Strategies for Successful Proposal Development

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
NSF Graduate Research Fellowship: What is it? 3 years of funding: $30k/year as stipend $10,500/year for tuition $1,000 one-time international travel allowance.
Advertisements

Writing Your CAREER Proposal 2014 NSF CAREER Proposal Writing Workshop University of Maryland April 7-8, 2014 CAREER Proposal Writing Workshop.
What is the NSF CAREER Program? NSF website:
Broader Impacts: Meaningful Links between Research and Societal Benefits October 23, 2014 Martin Storksdieck I Center for Research on Lifelong STEM Learning.
Session 5 Intellectual Merit and Broader Significance FISH 521.
Kathleen McCloud Physics (PHY) National Science Foundation CAREER Proposals.
An Excellent Proposal is a Good Idea, Well Expressed, With A Clear Indication of Methods for Pursuing the Idea, Evaluating the Findings, and Making Them.
Graduate Research Fellowship Program Operations Center The NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program National Science Foundation.
DIMACS/CCICADA/DIMATIA/Rutgers Math REU
Proposal Writing Workshop Features of Effective Proposals: Fellowship Track Washington, DC January 9, 2014.
NSF CAREER Award Outreach Workshop April 26, 2011 NSF Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Award Outreach Workshop April 26, 2011
The IGERT Program Preliminary Proposals June 2008 Carol Van Hartesveldt IGERT Program Director IGERT Program Director.
1 Exploring NSF Funding Opportunities in DUE Tim Fossum Division of Undergraduate Education Vermont EPSCoR NSF Research Day May 6, 2008.
Workshop NSF Major Research Instrumentation grants program NSF approach to research in undergraduate institutions Supporting students on grants Introduction.
Research Grant Proposal Writing: Bucknell Trends and Faculty Perspectives Mike Malusis, Tom Solomon, and Rick Rosenberg Engineering Faculty Learning Series.
National Science Foundation: Transforming Undergraduate Education in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (TUES)
Graduate Research Fellowship Program Operations Center NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program National Science Foundation.
Graduate Research Fellowship Program National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Operations Center.
2015 Commendations and Citations Information Session.
 NSF Merit Review Criteria Intellectual Merit Broader Impacts  Additional Considerations Integration of Research & Education Integrating Diversity into.
Proposal Writing Workshop Features of Effective Proposals.
Partnerships and Broadening Participation Dr. Nathaniel G. Pitts Director, Office of Integrative Activities May 18, 2004 Center.
NSF CAREER Program & CAREER Proposals Claudia Rankins Program Director, Directorate of Education and Human Resources NSF CAREER Program.
Sandra H. Harpole February 6,2012.  Dr. George Hazzelrigg ◦ Competitive Proposal Writing ◦
Recent recipient’s perspective on outreach development for a CAREER proposal Gang Tan Department of Computer Science & Engineering Lehigh University 1.
NSF CAREER Program & CAREER Proposals Claudia Rankins Physics (PHY) NSF CAREER Program.
On Preparing Proposals: Comments from Both Inside and Outside NSF Xiaodong Zhang The Ohio State University.
Writing More Effective NSF Proposals Jeanne R. Small Oklahoma City, Oklahoma March 2, 2006 Division of Undergraduate Education (DUE) National Science Foundation.
Academic Research Enhancement Award (AREA) Program Erica Brown, PhD Director, NIH AREA Program National Institutes of Health 1.
Tips for NSF GRF Applicants Matt Williams Barry M. Goldwater Scholar ( ) NSF Graduate Research Fellow ( ) October 13, 2010.
