Title: Office of Proposal Development Texas A
1Finding and Winning Funding at NIH
- Office of Proposal Development
- February 27, 2007
2Office of Proposal Developmenthttp//opd.tamu.edu
/
- Unit of the Vice President for Research
- Supports faculty in the development and
preparation of research and educational proposals - Junior faculty research
- Center-level initiatives
- Multidisciplinary research teams
- Research affinity groups
- Diversity in the research enterprise
3Office of Proposal Development Website
http//opd.tamu.edu/
- Funding opportunities
- Upcoming seminars
- Proposal resources
- Resources for junior faculty
- Craft of Grant Writing workbook
- Presentations from past seminars
4Office of Proposal Development Staff
- Mike Cronan Center-level proposals, AM System
partnerships, new proposal and training
initiatives, mikecronan_at_tamu.edu - Lucy Deckard New faculty initiative,
fellowships, physical science-related proposals,
equipment and instrumentation, interdisciplinary
materials group, OPD web management,
l-deckard_at_tamu.edu - Phyllis McBride Craft of Proposal Writing
training, NIH and related agency initiatives in
the social and behavioral sciences, editing and
rewriting, p-mcbride_at_tamu.edu - Jean Ann Bowman Ecological and environmental
sciences/agriculture-related proposals and
centers, jbowman_at_tamu.edu - Robyn Pearson Education, liberal arts, social
behavioral sciences, and humanities-related
proposals, support for interdisciplinary research
group development, educational proposals, editing
and rewriting, rlpearson_at_tamu.edu - John Ivy NIH and related agency initiatives in
the biomedical sciences, partnerships with the
TAMU Heath Science Center, johnivy_at_tamu.edu - Libby Childress Scheduling, resources, training
workshop management, project coordination,
libbyc_at_tamu.edu
5Panelists
- Evelyn Tiffany-Castiglioni, Ph.D. Professor and
Head, Dept. of Veterinary Integrative
Biosciences, College of Veterinary Medicine
Biomedical Sciences, TAMU - David McMurray, Ph.D. Regents Professor, Dept.
of Microbial and Molecular Pathogenesis, College
of Medicine, HSC - Joe Sharkey, MPH, Ph.D. Associate Professor,
Dept. of Social and Behavioral Health, School of
Rural Public Health, HSC
6Panelists (cont.)
- Deborah Bell-Pedersen, Ph.D. Associate
Professor, Department of Biology, College of
Science, TAMU - K.C. Donnelly, Ph.D. Professor and Head, Dept.
of Environmental and Occupational Health, School
of Rural Public Health, HSC - Fuller Bazer, Ph.D. Associate VP for Research,
Distinguished Professor and O.D. Butler Chair in
Animal and Life Science, College of Agriculture
and Life Sciences, TAMU
7NIH in a Nutshell
- From a one-room laboratory in 1887 to one of the
worlds foremost research entities - Mission To uncover new knowledge that will lead
to better health for everyone - Basic scientific research in pursuit of
fundamental knowledge about the nature and
behavior of living systems - Applied scientific research to extend healthy
life and reduce the burdens of illness and
disability - Consists of the Office of the Director, 20
Institutes, and 7 Centers
8NIH Extramural Research
- Supports mission by funding research in
- Causes, diagnosis, prevention, and cure of human
diseases - Processes of human growth and development
- Biological effects of environmental contaminants
- Understanding of mental, addictive and physical
disorders - Directing programs for the collection,
dissemination, and exchange of information in
medicine and health, including the development
and support of medical libraries and the training
of medical librarians and other health
information specialists.
9NIH Areas of Research Interest
- Serve as broad categories of NIH-sponsored
research that show potential for future benefits - Encourage institutes to develop new initiatives
within these areas - Applied in a variety of ways, depending on the
institute
10NIH Funding Priorities FY 2007
- Genes, Environment, and Health
- Biodefense
- Pandemic influenza
- NIH Roadmap for Medical Research
- NIH Blueprint for Neuroscience Research
- New investigators
- Clinical research translation
- Specific disease research
- HIV/AIDS
- Diabetes
- Parkinsons disease
- Alzheimers disease
- Post-genomics research
11NIH Budget FY 2007
- 28.6 billion
- Majority of funds are earmarked for extramural
research - Receives 35,000 research project grant
applications each year - 22 of those applications succeed in gaining
research funding
12Identify NIH Funding Opportunities
- NIH Office of Extramural Research
- http//grants1.nih.gov/grants/oer.htm
- http//grants1.nih.gov/grants/guide/index.html
- Search by keyword
- Browse by Requests for Applications (RFAs)
- Browse by Program Announcements (PAs)
- Automatic funding alerts
- Institutes and Centers (IC) homepages
- Listed at http//www.nih.gov/icd
- Go to IC homepage
- Browse or search their Research Funding or
"Extramural Funding section
13Identify NIH Funding Opportunities
- Grants.gov
- http//www.grants.gov/search/agency.do
- Search by keyword
- Search by funding opportunity number
- Search by CFDA number
- Search by category
- Search by agency
- Automatic funding alerts
14Identify NIH Funding Mechanisms
- NIH funding mechanisms page
