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Applying for an ARC Discovery Grant

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are PIs' (incs international) contributions genuine - are they committing funds ... all CIs and PIs must be ECR - PhD awarded in past 5 yrs (check date! ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Applying for an ARC Discovery Grant


1
Applying for an ARC Discovery Grant
  • Deborah TerrySocial, Behavioural and Economic
    Sciences College of Experts, ARC

2
Assessment process
  • 3 types of reviewers - EACs, OzReaders,
    IntReaders
  • Exec Director (ED) assigns each application to
    two college members (EAC1 EAC2)
  • RFCD codes relevant here
  • IntReaders and OzReaders assigned by EACs/ED
    using
  • title, RFCD codes, keywords 100 word summaries
    A5.1 (project), A5.2 (national benefit,
    importance)
  • ARC assessor database
  • keywords particularly important
  • they determine the assessor pool
  • should not be too general or too specific
  • combine words that define the broad area point
    to the specific aspect of it that is under
    consideration

3
Assessment process
  • every grant is evaluated by 2 EAC members, 2
    OzReaders, and 1 - 5 IntReaders
  • response rate from IntReaders is not high
  • 2 EAC members 2 OzReaders - unlikely to be
    experts in your field
  • two of these assessors - EAC members - will have
    no contact with you
  • i.e, comments are not provided by the EAC members

4
Assessment process
  • ranks (not scores) from all assessors combined
    into a single ranked list
  • ranks averaged over assessors and weighted by the
    number of applications assessed
  • assessors who read only a few applications
    (IntReaders) have little influence on the value
  • EAC1s then consider assessments rejoinders and
    decide whether the rank should change
  • final ranks determined level of funding for the
    successful grants decided upon

5
Assessment process - summary
  • use key words and project summaries to increase
    the chances that the application is sent to the
    most appropriate reviewers
  • IntReaders comments more important than their
    scores - but will be impactful, partic. if point
    to fundamental problems
  • final scores based on rankings - remember,
    assessors who are not experts in your field have
    the most impact on the final rank
  • keep the nature of the readership in mind
  • need to ensure that the application is accessible
    at the same time as showing that you are on top
    of the technical aspects of the project

6
Assessment process - implications
  • assessors who are not experts in your field have
    the most impact on the final rank
  • write the title, aims, background, significance
    sections, 100 word summaries for non-experts
  • need to excite the reader - EACs are reading over
    100!
  • need to have a clear strong start - what are
    you going to do why is it important - make aims
    clear early
  • show evidence of capacity to do project -
    previous work
  • write the approach methodology for the
    IntReaders
  • evidence in their reports that you arent on top
    of the methodology may impact on the final rank
  • make sure it is clear WHAT you will do that it
    is feasible

7
Fellowship score
  • separate fellowship score
  • assessment based on excellence of applicants
    track record and excellence of project
  • additional information provided in section B10.6
    is important
  • fellows contribution to the project
  • research environment of the host institution
  • facilities, support, intellectual environment
  • reasons for not moving to another institution if
    you intend to remain at UQ

8
Investigator(s)
  • two components
  • track record relative to opportunity
  • capacity to undertake the project
  • relative to opportunity is taken seriously
  • provide the information in the relevant section
    that assessors need to make this judgement
  • make use of the section on other evidence of
    impact (e.g., keynote addresses, editorial
    responsibilities, p/grad supervision, citations,
    professional exp, roles in societies etc)
  • increasingly journal quality taken into account
  • highlight evidence of an international research
    reputation - i.e., being linked into to an
    international network
  • use evidence to back up claims about impact

9
Investigator(s)
  • if track record is pulling you down, think about
    how to put together a stronger team for the
    project
  • needs to include one or more members who have
    very strong internationally competitive track
    records
  • teams need to make a case for why they are the
    best team for the project
  • do they have a track record of working together?
  • do they bring complementary skills?
  • is the team appropriately constituted given the
    project?
  • are PIs (incs international) contributions
    genuine - are they committing funds or material
    resources?
  • are all the CIs/PIs needed?
  • does the project come across as being cohesive?

