Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byGwendoline Hicks Modified over 8 years ago
1
Research and Creative Activity Sara McLaughlin Mitchell Department of Political Science University of Iowa
2
Overview Apply for grants! Benefits (overhead, grad funding, summer money, etc.) Overhead $$ helps UI too Strong component of tenure cases in many departments Public vs. private sources Today I will focus on my experience with the National Science Foundation.
3
Outline of NSF Grant Review Process Submission of grant proposal to a division of NSF (e.g. Political Science, part of SBE) Proposal reviewed by external reviewers and panelists Panel consists of 8-15 experts Discusses only top 1/3 of proposals Makes recommendations on funding Program officer (e.g. Brian Humes) makes final recommendations
4
Outline of NSF Grant Review Process Can submit to more than one division of NSF CAREER Awards Other programs: IGERT, REU, RAPID, special calls, etc.
5
Basic Elements of a Grant Proposal Letter of interest Abstract/Project Summary Description of Team Members/PIs Project Description Problem/Research Question Theory & Objectives Research Design & Methodology Results from Prior Funding References Budget & Justification, Facilities Biosketches, Current/Pending support Human subjects approval Internal routing form (UIRIS)
6
Grant Writing vs. Research Writing Similarities Importance of ties to program officers/journal editors Strength of theoretical ideas & research design Clarity of proposals/research in written form Significance/importance of research Making data publicly accessible
7
Grant Writing vs. Research Writing Differences Audience Non-anonymity/Reputation Stage of Research Human Subjects Approval Budgets, Justification, Paperwork Recommendation letters/sponsors Greater allocation to research design & feasibility in grants
8
Tips for Grant Writing Get copies of successful proposals and emulate. Have people that know your work and have successfully competed for grants read your proposals. Talk to faculty that have served on NSF panels or panels for other agencies (e.g. NIH has study sections). Talk to people in sponsored programs on campus
9
Tips for Grant Writing Give your letter writers ample notice in advance. You should be aware of funding agencies' agendas/biases. You should think about grant writing as part of your research. You can convert some of the material in your grant applications into research articles and books. Seek out funding from multiple agencies.
10
Tips for Grant Writing Don't let rejection get you down because your chances of success increase with each iteration. Success breeds success so getting first grant is important. Contact program officers and tell them about your research. Bidders conferences Invite program officers to give talks
11
Tips for Grant Writing Follow instructions/guidelines Don’t ask for more money than you need, less is more Spend time on your project summary because for many people this will be their only information Articulate the broader significance of the project clearly. Start early because grant proposals take a lot of time to write & submit.
12
What Helps/Hurts a Grant Proposal Helps Feasibility/Pilot study Solid theoretical argument and strong link to the proposed research design Reputation/past success Trendy topic? Hurts Data collection proposed without theoretical justification No sense for how project fits into broader literature/data collection Poor organization/writing
13
Additional Resources Federal Grants: www.nsf.gov, www.nih.gov www.nsf.govwww.nih.gov University of Iowa: Division of Sponsored Programs: http://dsp.research.uiowa.edu/ http://dsp.research.uiowa.edu/ OVPR: http://research.uiowa.edu/find- fundinghttp://research.uiowa.edu/find- funding International Programs: http://international.uiowa.edu/ http://international.uiowa.edu/
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.