Title: SocialBehavioral Sciences and Education Research
1Social/Behavioral Sciences and Education Research
- Junior Faculty Workshop
- Texas AM University System
- November 3-4, 2005
2Welcome!
- Moderator Robyn Pearson, Office of Proposal
Development, TAMU-CS - Panelist Introductions
- Participant Introductions
- Discussion topics
- Common partnership elements
- Common research interests
- Possible funding opportunities
- Summary
3Goals for this Breakout Session
- Discuss existing collaborative projects to
provide a frame of reference - Identify common partnership elements, both
advantages and disadvantages - Identify common research interests among
participants and panelists - Identify needs that might be filled through
collaborative research
4Goals (cont.)
- Identify potential collaborative teams or
cross-disciplinary teams - Identify action items to support team development
- Identify possible funding opportunities
- Prepare summary of session for Friday
5Panelists
- Dr. Lauren CifuentesAssociate Professor,
Department of Educational Psychology, TAMU-CS
(laurenc_at_tamu.edu) - Dr. Sarah GatsonAssociate Professor, Department
of Sociology, TAMU-CS (gatson_at_tamu.edu) - Dr. B. Lee Green, Associate Professor, Department
of Health Kinesiology and Director, Center for
the Study of Health Disparities, TAMU-CS
(lgreen_at_hlkn.tamu.edu)
6Panelists
- Dr. Sharon McWhinney, Professor, Department of
Agriculture, Nutrition and Human Ecology, PVAMU
(slmcwhinney_at_pvamu.edu) - Dr. Edward Murguia, Associate Professor,
Department of Sociology and Director, The
Mexican American and US Latino Research Center,
TAMU-CS (murguia_at_tamu.edu)
7Examples of Collaborative Projects
- Green McWhinney Reducing Health Disparities
through Health Promotion and Disease Prevention
Reducing Risk across the Lifespan among African
Americans and Hispanic Populations - 2005 ISE Secret Lives of Bats, Blood Cells, and
Biologists. NSF Informal Science Education.
Co-PI with Richard Furuta (PI), Frank Shipman
(Co-PI), Christopher M. Quick (Co-PI), Lauren
Cifuentes (Co-PI), Rita M. Caso (External
Evaluator), and Thomas F. Lynch (Director, Brazos
Valley Natural History Museum). (Pre-proposal
submitted March 17, 2005 590,000). - 2004 Bioengineers and Teachers Working the
Internet, Networks, and Gemeinschaft Research
Experiences for Teachers. National Science
Foundation-Research Experiences for Teachers.
Senior Personnel co-author, with Principal
Investigator Christopher M. Quick, and
Co-Principal Investigator Jim Herman. (Granted,
March 23, 2005) (400,000)
8Examples of Collaborative Projects
- 2004 Pathways to the Doctorate Research
Assistantship Award TAMU Office of the Vice
President for Research and the Sociology
Department (25,000 15,000, respectively).
Funds a graduate student (Ms. Veeda Williams)
from a TAMU System school as a research assistant
for the eBat project. - 2004 Mechanobiology of the Bat Wing
Microvasculature Summer Research Experiences for
Undergraduates. National Science
Foundation-Research Experiences for
Undergraduates. Senior Personnel co-author,
with Principal Investigator Christopher M. Quick,
and Co-Principal Investigator Randy Stewart.
(Not granted, revise and resubmit for 2005 cycle)
(250,000) - 2001 Youth, Technology, and the Proliferation
of Drug Use. Co-Principal Investigator, with
Dr. Edward Murguia and Melissa Tacket-Gibson.
Awarded from National Institutes of
Health/National Institutes on Drug Abuse.
(290,000)
9Advantages of partnerships
- Partnerships are often more competitive
- Allow better leveraging of resources and
expertise - Increase the researchers visibility
- Bring direct and indirect funds to your
institution - Increase faculty potential for cross-disciplinary
research, particularly at the program or center
level - Foster collaborative and cross-disciplinary
research opportunities for students
10Partnership challenges
- Time more effort and longer lead time for
proposal development - Distance more money may be needed for travel,
research, etc. - Communication greater reliance on electronic
resources (e-mail, list-serves, etc.) - Must be a win-win situation to be sustainable and
grow - Requires fiscal cooperation and equal commitment
and effort among partners
11Partnership development
- Assemble a proposal development team, defining
reasons for and nature of the partnership - Clarify each team members project role and
proposal writing responsibility - Use RFP as road map to concept development
- Distill concepts and arguments into linear
presentation - Converge proposal drafts and interactions to
final text
12Common Research Interests of Panelists and
Participants
- Geographical links
- Latino research, Border cultures
- Transition to college and college retention
- Culturally sensitive instruction/curricula
- Obesity, health, physical activity, teaching
styles - Community and citizenship
- Educational extension and access, especially to
underserved groups
13Common Research Interests of Panelists and
Participants
- Behavioral intervention
- Trauma (physical/emotional), recovery, awareness
- Acculturation, Ethnic Identity, Sexual Identity
- Memory
- Contextual and cultural aspects of memory
memory beliefs - Alzheimers Disease
14Intersections of Research
15Finding Funding Opportunities
- Handout Beta version of the VPR/OPD Identifying
External Funding Opportunities, one chapter in
the larger Proposal Writing Workbook being
developed by the Office of Proposal Development
at Texas AM University - Comprehensive listing of funding newsletters,
search engines, and funding agencies
16Finding Funding Opportunities
- Handout Beta version of the VPR/OPD Toolkit for
Humanities Social Science Funding is the first
draft of one chapter in the larger Proposal
Writing Workbook being developed by the Office of
Proposal Development at Texas AM University. - These listings are a compilation of annual
funding opportunities in the humanities and
humanities-related social sciences identified
over the past year.
