Title: Humanities Grants
1Humanities Grants
- Phyllis McBride, Ph.D.
- Assistant Director
- Office of Proposal Development
2Why seek funding?
- To obtain a fellowship to reduce teaching load
and focus on a research project - To travel to an archive, library, or museum to
access primary and secondary materials - To attend a professional conference to give a
presentation and/or networkwith colleagues
3How to identify funding opportunities
- Articulate the topic and purpose of your proposed
research project - Ensures that your research agenda drives your
funding search - Enables you to conduct a more refined search
4How to identify funding opportunities
- Remain open-minded as you search
- Do consider collaborating with a colleague on an
interdisciplinary project - Do consider framing your research project in a
new way - Dont force your topic to fit a program for
which it is obviously not appropriate
5How to identify funding opportunities
- Numerous resources are available to help you find
the funding program that is most likely to
support your research - Campus resources
- Sponsor web sites
- Funding opportunity databases
6How to identify funding opportunities
- Become self-sufficient in conducting searches of
funding opportunity databases - Recognize that self-directed searches are the
most productive - Sign up for automatic funding alerts!
7Consider all possible sources of funds
- Internal funding opportunities
- External funding opportunities
8Consider internal funding
- Departmental grants
- College grants
- Program to Enhance Scholarly and Creative
Activities - Mexican-American and Latino Research Center
- Race and Ethnic Studies Institute
9Consider external funding
- Federal, state, and local grants
- Private, corporate, and community foundations
- Professional associations
10Find external funding
- Community of Science
- http//www.cos.com
- Grants.gov
- http//www.grants.gov
- Foundation Center
- http//foundationcenter.org/pnd/rfp/
- TAMU Office of Proposal Development
- http//opd.tamu.edu/funding-opportunities
11Find funding opportunities Community of Science
- Located at http//www.cos.com/
- Features
- International scope
- Includes opportunities from federal agencies,
private foundations, and corporate sponsors - Presents 24,000 records representing 400,000
opportunities worth more than 33 billion - Offers an automatic funding alert service
12Community of Science
13Community of Science
- Search by keyword, sponsor, or geographic region
14Find funding opportunitiesGrants.gov
- Located at http//www.grants.gov
- Features
- National scope
- Includes opportunities from federal sponsors
only - Single point of contact for all 26 federal
grant-making agencies - Presents more than 900 grant programs
- Offers an automatic funding alert service
15Grants.gov
16Grants.gov
17Find funding opportunitiesFoundation Center
- Located at http//www.fdncenter.org/
- Features
- Profiles of more than 75,000 foundations
- http//lnp.foundationcenter.org/finder.html
- Virtual training classroom
- http//fdncenter.org/learn/classroom/index.jhtml
- Philanthropy News Digest RFP Bulletin
- http//www.fdncenter.org/pnd/rfp/
18Foundation Center
19PND RFP Bulletin
20Major funders of humanities research
- Federal
- National Endowment of the Humanities
- National Endowment for the Arts
- Institute of Museum and Library Services
- American Council of Learned Societies
21National Endowment for the Humanities
- Background
- Created in 1965
- Largest funder of humanities programs in the
United States - Requesting an appropriation of 144,355,000 for
FY 2009
22NEH
- Mission
- Serves and strengthens the nation by promoting
excellence in the humanities and conveying the
lessons of history to all Americans - Dedicated to supporting research, education,
preservation, and public programs in the
humanities
23NEH
- Program areas
- Research
- Education
- Public programs
- Preserving and providing access to cultural
resources - Endowment-wide initiatives
- We the People
- Digital Humanities
- Rediscovering Afghanistan
24NEH
- Funding mechanisms for research
- Fellowships
- Home institution
- Independent research institutions
- Teaching development
- Digital humanities
- Special topics
- Scholarly editions
- Summer stipends
25National Endowment for the Arts
- Background
- Created in 1965
- Largest annual funder of the arts in the United
States official arts organization of the United
States government - Requesting an appropriation of 128,412,000 for
FY 2009
26NEA
- Mission
- To support excellence in the arts, both new and
established - To bring the arts to all Americans
- To provide leadership in arts education
27NEA
- Program areas
- Arts Education
- Dance
- Design
- Folk Traditional Arts
- Literature
- Local Arts Agencies
- Media Arts Film/Radio/Television
- Museums
- Music
- Musical Theater
- Opera
- Presenting
- State Regional
- Theater
- Visual Arts
28NEA
- National initiatives
- The Big Read
- Operation Homecoming Writing the Wartime
Experience - Poetry Out Loud
- NEA Jazz Masters
- American Masterpieces
- NEA Arts Journalism Institutes
- Shakespeare in American Communities
- Great American Voices Military Base Tour
29NEA
- Funding mechanisms for research
- Literature Fellowships for creative writing
and translation projects - Jazz Masters fellowships the nations highest
honor in this distinctly American music - National Heritage Fellowships for master folk
and traditional artists
30Institute of Museum and Library Services
- Background
- Created in 1996
- Primary source of federal support for the
nations 122,000 libraries and 17,500 museums - Requesting an appropriation of 271,246,000 in FY
2009
31IMLS
- Mission
- Primary source of federal support for the
nations 122,000 libraries and 17,500 museums - To create strong libraries and museums that
connect people to information and ideas.
32IMLS
- Program areas
- Collections management
- Community engagement
- Conservation
- Demonstration
- Digital collections/tools
- Formal education
- Informal learning
- Partnerships
- Professional development
- Public programs
- Research
33IMLS
- Funding mechanisms for research
- Research
- Early career development program
- Doctoral programs
- Masters level programs
- Pre-professional programs
- Continuing education programs
- Programs to build institutional capacity
34American Council of Learned Societies
- Background
- Created in 1919
- A private, nonprofit federation of 70 national
scholarly organizations - The preeminent representative of American
scholarship in the humanities and related social
sciences
35ACLS
- Mission
- To advance humanistic studies in all fields of
learning in the humanities and the social
sciences - To maintain and strengthen relations among the
national societies devoted to such studies - To explore new methods and subjects of humanities
research - To represent humanities scholarship at home and
abroad
36ACLS
- Program areas
- American studies anthropology archaeology art
and architectural history classics economics
film geography history languages and
literatures legal studies linguistics
musicology philosophy political science
psychology religious studies rhetoric,
communication, and media studies science,
technology, and medicine studies sociology and
theater, dance, and performance studies. - Proposals in the social science fields listed
above are eligible only if they employ
predominantly humanistic approaches (e.g.,
economic history, law and literature, political
philosophy).
37ACLS
- Funding mechanisms for research
- Fellowships
- ACLS Fellowship Competitions and Deadlines
- http//www.acls.org/grants/Single.aspx?id352
38Conclusion