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Title: Research Administration


1
Research Administration For Scientists
  • COMP 290-083
  • Tim Quigg
  • Class 1 January 7
  • Introduction and Overview
  • History of Research Funding in US
  • Overview of Federal Budget Process
  • Overview of Federal Research Budget

2
Email quigg_at_cs.unc.edu
Web page http//www.cs.unc.edu/quigg/
3
Introduction Instructor
  • Call me Tim
  • Associate Chair for Administration and Finance
  • Senior Contract Specialist
  • Co-founder of two software companies
  • CQ Data Systems Learning Experience
  • SoftSpoken, Inc. bought by First Logic

COMP 290-083
4
Introduction Instructor
  • Major Account Rep Motorola Computer Systems
  • CFO/Deputy Director of Large State Government
    Program Appointed by the Governor
  • Director of Large Social Science Research
    Project Funded by DHEW

COMP 290-083
5
Introduction Instructor
  • SRA International
  • Distinguished Faculty
  • President, Southern Section
  • Board Member
  • Frequent Lecturer Workshops/Conferences/S
    hort Courses
  • 30 years experience

COMP 290-083
6
COMP 290-083
7
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When did the federal government
become involved in
funding university research?
10
History External Support for University
Research in U.S.
  • Before WWII
  • Mainly internal sources

Agriculture
  • Notable exception
  • Morrill Act of 1862 Land-Grant Colleges
  • 30,000 acres of federal land/congressional
    representative to each State

COMP 290-083
11
History External Support for University
Research in U.S.
  • Sold to provide a perpetual endowment fund for
  • at least one college where the leading object
    shall be, without excluding other scientific and
    classical studies and including military
    tactics, to teach such branches of learning as
    are related to agriculture and the mechanic
    arts
  • Kentucky (50/acre) Cornell (5.50/acre)

COMP 290-083
12
History External Support for University
Research in U.S.
  • Second Morrill Act of 1890
  • In order to get , State had to show that race
    was not a criterion for admission to land-grant
    institution or
  • Designate a separate land-grant college for
    blacks
  • 1890 land-grants created all over the
    then- segregated South

COMP 290-083
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History External Support for University
Research in U.S.
  • Hatch Act of 1887 Agriculture Experiment
    Station
  • Annual appropriation State match required
  • Smith-Lever Act of 1914 Cooperative
    Extension Service
  • Annual appropriation State match required
  • Current federal from various acts gt 550
    million annually

COMP 290-083
16
History External Support for University
Research in U.S.
  • During WWII
  • University scientists mobilized to apply
    expertise to war effort
  • National Defense Research Council
  • Formed by FDR in June, 1940
  • Forum for bringing university/industry/
    government scientists together
  • 18 month head-start on Pearl Harbor

COMP 290-083
17
History External Support for University
Research in U.S.
  • Office of Scientific Research and Defense
    (OSRD)
  • May 1941
  • Dr. Vannevar Bush, Director
  • Mission to explore a possible government role
    to encourage future scientific progress.
  • Civilian, not military, control

COMP 290-083
18
History External Support for University
Research in U.S.
  • OSRD contracted work to other institutions
  • Carnegie Institute of Technology Large Rocket
    Lab
  • MIT Radiation Lab
  • Western Electric and Bell Labs Sound
    Amplification
  • Emphasis on concentrated, massive rapid
    development
  • Production from model to field e.g., Japanese
    torpedo jammer developed in one week

COMP 290-083
19
History External Support for University
Research in U.S.
  • Three critical secret projects pivotal to
    allied victory in WWII
  • Atomic bomb (Manhattan project)
  • Radar
  • 1935 NRL ship radar
  • 1942 MIT high-frequency, narrow-beam,
    high-resolution
  • Manufactured by Sperry, Westinghouse, Philco
    (for aircraft)