10
Early career researchers
  • ARC allocates a specific amount of funding to
    ECR-only Discovery Projects (approx 10)
  • all CIs and PIs must be ECR - PhD awarded in past
    5 yrs (check date!)
  • can apply for an eligibility exemption
  • cutoff for funding may be lower for ECRs
  • still need strong project and very good record
    (for ECR)
  • decision as to whether to go with ECR-only
    critically dependent on track record/s
  • ECR track records carefully assessed in terms of
    rate of publication, publication outlets, no. of
    first-author publications, evidence of an
    international reputation

11
Early career researchers
  • is your track record/s strong enough for an
    ECR-only application?
  • if yes
  • think about the project whether it would
    benefit from a larger team
  • most important issue is ensuring that you have
    the most appropriate team for the project
  • demonstrate capacity to undertake the research -
    not too ambitious
  • ensure that the research development goals of the
    ARC are met
  • if no
  • think about the project how you can best put
    together an appropriate team
  • ensure that you have a strong justification for
    the team - not just boosting with senior
    researchers how will ECR benefit from the team?
  • if your track record is weak
  • work on publications, pilot work, think about a
    linkage application first

12
Project content
  • significance innovation
  • does it address an important problem?
  • how will the anticipated outcomes advance the
    knowledge base of the discipline?
  • how does the research address a Designated
    National Research Priority (if appropriate)?
  • are the project aims and concepts novel and
    innovative?
  • will new methods or technologies be developed?
  • critically important 30 - why is the research
    important and how is it novel? whats new?
  • you need to build the case for significance
    innovation - remember 4 of the assessors are not
    experts
  • show how project fits into the current
    international state of the field - how will it
    contribute to current debates? why is it at the
    cutting edge of the field?

13
Project content
  • approach
  • are the conceptual framework, design, methods and
    analyses adequately developed, well integrated
    and appropriate to the aims of the project
  • need to convince assessors that you are using the
    appropriate methods and that the team has the
    skills to undertake the research
  • show that you on top of technical aspects of the
    methodology without relying on jargon
  • methods need to be consistent with aims
    feasible
  • project needs to fit the proposed timeframe - 1
    2 year projects are supported 5 year projects
    need to be very strong - for teams with
    outstanding records
  • dissemination of the results - be creative

14
Project content
  • national benefit
  • what is the potential of the research project to
    result in economic and/or social benefits for
    Australia?
  • what is the potential for the research to
    contribute to the designated National Research
    Priorities?
  • may be the critical 10 that gets you over the
    line
  • think about it dont exaggerate
  • not the same as significance innovation
  • avoid glib comments that are not convincing
  • look at the specific goals specified in each of
    the priority areas
  • national benefit can be argued in many ways
  • contribute nationally to cutting edge research
    programs
  • strengthen international position build
    international links
  • create research training opportunities
  • address national problems

15
Budget
  • dont inflate the budget
  • this may impact on scores
  • budget items will be scrutinised
  • need strong case for higher level staff (or
    postdoc) - what will CIs be doing?
  • travel - is it necessary - what is the uni
    funding?
  • teaching relief - is approved if argued well -
    argue in terms of the needs of the project
  • expensive methodologies (fMRI, survey costs) need
    to be justified appropriately costed
  • show value for money

16
Hints
  • check eligibility technical requirements
  • these will be enforced
  • start writing early
  • success rate lower for late applications
  • make sure the writing style and organisation of
    the proposal are clear - use headings etc, EDIT!
  • use the same headings as recommended by ARC
  • think big (in line with ARCs goal of building
    scale focus) but ensure sufficient attention to
    detail
  • significance innovation (SI) must be clear
  • must show that you are on top of the methodology
    project is feasible
  • need a strong compelling start - ensure SI
    overall aims clear

17
Hints
  • think about how specialist non-specialist
    assessors would react to the proposal
  • think about the likely type/range of assessors
  • will it be accessible to multiple audiences?
  • seek feedback at different stages of the process
  • from reader schemes (success higher), colleagues,
    successful grant holders, researchers in related
    areas
  • make sure they read all the application seek
    advice on key words, RFCD codes if
    cross-disciplinary
  • dont recycle projects
  • likely to get similar assessors
  • try again - many fundable projects are not funded
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