NSF GRFP Workshop Sept 16, 2016 Dr. Julia Fulghum
Promoting Diversity at the Graduate Level in Mathematics: A National Forum MSRI October 16, 2008 Deborah Lockhart Executive Officer, Division of Mathematical.
Funding your Dreams Cathy Manduca Director, Science Education Resource Center Iowa State University, 2005.
NSF IGERT proposals Yang Zhao Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering Wayne State University.
Integrating Broader Impacts into your Research Proposal
How to develop an independent research plan – review literature with an eye for problem, approach, solution, new ideas – review objectives of funding programs.
 NSF Merit Review Criteria Intellectual Merit Broader Impacts  Additional Considerations Integration of Research & Education Broadening Participation.
Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Program Program Solicitation – NSF Sonia Esperança, Ph. D. Acting Division Director, Earth Sciences Member,
Faculty Early Career Development Program (CAREER) Joanne Tornow BIO/MCB Chair, CAREER Coordinating Committee.
Integrating Broader Impacts into your Research Proposal Delta Program in Research, Teaching, and Learning Trina McMahon Associate Professor of Civil and.
Session B – Broader Impacts: What’s the big idea? J. Britt HolbrookSharon Franks Center for the Study of InterdisciplinarityResearch Proposal Development.
Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Program Program Solicitation – NSF Mohamed Gouda Program Director, Division of Computer and Network Systems.
CAREER WORKSHOP APRIL 6, 2015 Overview of the CAREER Program Beth Hodges Director, Office of Proposal Development FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY.
Integrating Broader Impacts into your Research Proposal Delta Program in Research, Teaching, and Learning Trina McMahon Professor of Civil and Environmental.
NSF Peer Review: Panelist Perspective QEM Biology Workshop; 10/21/05 Dr. Mildred Huff Ofosu Asst. Vice President; Sponsored Programs & Research; Morgan.
1Mobile Computing Systems © 2001 Carnegie Mellon University Writing a Successful NSF Proposal November 4, 2003 Website: nsf.gov.
Course, Curriculum, and Laboratory Improvement (CCLI) Transforming Undergraduate Education in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics PROGRAM.
Tackling the Broader Impacts Challenge: Advice and Resources Nathan Meier Director of Research Strategy Office of Research and Economic Development October.
NSF Funding Opportunities Anthony Garza. General Funding Opportunities Standard proposals or investigator-initiated research projects (submission once.
BIO AC November 18, 2004 Broadening the Participation of Underrepresented Groups in Science.
NSF CISE CAREER Writing Workshop Chunmei Liu Howard University 4/15/2011.
Office of Proposal Development Florida State University Mike Mitchell, Proposal Development Coordinator NSF CAREER Ten Things to Know NSF CAREER Workshop.
NSF Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Program February 25, 2016.
NSF Graduate Research Fellowship
NSF Graduate Research Fellowship
Office of Research and Engagement Faculty Development Team
Applying for NSF CAREER Grants
Faculty Early Career Development program CAREER part 1
The University of Mississippi
Grant Writing Information Session
Kathleen McCloud Physics Division
NSF CAREER TTVN Seminar February 3, 2009
NSF Graduate Research Fellowship
David W. Mogk Dept. of Earth Sciences Montana State University
NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program
The Curry School of Education October 3, 2018
Gulf States Math Alliance 2019 Conference
Writing More Effective NSF Proposals
Harry S. Truman Scholarship
University of the Incarnate Word
Presentation transcript:

