Title: Office of Proposal Development
1Strategies for Success at NIH a Faculty Panel
Discussion
- Office of Proposal Development
- Division of Research Graduate Studies
- February 19, 2008
- John Ivy
- johnivy_at_tamu.edu
- 458-4280
2Today's Agenda
- Word from our sponsor
- the Office of Proposal Development
- Overview of NIH
- Structure, funding mechanisms, funding
opportunities, review criteria, the review
process - Faculty Panel
- QA, discussion, wisdom
3Office of Proposal Developmenthttp//opd.tamu.edu
/
- Unit of the Division of Research and Graduate
Studies - Supports faculty in the development and
preparation of research and educational proposals - Junior faculty
- Center-level initiatives
- Multidisciplinary research teams
- Research affinity groups
- Diversity in the research enterprise
4OPD Proposal Support
- Assistance with finding funding opportunities
- Information on particular programs
- What is the funding agency looking for?
- Experiences of other TAMU faculty who have
applied for that program - What types of projects have been funded?
- Project planning
- Strategic planning based on review criteria
- Education and outreach components
- Proposal editing
- Conformity with solicitation requirements
- Clarity and organization
- Grammar, punctuation, spelling
- What OPD does not do
5OPD Website http//opd.tamu.edu/
- Funding opportunities
- Upcoming seminars
- Proposal resources
- Resources for junior faculty
- Craft of Grant Writing workbook
- Presentations from past seminars
6OPD 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
7NIH Mission
- NIH is the steward of medical and behavioral
research for the Nation. Its mission is - science in pursuit of fundamental knowledge about
the nature and behavior of living systems and - the application of that knowledge to extend
healthy life and reduce the burdens of illness
and disability.
8NIH Goals
- It's goals are
- foster fundamental creative discoveries,
innovative research strategies, and their
applications as a basis to advance significantly
the Nation's capacity to protect and improve
health - develop, maintain, and renew scientific human and
physical resources that will assure the Nation's
capability to prevent disease - expand the knowledge base in medical and
associated sciences in order to enhance the
Nation's economic well-being and ensure a
continued high return on the public investment in
research and - exemplify and promote the highest level of
scientific integrity, public accountability, and
social responsibility in the conduct of science.
9NIH 20 Institutes, 7 Centers
10National Institutes of Health
- NIH is a basic research agency
- Each Institute has its own mission
- Each Institute has its own budget
- Each Institute has its own activities
- Each Institute has its own ways of doing things
- When youre planning to submit a grant, check
with Program Officers from different institutes
to determine their specific policies and interest
in your science.
11FY 2007 Operating PlanNIH Discretionary Budget
Authority 29.228 Billion
- gt80 awarded to gt325,000 extra-mural researchers
12Unsolicited vs. Solicited
- NIH makes a distinction between solicited versus
unsolicited proposals - Unsolicited (investigator-initiated) proposals
(82) - Parent Announcements (Program Announcements, PA)
- Solicited (agency-initiated) proposals (18)
- Program Announcements (PA)
- New research programs and updates to ongoing
programs (renewable) - Request for Applications/Proposals (RFA/RFP)
- One time request to fulfill specific agency
research objective or need
13NIH Funding Mechanisms
- Three principal types
- Training T F
- Kareer K
- Research Project Grant R
- R01, R03, R21
14Identify 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
15Identify 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
16(No Transcript)
17Parent Announcements
18Identifying NIH Solicitations by Topic
19Success Rate FY 2007It's competitive out there!
- Research Project Grant application overall
success rate - 47,455 applications
- 10,100 funded
- 21.3 success rate
- New 18.2
- Continuation 38.7
- Supplements 33.7
DP1, DP2, P01, R01, R03, R15, R21, R33, R34, R36,
R37, R55, R56, RL1, RL2, RL5, RL9, U01, U19
20Speak with the Program Officer early and often
- Do your homework first
- Make an appointment
- Listen to the response
- Request clarification
- Follow up
21Know your NIH Review Criteria
- Significance
- Ability of the project to improve health or
advance the field - Approach
- Feasibility of methods and appropriateness of
budget - Innovation
- Originality of research
- Investigator
- Education, training, relevant experience
- Environment
- Suitability of facilities and institution support
22Understand 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
- NIH Grant Review Process Video
- Provides a list of study section rosters
23Understand the NIH Review Process
- Review process is merit-based
- All applications receive three individual reviews
- Streamlining 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 - Scientific Review Officer prepares a written
summary of your proposal based on written
critiques and Study Section discussion - Summary statement is sent to PI
24Write for Reviewers
- Reviewers are
- Smart, accomplished, dedicated, and fair
- Reviewers also are
- Busy
- Overworked
- Tired
- Skeptical
- May not be as knowledgeable about the details
of the proposed topic as is the PI
25Revisions
- 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 SRO or the IC Program Officer
26Additional Resources
- Office of Proposal Development,
TAMU http//opd.tamu.edu/ - Funding Opportunitieshttp//opd.tamu.edu/funding-
opportunities - Resources for Junior Facultyhttp//opd.tamu.edu/r
esources-for-junior-faculty - The Craft of Grant Writing workbookhttp//opd.tam
u.edu/the-craft-of-writing-workbook - National Institutes of Health http//www.nih.gov/
- Grant Application Basicshttp//grants.nih.gov/gra
nts/grant_basics.htm - All About Grants Tutorialhttp//www.niaid.nih.gov
/ncn/grants/default.htm - Annotated R01 Research Plan and Summary
Statementhttp//www.niaid.nih.gov/ncn/grants/app/
- Mock Peer Review Videohttp//www.csr.nih.gov/Vide
o/Video.asp - CRISP funded biomedical researchhttp//crisp.cit.
nih.gov/
27Panelists
- Robb Chapkin, Ph.D.Professor and University
Faculty Fellow, Dept. of Nutrition and Food
Science, College of Agriculture and Life
Sciences, TAMU - Paul Hardin, Ph.D.Professor, John W. Lyons
Chair, Dept. of Biology, College of Science, TAMU - Geoffrey Kapler, Ph.D.Professor and Associate
Head, Dept. of Molecular and Cellular Medicine,
College of Medicine, HSC
28Panelists (cont.)
- Marcia Ory, Ph.D., M.P.H.Regents Professor,
Dept. of Social and Behavioral Health, School of
Rural Public Health, HSC - Thomas Spencer, Ph.D.Associate Professor and
AgriLife Research Faculty Fellow, Dept. of Animal
Science, College of Agriculture and Life
Sciences, TAMU - Jane Welsh, Ph.D.Professor, Depts. of Veterinary
Integrative Biosciences and Veterinary
Pathobiology, College of Veterinary Medicine, TAMU