Title: External Funding and Collaboration
1External Funding and Collaboration
- NSF Teacher Enhancement
- Summer Institute
- Champaign, Illinois
- July 2002
2What well cover
- Terminology
- Who should write collaborative proposals
- Essential proposal elements
- Success proposal generation
- Successful proposal implementation
3Terminology
- PI principal investigator
- Co-PI co-principal investigator
- Grant usually involves research, no strict
deliverables - Contract usually are concrete, specific
deliverables - Program officer funding agency point of
contact, provider of information, review panel
organizer - Review panel meeting of individuals selected to
represent different points of view who will
critique submitted proposals
4Terminology (contd)
- Preproposal draft proposal submission that
outlines the general proposal idea and rough
budget. Feedback should be provided on the
pre-proposal before submission of the final
proposal - Full/Final proposal final proposal submission
containing all required proposal elements and a
final (committed) budget
5Terminology (contd)
- Proposal negotiation discussion between review
panel decision and award to determine if the
proposal can be changed in response to the review
panels suggestions and be within a target budget
determined by the program officer. To the
proposers advantage to finish this step FAST.
6Terminology
- Cost sharing amount of money/resources required
by funding agency to be provided by the proposing
institution - In-kind is common
- Personnel time is common
- Cash is rare
7Who should organize collaborative proposals
- Characteristics of good proposal leaders
- Energetic Type A
- Idea generator
- Compromiser
- Consensus builder
- Writing skills
- Organizational skills
- Patience Type B
8What the proposal organizer should bring to the
table
- Institutional strengths
- Personal connections with peers and organizations
in the field - Past experience and successful performance on
previous grants (track record) - Personal credibility to funding agency
9Becoming a proposal organizer
- Becoming a proposal organizer is a chicken and
egg problem - Critical elements come from successful proposals
- First time prospective PIs dont have a track
record - Solution become attached to a mentor who has
been through this before - Caution there are a lot of people who have
been through this before and do it wrong
10Levels of responsibility
- Key personnel
- PI
- Co-PI
- Senior scientist
- Unnamed contributor
- General expertise
11Responsibilities
- Institutions Office of Grants and Contracts (or
Office of Sponsored Programs or ) - Institutional signatures
- Proposal submission approval
- Subcontract generation and approval
- Changes to award
- Requesting award funding from funding agency
- Distributing award funding to appropriate
institution budget line
12Responsibilities
- PI
- Technical/funding scontact for the funding agency
- Leader for management and implementation of award
- Approval for charges against the award including
subcontracts - Responsible for cost sharing accounting
- Periodic reports to funding agency
- Management of award
- Recipient of a percentage of the overhead
collected - Answer questions from funding agency
13Responsibility
- Co-PI
- Role defined by the PI and the proposal
- If at an institution different than the PI, will
be funded by subcontract from the PIs
institution - Usually receives (at least partial) credit from
own institution for funding received - At universities, at least, receive partial
remittance of overheads collected along with PI
14Essential Proposal Elements
- Funding opportunity identification
- Collaborators
- Proposal generation
- Proposal outline
- Budget
- Submission
- Reviews returned
- Debriefing for proposal
15Opportunity Identification
- What are you interested in doing (interest drives
proposals not vice-versa)? - Subject area
- Possible partners
- Outcomes
- Ballpark funding required
- Possible cost sharing available
- Resources available
16Exercise
- Create a MS Word document
- Make a list of the opportunity identification
elements on the previous slide for a proposal you
are interested in
17Funding Opportunity Identification
- Compile a list of funding sponsors
- Starting points
- Government agencies
- State agencies
- Industry
- Foundations
- Your own institution
18Funding Opportunity Identification
- Government agencies
- Know the politics
- http//www.whitehouse.gov/infocus/education
- http//www.nochildleftbehind.gov/
- National Science Foundation www.nsf.gov
- http//www.ehr.nsf.gov/ehr/esie/ (ESIE program
website) - Department of Education www.ed.gov
- http//www.ed.gov/index.jsp (Grants)
- Department of Energy http//www.energy.gov
19NSF Opportunities
- Instructional Materials Development (NSF 02-067)
- Centers for Learning and Teaching (NSF 02-038)
- Informal Education (NSF 0160)
20Department of Education
- Go to Department of Education web site
- Click on Grants and Contracts tab
21Funding Opportunity Identification
- State agencies
- State department of public instruction
- E.g. North Carolina http//www.dpi.state.nc.us/
- Use search function on keywords like grants or
funding
22Funding Opportunity Identification
- Industry
- Intel http//www97.intel.com/education/index.asp
- Intel National and Community Grants