Strategies for Successful Proposal Development NSF CAREER Award Strategies for Successful Proposal Development March 28, 2016 Some information used with permission from UW Delta Program

Agenda Overview of NSF CAREER award criteria and framework Panel: Strategies and advice Breakout sessions with panelists Networking and reception

Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Program Most prestigious awards to help a junior faculty member develop activities that can effectively integrate research and education within the context of his/her organization. In 2014, CAREER Proposals submitted by New PIs - 66% Awards to New PIs - 54%

CAREER Program Goals Provide stable support for 5 years (≥400K in most Directorates; BIO, GEO/PLR, ENG are ≥500K) to allow the career development of outstanding new teacher-scholars in the context of the mission of their organization. Increase participation of those traditionally underrepresented in science and engineering. Build a foundation for a lifetime of integrated contributions to research and education. Provide incentives to universities to value the integration of research and education.

Eligibility Criteria Hold a doctoral degree in a field supported by NSF by the proposal deadline Be untenured as of Oct 1st following proposal deadline Be employed in a tenure-track (or equivalent) position as an Assistant Professor Have not previously received a CAREER award Have not had more than two CAREER proposals reviewed in the past Untenured Associate Professors are not eligible

CAREER Proposal Components Compelling research plan Innovative but feasible education plan Plan for effective integration of research + education activities (evaluation plan is a big plus) Departmental letter Statements of collaboration, if relevant/appropriate Budget that is consistent with the scope of research and education activities Biosketch

Research and Education Integration of Research and Education

How will your research impact your education goals and how will your education activities feed back into your research? Promoting teaching, training and learning Example: involving others (graduate, undergraduate, K-12, high school teachers, public) in your research using new tools, field components, web outreach, cyber networks, etc.

How will your research impact your education goals and how will your education activities feed back into your research? Broadening participation of underrepresented groups Example: Hosting students and/or teachers from under-served demographic groups; integrating a service teaching project in your course

How will your research impact your education goals and how will your education activities feed back into your research? Enhancing the infrastructure for education Examples: Searching for new methods to deliver your research results to a broader audience than those in the immediate research community Using the broader community to gather data for your research (crowdsourcing; “citizen science”)

Approaching your Education Plan • Your approach to your education plan should be thoughtful / informed and create new opportunities – Avoid reinventing wheels • Do some background research in advance – Seek connections and collaborations on campus • Leveraging the expertise and infrastructure of existing centers/programs • Seeking collaborators with expertise in the area • Have a well-considered assessment/evaluation plan

Your Education Plan Develop a creative plan that ties to your research- the education plan can be a way to strengthen your brilliant research proposal Do NOT propose something you have no interest in doing Education part (no matter how wonderful) cannot make up for a deficient research plan.

Education component – critical to success! Your education component - innovative and creative Demonstration of prior results with successful education activities is a plus Leverage activities at Columbia that have relevance to your research Make sure that the education activities are well integrated with the research – otherwise, the workload will not be manageable Who will benefit from the proposed activities? How will you know if these activities are having an impact? (evaluation & assessment?)

Do… seek out the assistance of your peers and colleagues. something you are genuinely excited about. partner with groups/centers on campus to take advantage of existing infrastructure. leverage existing NSF funds. give a detailed timeline.

I should have… talked with my Program Officer before submitting the grant… started earlier included funding for education activities in my budget not overcommitted- proposing too much is as bad as proposing too little proofread and polished far ahead of the deadline not cut and pasted from my research papers - it makes a poor read

Be Persuasive Demonstrate that your ideas are creative and will make an impact in your field. (Sell the idea.) • Demonstrate that you are capable of carrying out what you propose. (Sell yourself.) • Demonstrate that you are motivated to conduct the proposed work. (Sell your enthusiasm.)

Most common mistakes made by applicants on research component Work is too close to what has been done before Techniques and methodology are not cutting edge Project has too large a scope or is too narrowly focused to be exciting Proposed methods/research plan are not likely to yield results that will address the stated goals of the project The experimental/theoretical/analytical design is flawed Resources not available or PI does not have demonstrated expertise in the area

Most common mistakes made by applicants on education component Education component is generic and what is expected of any PI Unrealistic – too ambitious; too broad, etc. Reinventing the wheel – another website, another blog, etc. Research and education plans are not aligned or integrated Lack of understanding of what is effective in education – scholarship of the education component (contact the CTL!)

Presidential Early Career Awards for Scientists and Engineers PECASE: Presidential Early Career Awards for Scientists and Engineers NSF selects up to 20 nominees for PECASE from among the most meritorious new CAREER awardees. Selection is based on two important criteria: Innovative research at the frontiers of science and technology that is relevant to the mission of NSF, and Community service demonstrated through scientific leadership, education or community outreach.

Panel advice and discussions NSF Award Recipients: Ryan Abernathey, Assistant Professor of Earth & Environmental Sciences (2016) Kartik Chandran, Associate Professor of Earth & Environmental Engineering (2009) Christine Hendon, Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering (2015) Laura Kaufman, Professor of Chemistry (2008)

Panel advice and discussions NSF CAREER Reviewers: John Cunningham, Assistant Professor of Statistics Julia Hirschberg, Professor & Chair of Computer Science