COMP 290-083
20
History External Support for University
Research in U.S.
  • Proximity (variable time) fuze
  • Prior to WWII timed fuze or contact fuze
  • Neither effective against highly maneuverable
    airplanes
  • Section T Applied Physics Lab at Johns
    Hopkins University assigned task of developing
    proximity fuze for Navys 5 guns

COMP 290-083
21
History External Support for University
Research in U.S.
  • Theory
  • Fuze contains miniature radio
    transmitter-receiver
  • Sends out signal
  • When signal reflected back from target reaches
    a certain frequency (caused by proximity to
    target) a circuit closes firing a small charge
    which detonates projectile

COMP 290-083
22
History External Support for University
Research in U.S.
  • Problems
  • Components tiny glass vacuum tubes
  • Force of 20,000 gs when fired (2800 ft./sec.
    muzzle velocity)
  • 25,000 revolutions/minute through rifling
    grooves
  • Moisture
  • Self-destruct feature for dudes

COMP 290-083
23
History External Support for University
Research in U.S.
  • Importance to war effort
  • James V. Forrestal, Secretary of the Navy
    said, The proximity fuze has helped me blaze
    the trail to Japan. Without the protection this
    ingenious device has given the surface ships of
    the fleet, our westward push could not have been
    so swift and the cost in men and ships would
    have been immeasurably greater
  • Prime Minister, Winston S. Churchill was
    quoted with These so- called proximity fuzes,
    made in the United States.., proved potent
    against the small unmanned aircraft (V-1) with
    which we were assailed in 1944.
  • And Commanding General of the Third Army,
    George S. Patton said, The funny fuze won the
    Battle of the Bulge for us. I think that when
    all armies get this shell we will have to devise
    some new method of warfare.

COMP 290-083
24
History External Support for University
Research in U.S.
  • Bushs final report The Endless Frontier
  • Two principles for expanding R D in U.S.
    Universities
  • Federal government as patron of science
  • Government support should ensure a free rein of
    investigation by scientists into topics and
    methods of their choice

COMP 290-083
25
History External Support for University
Research in U.S.
  • This report lead to the establishment of
    National Science Foundation (NSF) in 1950
  • Independent government agency
  • National Science Board
  • 24 members plus director
  • Appointed by President

COMP 290-083
26
History External Support for University
Research in U.S.
  • Responsible for promoting science and
    engineering
  • Six priority areas
  • Mathematical Sciences
  • Social, Behavioral, and Economic Sciences
  • Biocomplexity in the Environment
  • Information Technology Research
  • Nanoscale Science and Engineering
  • Learning for the 21st Century Workforce

COMP 290-083
27
Excerpts from the State of the Union Address
January 4, 1950
Sound bite Transcript "The value of our natural
resources is constantly being increased by the
progress of science. Research is finding new ways
of using such natural assets as minerals, sea
water, and plant life. In the peaceful
development of atomic energy, particularly, we
stand on the threshold of new wonders. The first
experimental machines for producing useful power
from atomic energy are now under construction. We
have made truly the first beginnings in this
field, but in the perspective of history, they
may loom larger than the first airplane, or even
the first tools that started man on the road to
civilization.
Harry S. Truman
28
KEY HISTORICAL DATES APRIL 27, 1950 Final
passage by House of Representatives of bill
creating the National Science Foundation. House
passed the original bill, H.R. 4846, on March 1
by 247-126 vote. APRIL 28, 1950 Final passage
of science bill by the Senate. Original Senate
bill, S.247, was passed on March 18. MAY 10,
1950 President Harry S. Truman signed the bill
creating the National Science Foundation. Truman
announced this signing in the morning from the
rear platform of a train in Pocatello,
Idaho. SEPTEMBER 27, 1950 NSF's first budget of
225,000 was approved by President
Truman. NOVEMBER 2, 1950 President Truman
announced his appointments to The National
Science Board. DECEMBER 12, 1950 The first
meeting took place of the National Science Board
in the White House.
29
  • NSF by the Numbers
  • NSF annual budget 4.789 billion (in Year
    2002)
  • NSF's share of total annual federal spending
    for RD 4
  • NSF's share of federal funding for all basic
    research done at academic institutions 23
  • NSF's share of federal funding for basic
    academic research in physical sciences (36)
    environmental sciences (49) engineering (50)
    mathematics (72) computer science research
    (78) and anthropology (100).
  • Number of organizations (colleges and
    universities, schools, nonprofit institutions,
    and small businesses) receiving NSF funds each
    year nearly 2,000
  • Number of proposals that NSF competitively
    reviews each year 32,000
  • Approx. number of total awards funded each
    year 20,000
  • Approx. number of new awards funded each year
    10,000
  • Number of reviewers (scientists and engineers)
    who evaluate proposals for NSF each year 50,000
  • Number of reviews done each year 250,000
  • Number of students supported through NSF's
    Graduate Research Fellowship Program since 1952
    36,000
  • Number of people (teachers, students,
    researchers, post-doctorates and trainees) that
    NSF directly supports nearly 200,000