- http//www.intel.com/education/sections/corporate3
/index.htm - Matching Gifts/Volunteer Matching Grants Program
- Microsoft http//www.microsoft.com/giving/
23Funding Opportunity Identification
- Foundation
- Generally on the web
- Books of foundations
- Generally every large corporation has a
foundation - Intel (www.intel.com)
- Compaq (www.compaq.com)
- Microsoft (www.microsoft.com)
- Burroughs Wellcome Fund
- http//www.bwfund.org/science_education.htm
24Funding Opportunity Identification
- Foundations
- http//fdncenter.org/
- Search by keyword
- Search by state
- Grant maker search 3.0
25Exercise
- Find one government and one foundation funding
source that might satisfy your requirements
26Opportunity Identification
- Narrowing the list of possibilities
- Determine return on investment (include overhead
time for grant administration) - Make sure it is something you want to do
- Optimally the project is something you were going
to do anyway - Minimally it should not be distracting
- Chasing money for the sake of funding is
counterproductive
27Opportunity Identification
- Meet with the Program Officer (or minimally
arrange a telephone call) - Take a one page white paper of what you think
will respond to the opportunity solicitation - Take a folder of information about your
institution targeted to the opportunity
28Opportunity Identification
- White paper sections
- Project Summary
- Project description
- Background
- Needs
- Project Partners
- Goals
- Outcomes
- Project Design
- Technology Plan
- Work Plan
- Evaluation Plan
- Dissemination Plan
29Opportunity Identification
- White paper sections (contd)
- Biographical Sketches
- Bibliography
30Exercise
- Generate a draft white paper with the preceding
sections for your proposal
31Opportunity Identification
- Agenda for Program Officer meeting
- Provide overview of your institution
- Request a solicitation overview
- Discuss the one page white paper and whether it
responds favorably to the solicitation - Receive pointers from the Program Officer about
white paper changes - Ask Program Officer about other proposals that
have been funded that are similar to the white
paper - Establish a relationship with the Program Officer
that will enable follow-up email and subsequent
visits - Take good notes!
32Opportunity Identification
- Realistically assess chances of winning
- Raw probability
- Ask Program Officer how many proposals submitted
last round and number of winners - Better estimate
- Experience
- Budget
- Meet expectations of solicitation
- Competitors
- Comparison to previous winning proposals
33Opportunity Identification
- Revise white paper
- Send to Program Officer for comments or review
changes by telephone - Use the white paper to solicit partners
- Send the white paper to your Grants Office to
keep them in the loop - Receive feedback, if any
- Receive institutional experience about the
funding agency (success of others, pitfalls)
34Exercise
- Go around the room and assess the probability of
success of a proposal for the funding source
identified
35Collaboration
- Breakdown the solicitation into subject areas
- Ensure there are collaborators with credentials
in each subject area - Utilize networking to find potential
collaborators - Ask Program Officer for potential collaborators
36Exercise
- Add a short phrase about what each potential
collaborator would add to the proposal
37Collaboration
- Establishing collaboration
- One approach is to have a meeting with all
potential collaborators identified - Determine theme for proposal based on
solicitation - Identify how each collaborator supports the theme
- Identify role of each collaborator
- Identify benefits to each collaborator
38Collaboration
- Pitfalls
- Identification of the PI, co-PIs, senior
scientists and unidentified collaborators. All
must be engaged - Collaborators who are too busy
- Not establishing a strong probability of success
for this proposal and the collaborators - Budget
39Proposal Generation
- Two primary jobs
- Content Leader (usually the PI)
- Responsible for content in the proposal
- Defining roles of collaborators, adding
collaborators, removing collaborators - Deciding on budget
- Assigning writing assignments
- Establishing milestone dates
40Proposal Generation
- Logistics Leader
- Forms
- Creating proposal drafts from submitted text
- Enforcing proposal generation timelines
- Calling funding agency to resolve logistical
problems - Calling collaborators
- Interfacing with Grants and Contracts
41Proposal Generation
- Secondary roles
- Content section chairs
- Individual contributors
- Technical writer
- Proof reader
42Proposal Generation
- Steps (6 months to complete)
- White Paper
- White Paper revised
- Pre-proposal (short version of full proposal) and
rough budget - 1st draft full proposal
- 2nd draft full proposal and 1st draft budget
- 3rd draft full proposal and 2nd draft budget
- Final full proposal and final budget
- Signed institutional commitments
43Proposal Outline
- Cover sheet and forms
- Project summary
- Project description
- Background
- Need
- Project Partners and Roles
- Goals and Objectives
- Outcomes
44Proposal Outline
- Project Description (contd)
- Project Design
- Technology Plan
- Work Plan
- Project Management
- Key Personnel
- Advisory Committee
