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NSF Merit Review Criteria Intellectual Merit Broader Impacts Additional Considerations Integration of Research & Education Integrating Diversity into NSF Programs Additional review criteria specific to Noyce Program, dependent on proposal type
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Capacity /ability of institution to effectively conduct program Number /quality of students to be served by program Justification for ◦ number of students ◦ amount of stipend ◦ scholarship support Quality/feasibility of recruitment/marketing strategies Strong: Provides data to justify need and realistic expectations; indicates number of participants Weak: Projections not supported by data
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Ability of program to recruit STEM majors who would not otherwise pursue a teaching career Strong: Indicates they will recruit beyond those who are already in the program Weak: Not expanding beyond current pool
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Quality of the preservice educational program Strong: Provides details about program Provides evidence that graduates are successful Research based Weak: Little information provided
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Extent to which STEM/education faculty are collaborating in developing/ implementing the program Strong: Good representation of STEM and education faculty Defined roles in management plan Shared responsibility Weak: No evidence of collaboration (“in name only”)
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Quality of preservice student support and new teacher support infrastructure Strong: Clear plan for supporting students and new teachers to ensure success Strong partnership with school district Weak: No support beyond the financial support
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Extent to which proposed strategies reflect effective practices based on research Strong: Based on educational literature and evidence from research findings Weak: No references or not clear how the project is based on research
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Degree to which proposed programming will enable scholarship/ stipend recipients to become successful math/ science teachers Strong: Program designed to address specific needs of Noyce Scholars Weak: Program does not appear to be designed to support needs of Noyce Scholars
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Feasibility/ completeness of evaluation plan measuring effectiveness of proposed strategies Strong: Independent evaluator Clear objectives and measures Describes data collection and analysis aligned with evaluation questions Weak: No objective evaluator Evaluation not aligned with project objectives
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Institutional support for program and extent to which institution commits to making program a central organizational focus Strong: Evidence of support from departments and administrators Likely to be sustained Integrated with other STEM initiatives Weak: Lack of supporting letters from administrators Little involvement beyond the PI
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Proposal does not follow Noyce guidelines ◦ Students must complete STEM major ◦ Little information about teacher preparation program ◦ Unrealistic enrollment projections ◦ Recruitment/selection strategies not well described ◦ Lack of support for new teachers involvement of STEM faculty (or education faculty) plans for monitoring compliance with teaching requirement ◦ Weak evaluation or lack of objective evaluator ◦ Lessons learned from prior work lacks details
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Capacity/ ability of institution to effectively conduct program Number/ quality of Fellows the program will serve Justification for ◦ number of Fellows served ◦ amount of stipend ◦ salary supplements Quality/ feasibility of recruitment/ marketing strategies
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Extent to which proposed strategies reflect effective practices based on evidence from research Degree to which proposed programming enables participants to become successful math/ science teachers or Master Teachers Extent to which STEM/ education faculty collaborate in developing/ implementing a program with the specialized pedagogy needed to ◦ enable teachers to effectively teach math/science ◦ assume leadership roles in their schools.
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Feasibility/ completeness of an objective evaluation plan measuring effectiveness of proposed strategies Institutional support for program and the extent to which it is committed to making the program a central organizational focus Evidence of cost sharing commitments Plans for sustainability beyond NSF funding
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NSF Teaching Fellows only: Ability of program to recruit ◦ Individuals not otherwise pursing teaching career ◦ Members of underrepresented groups Quality of Master’s degree program leading to teacher certification Quality of preservice student support and new teacher support infrastructure NSF Master Teaching Fellows only: Quality of professional development that will be provided
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Strong partnership with participating school district Required matching funds identified Clear description of program elements for preservice for Teaching Fellows professional development for Master Teaching Fellows Detailed recruitment and selection plans Clear vision of Master Teacher roles/ responsibilities, including preservice involvement Attention to content and pedagogy Detailed evaluation plans
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Insufficient details for preservice and induction program for Teaching Fellows professional development program for Master Teaching Fellows Vague recruitment plans Selection plans do not follow guidelines Master Teacher roles and responsibilities not discussed Matching funds not identified Role of non-profit organization not clear School district partnership not strong Evaluation weak
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Individuals from all participating institutions have clear roles and communication structures Management plan includes a description of communication, meetings, roles, division of responsibilities, and reporting Distribution of resources is appropriate to the scope of the work All partners contribute to the work and benefit from it Letters of commitment are provided
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Original ideas Succinct, focused project plan Realistic amount of work Sufficient detail provided Cost effective High impact Knowledge and experience of PIs Contribution to the field Rationale and evidence of potential effectiveness Likelihood the project will be sustained Solid evaluation plan
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Consult the program solicitation (NSF 11-517) and NSF Proposal & Award Policies & Procedures Guide (NSF 11-1) Test drive FastLane Alert your Sponsored Research Office and observe internal deadlines for signatures Follow page and font size limits Be aware of current literature in the field and cite it Provide details for key areas of your project Discuss prior results Include evaluation plan with timelines and benchmarks
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Put yourself in the reviewers’ place Consider previous reviewers’ comments if resubmitting a proposal Have someone else read the proposal Spell check; grammar check Meet deadlines Follow NSF requirements for proposals involving Human Subjects Call or email NSF Program Officers
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Submitted after deadline Fail to separately and explicitly address intellectual merit and broader impacts in the Project Summary Fail to follow requirements for formatting (e. g. page limitation, font size, and margin limits) Fail to describe mentoring activities for postdoctoral researchers, if any included in proposed budget Fail to provide a data management plan
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Contact us: Joan Prival jprival@nsf.gov Richard Aló ralo@nsf.gov Mary Lee Ledbetter msledbet@nsf.gov Other resources:www.nsf.gov www.nsfnoyce.org
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