- http//grants.nih.gov/grants/funding/funding_progr
am.htm - Describes the types of funding mechanisms
available - Numerous funding mechanisms
- Not all institutes support all funding mechanisms
- Popular funding mechanisms
- R01 Research Project Grant
- R03 Small Research Project Grant
- R21 Developmental Research Grant
- K99/00 Pathway to Independence Award
15NIH Career Development Awards
- K Kiosk
- http//grants1.nih.gov/training/careerdevelopmenta
wards.htm - Some directed at retraining, professional career
development, and recognition of career success - K01 Mentored Research Scientist Award
- Provide mentored career development in a new
research area - K08 Mentored Clinical Scientist Award
- Development of independent clinical research
scientist - K02 Independent Scientist Award
- Develop career of newly independent, funded
scientist 5 yr, 75 effort - K05 Senior Scientist Award
- Recognize outstanding scientist with sustained
level of high productivity 5 yr, 75 effort - K99/R00 NIH Pathway to Independence (PI) Award
- 2 years mentored postdoctoral research 3 years
independent research in tenure track position (or
equivalent)
16Identify NIH Grant Cycles
- NIH submission dates/deadlines page
- http//grants.nih.gov/grants/dates.htm
- Three grant cycles per calendar year
- Deadlines vary according to funding mechanism
- New R01s Feb 5, Jun 5, Oct 5
- New R03s and R21s Feb 16, Jun 16, Oct 16
- New K awards Feb 12, June 12, Oct 12
- NB Deadlines for renewals, resubmissions,
revisions, and AIDS/AIDS-related submissions
differ from the above
17Identify Projects Funded by NIH
- CRISP online database http//crisp.cit.nih.gov/
- Includes abstracts of all projects that have
already been funded by all Public Health Service
agencies - National Institutes of Health
- Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
- Food and Drug Administration
- Health Resources and Services Administration
- Office of the Assistant Secretary of Health
- Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
Administration
18Understand the NIH Review Process
- Center for Scientific Review
- http//cms.csr.nih.gov/
- News and Reports
- Peer Review Meetings
- Resources for Applicants
- Describes the peer review process
- Offers a video of a mock review session gt NIH
Grant Review Process Video - Provides a list of study section rosters
19Understand the NIH Review Process
- Review process is merit-based
- All applications receive three individual reviews
- Streamling Reviewers identify those they believe
in the bottom 50 - Study Section discusses the top 50 of
applications (i.e., applications that have not
been streamlined) - Priority score (100-500) and percentile ranking
are sent to PI - Summary statement is sent to PI
- Scientific Review Administrator prepares a
written summary of your proposal based on
reviewers comments and Study Section discussion
20Know the NIH Review Criteria
- Investigator
- Education, training, relevant experience
- Environment
- Suitability of facilities and institution support
- Significance
- Ability of the project to improve health
- Approach
- Feasibility of methods and appropriateness of
budget - Innovation
- Originality of research
21Write for Reviewers
- Reviewers are
- Smart
- Accomplished
- Dedicated
- Fair
22Write for Reviewers
- Reviewers also are
- Busy
- Overworked
- Tired
- Skeptical
- May not be as knowledgeable about the details of
the proposed topic as is the PI
23Revisions
- Three strikes youre out
- Read the reviewers comments
- Take a break
- Re-read the comments
- Dont take them personally
- Read the reviewers comments, AGAIN
- Begin working on the revisions, incorporating the
revisions that you think make your proposal
better than the previous submission - If you have a question about a particular
comment, contact the SRA
24Albert Einstein on Grant Writing
- If you can't explain something simply, you don't
understand it well. - Most of the fundamental ideas of science are
essentially simple, and may, as a rule, be
expressed in language comprehensible to everyone. - Any fool can make things bigger, more complex,
and more violent. It takes a touch of geniusand
a lot of courageto move in the opposite
direction.
25Helpful Links
- NIH grants tutorials
- http//www.niaid.nih.gov/ncn/grants/default.htm
- Grant Application Basics
- How to Plan a Grant Application
- How to Write a Grant Application
- How to Manage Your Grant Award
- Advice on Research Training and Career Awards
- Annotated R01 Grant Application
26Whats new at NIH?
- Electronic proposal submissionPHS398 ? SF424 via
Grants.gov
Jan. 19, 2007
27Whats new at NIH?
- K99/R00 (Jan. '06)
- Mentored postdoctoralindependent investigator
transition - Smaller page limitation on R01s under discussion
28Whats new at NIH?
- Multiple PIs
- Initiated May '06
- Initially few RFAs and PAs during assessment
29Questions and Panel Discussion
- Evelyn Tiffany-Castiglioni, Ph.D. Veterinary
Integrative Biosciences, CVM - David McMurray, Ph.D. Microbial and Molecular
Pathogenesis, College of Medicine - Joe Sharkey, MPH, Ph.D. Social and Behavioral
Health, SRPH - Deborah Bell-Pedersen, Ph.D. Biology, College
of Science - K.C. Donnelly, Ph.D. Environmental and
Occupational Health, SRPH - Fuller Bazer, Ph.D. Animal Science, COALS