30
Overview of Federal Budget Process
31
Executive Office of the President (EXOP) White
House Office
Office of Management Budget (OMB)
Office of the Vice President (OVP)
Presidents Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board
(PFIAB)
National Security Council (NSC)
Office of Policy Development (OPD)
US Trade Representative (USTR)
Council of Economic Advisors (CEA)
Office of Administration (OA)
Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP)
Primarily career staff
Council of Environmental Quality (CEQ)
Office of Science Technology Policy (OSTP)
Political
Mix of detailees, career, political
32
The Budget Process
33
The Budget Process
Guidance
34
The Budget Process
35
The Budget Process
Budget Request
36
The Budget Process
Passback
Budget Request
37
The Budget Process
Appeal
Passback
Budget Request
38
The Budget Process
Presidents Budget Request
39
The Budget Process
  • Budget Resolution
  • 302(b) Allocation
  • Subcommittee Markup
  • Committee Markup
  • Floor Vote
  • Conference

40
The Budget Process
SAPs
Hearings
  • Budget Resolution
  • 302(b) Allocation
  • Subcommittee Markup
  • Committee Markup
  • Floor Vote
  • Conference

41
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The Budget Process
Bills
43
The Budget Process
Apportionment

44
The DOE/SC Budget Cycle
45
Overview of Federal Budget
46
Government Spending as a Share of GDP, 2000
47
Outlays as a Percent of GDP
Between 1966 and 1999, spending on Social
Security, Medicare and Medicaid, and interest as
a percentage of GDP grew, while spending on
defense fell.
48
Total Government Surplus or Deficit as a Percent
of GDP
49
The National Debt is 6.9 Trillion!
50
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Composition of Federal Revenues
52
The Federal Government Dollar- Where It Comes From
53
The Federal Government Dollar--Where It Goes
54
U.S. RD Spending Growth Is Due Mostly to
Private Sector
55
Increased U.S. RD Spending Is Due Mostly to
Private Sector(Cumulative New Money,
1993-1999)
56
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57
Historical RD Priorities(obligations, in 1996
constant dollars)
58
FY 2002 Proposed RD Budget (98 Billion BA)
Total includes additions resulting from Defense
Budget Amendment
59
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66
Earmarks to Universities CollegesIncreasing
and Undermining Competitive, Merit-Based Efforts
in Some Fields
67
Further Information
  • OMB website
  • www.whitehouse.gov/omb
  • Presidents budget
  • w3.access.gpo.gov/usbudget
  • AAAS Science Policy Programs
  • www.aaas.org/spp/
  • DOEs Office of Science
  • www.er.doe.gov
  • NSF Science Resources Studies
  • www.nsf.gov/sbe/srs/fedfunds/start.htm

68
Remember
COMP 290-083
69
Reading Assignments for Next Week The
Art of Grantsmanship by Jacob Kraicer
http//www.utoronto.ca/cip/sa_ArtGt.pdf
Zen in the Art of Grantsmanship
http//www.mindspring.com/bozartmt/zen_in.htm
l
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