- Evaluation Plan
- Dissemination Plan
- Institutionalization
45Proposal Outline
- Institutional Resources Available
- Bibliography
- Biographical Sketches
- Budget
- PI institution
- Subcontracts
- Current and Pending Support (NSF)
- Project Data Sheet (NSF)
- Letters of Support
46Budget
- Every funding agency has its own form
- Generates most of the disagreements after award
- Can be fatal to the project if miscalculated
- Has the potential to be audited during the
project and after project completion - Cost sharing can be underestimated but better not
be overestimated - Required cost sharing can range from 0 to 50
47Budget
- Proposal submission requires institutional
signature - Engage Grants and Contracts early in the budget
process they can be your best friend or worst
enemy - Determine budget expectations of the funding
agency early
48Budget
- Budget justification
- Shows how you arrived at the numbers you show
- Reviewers key in on certain aspects of the budget
- Amount of funding provided directly to teachers
- Amount of funding for subcontracts
- Amount of funding for overhead expenses
- Make sure anticipated expenditures are allowable
49Budget
- Cost Sharing
- Pre-award costs incurred usually dont count
- NSF has a 90 day rule for costs incurred prior to
award - In-kind as well as cash allowed (fair value)
- Personnel costs are popular
- Cash is unpopular
50Budget
- If budget is not competitive, try
- Negotiate with your institution on indirect costs
- Increase cost sharing
- Decrease scope of work and decrease cost
- Increase economies of scale
- Leverage previous work
- Decrease level (and cost) of personnel involved
51Submission
- Requirements
- Cover letter official transmittal
- Proposal usually several copies required
- Font size
- Margin requirements
- Section lengths
- Signatures gathering PI/co-PI signatures tricky
for multi-institutional proposals - On-time delivery crucial!!!
52Submission
- Plan ahead
- Know what must be done the last week
- Make emergency plans
- Editing
- Photocopying
- Delivery
- Parallelize tasks as much as feasible
53NSF Helpful Hints
- Register your school district NOW with FastLane
- Register as a PI or co-PI NOW you never know
when youll need it
54Exercise
- See if your organization is registered with NSFs
FastLane
55Review Panel/Evaluation
- Review Panel
- Diverse set of content experts to review the
proposal according to the solicitation guidelines - Proposal must address critical items in
solicitation - Proposal must be cost effective
- Written review(s) done by panel and provided to
PI - Recommends funding or no funding
- Program Officer is the point for the final
decision - Budget and scope negotiation after review
56Reviews
- Provided to PI
- Contains strengths, weaknesses and recommendation
- Blueprint for resubmission if proposal declined
for funding - However a different panel will most likely review
a subsequent proposal - There are no guarantees in life
- Panel dynamics can affect the proposal evaluation
57Debriefing
- Debriefing strongly recommended whether the
proposal is funded or not - Will help to establish better relationship with
Program Officer - Will provide insight into program requirements
- Program Officer can describe the ambience in
the room and not just the conclusions - A face-to-face meeting with the Program Officer
will yield the best information
58Proposal Implementation
- Get a fast start even before formal award
- Subcontract generation is usually the biggest
problem - Work should start even before subcontracts are
completed - Tight subcontracts are needed in case of trouble
- Most institutions have standard language for this
59Proposal Implementation
- Set up meeting dates a year at a time
- Establish a web presence and reserve URLs
- Visit the Program Officer as soon as possible
after award for formal debriefing and to show
start-up progress
60Proposal Implementation
- Communicate with Program Officer on a quarterly
basis - Quality quarterly reports will set you out from
the other winning proposals quarterly visits
will really set you apart - Submit all required reports on time
- Affects subsequent proposals
- Communicate program changes to Program Officer
and keep a written record of notification
61Bias
- Hiring proposal writers isnt helpful unless
expertise transfer occurs - Need expertise in own organization
- Writing is only part of the game
- Success is strongly influenced by the content
- Proposal writing cant be an as time allows
activity
62General Helpful hints
- Never start a proposal with less than 3 months to
the pre-proposal or full proposal submission
deadline - My personal limit is 6 months
- Scale the effort required to the expected reward
- Small award amounts should take small amount of
time - For new solicitations, the proposal organizer
should know the solicitation is going to be
released before it is released - Give calls from funding agencies highest priority
63Summary
- Flowchart (ahhh, a programming term) of how to
create and submit successful proposals - There is no one right way to do this
- Proposal writing is a stressful experience
- Success (or hit) ratio is important
- Reward vs. effort is important
64Reference
- Proposal Planning Writing, Lynn E. Miner and
Jerry Griffith, Oryx Press, 1993.