)

2031.7) 27

Number of individuals (parents, caregivers, grandparent, or relative) reporting improved personal knowledge (i.e., developmental stages of a child, techniques to encourage positive development, positive discipline techniques for children, healthy ways to promote children’s success in schools, and signs of abuse and neglect)

2031.9) 15

Number of individuals who reported using specific preventative and positive discipline techniques in response to child’s misbehavior

2031.10) 25

Number of individuals who practice effective parenting skills, such as parental empathy, proper ways of establishing family rules and/or boundaries, or concrete support of their child

2031.11) 8

Number of individuals who sought support from local community organizations and/or its individual members

2031.12) 12

Number of individuals who extended any type of support to another parent, grandparent, or relative raising a child

2031.13) 31

Number of participants who reported that they better understand the importance of caregiving preparation as a result of aging programs

2031.14) 12

Number of participants who attended parenting-related programs not identified as a “major program.”  Major parent-related programs include: Parenting a Second Time Around, Grandparents as Parents, Nurturing Parenting, and Nurturing Fathers

2031.15) 0

Number of participants who attended age-related programs focused on relationships/communication/caregiving and other issues facing aging families not identified as a “major program.”  Major age-related programs include: Keys to Embracing Again, 10 Warning Signs, and AARP Prepare to Care



Success Stories

Stacey"s Super Six

Author: Marian Stacy

Major Program: Family Development General

2020 has been met with many challenges, none of which have been welcomed or easy. As COVID restrictions determined how nutrition classes were executed within the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), the SNAP-Ed assistant in the Madison County Cooperative Extension Service was unsure about delivering quality lessons through social media. However, a retired Family Resource Center Director reached out to the SNAP-Ed assistant asking for nutrition and cooking resources for a group of si

Full Story

Senior Citizens Centers during COVID

Author: Marian Stacy

Major Program: Family Development General

On March 15, 2020, the University of Kentucky shut down all county Cooperative Extension Offices from public access due to the global COVID-19 outbreak. The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program Education (SNAP-Ed) Program Assistant in Madison County immediately contacted both Richmond and Berea Senior Citizen Center Directors to ask what she could do to reach out to home bound senior citizens in this time of isolation. The SNAP-Ed assistant was told both locations were still obligated to pr

Full Story

Madison Towers

Author: Marian Stacy

Major Program: Family Development General

Madison Tower Apartments is a low-income housing facility which serves single senior citizens who have mental or physical limitations. Often, this population tends to lead a sedentary lifestyle coupled with unhealthy meal patterns. The Housing Director contacted the Madison County Cooperative Extension Service to inquire if the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) assistant would come to the facility and educate residents on how to plan, cook, and store nutritious meals with the food

Full Story

Book Swap

Author: Jessica Hunley

Major Program: Family Development General

Over the course of March and into April 2021, as the Madison County FCS agent I have conducted a book swap for homemakers and other clientele to drop off gently used or unwanted cookbooks, crafting books, as well as chapter books.  The items donated were left to rest for 14 days for sanitary reasons under COVID protocol and then were put out for public viewing in the project room, for those interested to come back in and "shop" through the donations.  Homemakers and clientele

Full Story