Title: Lifespan Office of Research Administration, Grants
1Lifespan Office of Research Administration,
Grants Contracts
- NIH PEER REVIEW CRITERIA AND RESTRUCTURED PHS 398
SF 424 APPLICATION FORMS - Presenters
- Mary L. OBrien and Joan M. Silva
- Administrative Managers
- December 2009
2ENHANCING PEER REVIEWChanges to Application
Forms and InstructionsOctober 6, 2009
3Enhancing NIH Peer Review
- Facilitate changing nature of science
- Identify and encourage new and early stage
investigators (ESI) (NOT-09-021) - Ease burden on research enterprise
- Streamline time to award
- Fund the best science, by the best scientists,
with the least amount of administrative burden
4Background
- Year-long Deliberative Effort Gathering Feedback
Input - Request for Information
- NIH Staff survey
- IC White Papers
- Internal Town Hall Meetings
- External Consultation Meetings
- Data Analysis
- Internal and External Working Groups
- Working Groups Established
- to
- Engage the Best Reviewers
- Improve the Quality and Transparency of Review
- Ensure Balanced and Fair Reviews Across
Scientific - Fields and Career Stages
- Continuous Review of Peer Review
5Recap New Policy on Resubmissions
- For January 25, 2009 due dates and beyond, NIH
will accept only a single amendment to the
original application - original new applications (i.e., never submitted)
- competing renewal applications
6Early Stage Investigator (ESI) Policy
- NIH will support New Investigators at success
rates comparable to those for established
investigators submitting new applications - ESIs will comprise a majority of the NIs
supported (FY 2009 funding and beyond). - To ensure appropriate consideration for ESI
eligibility, all NIs will need to update their
eRA Commons profiles, and will now see their
eligibility displayed in eRA Commons.
7Goals of Identifying Early Stage Investigators
(ESIs)
- Encourage transition to independence for
investigators - Counter trend of increasing time spent in
training phase of career - Strongly encourage New Investigators (NIs),
particularly ESIs, to apply for R01 grants when
seeking first-time NIH fundingÂ
8Peer Review Criteria ChangesMay 2009 Review
Meetings Potential FY2010 funding
- New 1-9 Scoring System
- Scoring of Individual Core Criteria
- Templates for Structured Critiques
- For further information, see NOT-OD-09-024
NOT-OD-09-025.
91-9 Scoring System
- The new scoring system will use a 9-point scale
(1 exceptional, 9
poor) - This scale will be used for overall
impact/priority scores AND for individual
criterion scores - Preliminary impact/priority scores will help
determine which applications are discussed
10Scoring of Individual Review Criteria
- Assigned reviewers will use the 9-point scale for
five review criteria - Each assigned reviewers criterion scores will be
reported in the summary statement - Criterion scores will be reported for ALL
applications - Reviewers will consider criterion scores as
appropriate for each application in determining
overall impact/priority score
11Templates for Reviewer Critiques
- Templates contain a box for reviewers to write
their comments for - each of the core review criteria
- overall impact
- other review criteria and additional
considerations - Comments will be in the form of bullet points or
short narratives - The template will be uploaded to become part of
the summary statement
12Restructured Application Forms
13Major Changes to Applications
- Major changes for due dates on or after January
25, 2010 - Restructured application forms for both
paper-based PHS 398 applications and electronic
SF 424 (RR) applications. - New instructions including shorter page limits
14Applications Affected
- These changes affect ALL competing applications
New, renewal, resubmission, and revision (see
NOT-OD-09-149 NOT-OD-10-016) with the exception
of - Applicants who are eligible for continuous
submission (Advisory Group Members,
NOT-OD-09-114) should use current forms and
instructions through February 7, 2010 for R01,
R21, and R34 AIDS applications that would
otherwise have been due on January 7, 2010.
15Goals of Restructured Applications
- Align the structure and content of the forms with
review criteria - To focus the applicants and reviewers on the same
elements - To help ensure a more efficient and transparent
review process
16Overview of the Changes
- Application forms will be revised in three
sections - Research Plan
- Biographical Sketch
- Resource and Facilities
17Application Alignment with Review Criteria
Major Examples
18New Research Plan Components
- Introduction
- Specific Aims
- Background and Significance
- Preliminary Studies/Progress Report
- Research Design and Methods
- Inclusion Enrollment Report
- Progress Report Publication List
- Human Subjects Sections.
