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Thoughts on grant writing David Fuller Dept. of Physical Therapy McKnight Brain Institute University of Florida ddf@phhp.ufl.edu GMS 6096: Introduction to NIH Grant writing for biomedical sciences. Jan 28, 2015
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How do grants get funded? My view: 3 key considerations that apply to RO1, R21 and RO3.
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How do grants get funded? Good idea
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How do grants get funded? Good idea VERY clearly presented
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How do grants get funded? Good idea VERY clearly presented Luck / Good planning
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The following slides will provide an overview of what *I think are some of the most important aspects of a successful grant application *, others will probably have different opinions
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Reviewers are trying their best. (reviewing is a difficult job)
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Assume nothing except that the reader will be intelligent
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Read as many successful grants as you can.
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What is great art? The Scream Edvard Munch Wheat Field with Cypresses Van Gogh Girl with a Pearl Earring Johannes Vermeer
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Templates usually don’t work The Scream Edvard Munch Wheat Field with Cypresses Van Gogh Girl with a Pearl Earring Johannes Vermeer
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Use all available resources Collaborators: Equipment: Intellectual environment:
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A unifying central hypothesis A good idea when possible. It usually makes the grant easier to read.
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The Aims page should read like a (good) novel Tell a story. Help the reader. Write the review for the reviewer.
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Choose your study section carefully Use the cover letter. Do NOT suggest specific names of reviewers.
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Preliminary data New vs. Senior Investigator New vs. established method Central vs. peripheral hypothesis Often new investigators have more preliminary data than they think…
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Never, ever, ever “just submit and see what happens”
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Do not wait until the last minute for: Abstract Rebuttal Vertebrate animals Personal statements Etc.
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*Acronyms are almost always a terrible idea *unless it is “DNA” or something at that level of public awareness
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Figures & tables need to be very easy to read
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Revise, Tweak, Proofread …. alot 100+ hours
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Resubmissions Should I resubmit? Address all concerns The rebuttal is perhaps the most important part of the resubmission
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Be prepared to admit that aspects of your initial idea (or maybe the entire idea) is/are bad Be prepared to admit that your initial draft needs to be “blown up” Resubmissions
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R21 vs. RO3
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R21
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Consider carefully if the submission should be an RO1
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R21: my experience 2 funded R21 grants Pilot data
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RO3 http://grants.nih.gov/grants/funding/r03.htm
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RO3 http://grants.nih.gov/grants/funding/r03.htm
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RO3: my experience http://grants.nih.gov/grants/funding/r03.htm
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Thank You
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