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- Rice university’s nsf advance
- How to obtain funding
Panel discussion presented by Rob Rafael at the 2011 NSF ADVANCE Workshop: Negotiating the Ideal Faculty Position, A Workshop for Underrepresented PhDs and Postdocs in Science, Engineering and Psychology September 18-20, 2010
Funding is critical
- Must be prepared to work hard to garner funding
- Need more than a great idea, though that is a crucial element
- Need to understand the logistics and the process
- Need to submit more than one grant, so need multiple ideas
- Be creative
- Read deeply and broadly
- Talk to lots of people about research
- Think about doing more than one project
- When one is difficult, the other may succeed
- Increases funding opportunities
- Promotes synergy in thinking
- Enhances visibility
- What are the sources available to you?
- Federal (NSF, NIH, DARPA, DOE, NIST, ONR, among many others)
- State
- Private foundations / not-for-profit organizations
- Industry
- Use the web to retrieve information for each source
- Some more detailed, others more obscure
Find out about resources
- Talk to your advisor, faculty in your department about resources in your area of research and in your institution
- Use the internet
- Search for information on organization, what it supports to determine whether to target for funding
- Search for deadline dates and invitations to apply in a given area
- Search services such as IRIS
(External Link)
- Government agencies have detailed pages
- Easy to get lost
- Ask for help
- GrantsNet (
(External Link) ) from AAAS has good links
- Grant Writing (many now available)
-
Proposal Writer’s Guide (Thackery)
-
Research Proposals: A Guide to Success (Ogden and Goldberg)
Get to know funders
- How are proposals reviewed?
- What is the timing?
- What do they support?
- How can you target your research appropriately?
- Is there someone you know associated with the funding agency?
- Talk to them!
- Go to DC and talk to them!
Reasons to talk to program folks
- If you have great, but risky ideas, talk with the program officer to see how best to present them
- Ask what a reasonable budget range would be
- Ask about the role of collaborators in your area of research
How to approach an agency
- Options for contact
- Go in person or make a phone call
- Find an agency person at a national meeting (they often attend to get to know their grantees)
- Be prepared and take as little of their time as possible while getting your message across
- Introduce yourself as a new independent researcher with some general information about yourself
- Have a specific question (or two) and ask if they have any specific advice
Understand the submission process
Find the resources from your institution that support grant submission
- Federal agencies may differ from foundations
- Get to know what they can do to help you identify the appropriate agency
- Get to know what they can do to help you with the process
- Understand the timeline and plan accordingly
Get organized
- Find and read resources that help with grant preparation
- Ask senior colleagues if they will read your proposal and provide feedback
- Ask successful colleagues if you can read their grant
- Try to get onto a review panel (it will change your views!!!)
- Think deeply about your project — be innovative and creative in tackling a significant problem
- Identify the potential sources
- Find the due dates (both agency and internal!)
- Determine which applications to pursue
- Develop your timeline for thinking, writing, rewriting, writing/rewriting, writing/rewriting, etc., final proofreading (critical!) — find out about institutional deadlines you
must meet!!
- Be sure that you get feedback from colleagues before submission
- Include plenty of time for this step in your timeline
- Provides key perspective/input
Source:
OpenStax, Rice university’s nsf advance program’s negotiating the ideal faculty position workshop master collection of presentations. OpenStax CNX. Mar 08, 2012 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col11413/1.1
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