- protections, women/minorities, enrollment,
children - Other Research Plan Sections.
- animals, select agents, MPI, consortium, support,
resource sharing - Appendix
19Major Changes to the Research Plan
- Specific Aims will include new language about the
impact of the proposed research. - A single attachment for the Research Strategy
(previously 3 files) increases applicant control
over the look and feel of the application. - Simpler preparation for the applicant
- Easier reading for reviewers
- Electronic validation of page limits for Research
Strategy
20New Research Strategy Section
21Revisions to Biographical Sketch
- Personal Statement added
- Briefly describe why your experience and
qualifications make you particularly well-suited
for your role in the project - Publications revised
- Limit the list of publications or manuscripts to
no more than 15 - Make selections based on recency, importance to
the field, and/or relevance to the application - Biographical Sketch Sample
22Revisions to Address Environment
- Instructions added to Resources
- Provide a description of how the scientific
environment will contribute to the probability of
success of the project - For ESIs describe the institutional investment in
the success of the investigator - Instructions added to Research Plan
- In Select Agents Research section, describe the
biocontainment resources available at all
performance sites
23New Instructions Including Shorter Page Limits
24Goals of Shortened Page Limits
- Reduce the administrative burden
- Focus on the essentials of the science
- Avoid information overload
25Table of Page Limits (Part I)
26Table of Page Limits (Part II)
- Each project or core will follow the page limit
of the equivalent activity code.Â
27Table of Page Limits (Part III) - Table
28What Does the Applicant Need to Do?
29Steps for Success Part 1
- Read about the upcoming requirement changes now
so that you can begin writing your Research
Strategy - Information available on the Enhancing Peer
Review website - Policy Announcement NOT-OD-09-149
NOT-OD-10-016 - Details of Application Changes
- New FAQ
- Training Communications Resources
30Steps for Success Part 2
- In December, go back to the updated FOA or
reissued Parent Announcement - Sign-up for Grants.gov Updates for the latest
issues and news - For both electronic and paper, choose the correct
application package and instructions to download
- SF 424 (RR) ADOBE_FORMS_B
- PHS 398 Revision date June 2009
- Applications submitted using incorrect forms will
be delayed and may not be reviewed!
31Steps for Success Part 3
- Read the new application instructions carefully
- For due dates on or after January 25, 2010,
submit your electronic and paper applications
using the new application forms
32Reminder Revised PHS 2590
- For Noncompeting Continuation Progress Reports
- Revised instructions and forms were required for
all annual reports due on/after October 1, 2009
(All Personnel Report, Biographical Sketch,
Human Embryonic Stem Cells). - The PHS 2590 now includes the instruction to
address any changes to the innovative potential
of the project (NOT-OD-09-139 NOT-09-150).
33For additional information
- Enhancing Peer Review at NIH Web Site
- http//enhancing-peer-review.nih.gov
34Application Support
- NIH Grants Information Help Desk For questions
about the content of new forms and instructions. - E-mail grantsinfo_at_od.nih.gov or
- Phone 301-435-0714
- Grants.gov Contact Center For questions on form
functionality or submission to http//www.grants.g
ov/. - E-mail support_at_grants.gov
- Phone 1-800-518-4726
- NIH eRA Help Desk For post-submission questions
or technical issues that threaten NIHs timely
receipt of your application. - Web support http//ithelpdesk.nih.gov/eRA/
- Phone 1-866-504-9552 or 301-402-7469
35Lifespan Office of Research Administration,
Grants and Contracts
- For further assistance, please contact your
Grants and Contracts Administrator
http//www.lifespan.org/research/contact/docs/gran
tcontractadministrators.pdf or - Mary L. OBrien, Administrative Manager,
mobrien_at_lifespan.org, X44487 - Joan M. Silva, Administrative Manager,
jsilva_at_lifespan.org, X44006