17Finding Funding Opportunities
- Handout Beta version of the VPR/OPD Toolkit for
Programs for Junior Faculty - There are a variety of programs aimed
specifically at junior (tenure-track,
non-tenured) faculty funded by agencies,
foundations and professional associations. These
programs range from large multi-year grants such
as the NSF CAREER program (gt400K over 5-years)
to smaller, more targeted grants such as Franklin
Research Grants (6K, 1-year grants offered by
the American Philosophical Society).
18Finding Funding Opportunities
- Texas AM University Research Funding Bulletin
- http//rf-web.tamu.edu/funding/bulletin.html
- Published Monthly by Texas AM Research
Foundation, editor Linda Ramirez
lramirez_at_rf-mail.tamu.edu
19Other Funding Links
- University of Iowa Grants Bulletin
- http//www.lib.msu.edu/harris23/grants/percat.htm
- APA Psychology Research Funding Bulletin
- http//www.apa.org/science/researchfunding.html
- American Sociological Association Funding
Opportunities - http//www.asanet.org/page.ww?sectionFundingnam
eFundingOpportunities - Office of Justice Program Funding
- http//www.ojp.usdoj.gov/
20Other Funding Links
- Duke University Office of Research Support
- http//www.ors.duke.edu/find/announce/deadlines/i
ndex.html - Iowa State Funding Opportunities Database
- http//research.uiowa.edu/dsp/main/?getfundingop
ps - Foundation Center
- http//fdncenter.org/
21Other Funding Links
- FundSource is a tool designed to help behavioral
and social scientists find research funding. It
has been designed to be specific to behavioral
and social science research, freely available
with no subscription costs, and responsive to
your needs and feedback - http//www.decadeofbehavior.org/fundsource/index.c
fm
22Other Funding Links
- H-NET An international consortium of scholars
and teachers, H-Net creates and coordinates
Internet networks with the objective of advancing
teaching and research in the arts, humanities,
and social sciences by sponsoring over 100 free
electronic, interactive newsletters edited by
scholars in North America, South America, Europe,
Africa, and the Pacific. - http//www.h-net.msu.edu/announce/group.cgi?typeF
unding
23Federal Agencies and Foundations
- National Science Foundation
- National Institutes of Health
- US Department of Education
- Foundations
24Specific Programs
- NSF Research in Disabilities Education
- http//www.nsf.gov/pubs/2005/nsf05623/nsf05623.ht
m - The Research in Disabilities Education (RDE)
program supports efforts to increase the
participation and achievement of persons with
disabilities in science, technology, engineering,
and mathematics (STEM) education and careers.
This program provides educational opportunities
for Undergraduate Students. This program provides
indirect funding for students at this level or
focuses on educational developments for this
group such as curricula development, training or
retention. - LOI Jan 16 Full Feb 13
- 100,000/yr
25Specific Programs
- NSF Information Technology Experiences for
Students and Teachers (ITEST) - http//www.nsf.gov/pubs/2005/nsf05621/nsf05621.htm
- ITEST is designed to increase the opportunities
for students and teachers to learn about,
experience, and use information technologies
within the context of science, technology,
engineering, and mathematics (STEM), including
Information Technology (IT) courses. Supported
projects are intended to provide opportunities
for both school-age children and for teachers to
build the skills and knowledge needed to advance
their study, and to function and contribute in a
technologically rich society. ITEST has two
components (a) youth-based projects with strong
emphases on career and educational paths and (b)
comprehensive projects for students and teachers.
- Preliminary due Nov 2 Full Feb 24
- 3 years _at_ 300,000 average
26Specific Programs
- NSF ADVANCE Increasing the Participation and
Advancement of Women in Academic Science and
Engineering Careers - http//www.nsf.gov/pubs/2005/nsf05584/nsf05584.htm
- Partnerships for Adaptation, Implementation, and
Dissemination Awards - Partnerships for Adaptation, Implementation, and
Dissemination Awards support the analysis,
adaptation, dissemination and use of existing
innovative materials and practices that have been
demonstrated to be effective in increasing
representation and participation of women in
academic science and engineering careers. - Deadline January 27, 2006
- 500,000 for 3 years
27Specific Programs
- NSF Law Social Science Program
- http//www.nsf.gov/funding/pgm_summ.jsp?pims_id5
422orgSBEfromfund - Supports social scientific studies of law and
law-like systems of rules, institutions,
processes, and behaviors, including research
designed to enhance the scientific understanding
of the impact of law human behavior and
interactions as these relate to law the dynamics
of legal decision making and the nature,
sources, and consequences of variations and
changes in legal institutions. The Program has an
"open window" for diverse theoretical
perspectives, methods and contexts for study,
i.e., social control, crime causation, violence,
victimization, legal and social change, patterns
of discretion, procedural justice, compliance and
deterrence, and regulatory enforcement. Planning
grant proposals, travel support requests to lay
the foundation for research, and proposals for
improving doctoral dissertation research are
welcome. - Jan. 15
28Specific Programs
- NSF Sociology Program
- http//www.nsf.gov/funding/pgm_summ.jsp?pims_id5
369orgSBEfromfund - The Sociology Program supports basic research on
all forms of human social organization --
societies, institutions, groups and demography --
and processes of individual and institutional
change. The Program encourages theoretically
focused empirical investigations aimed at
improving the explanation of fundamental social
processes. Included is research on organizations
and organizational behavior, population dynamics,
social movements, social groups, labor force
participation, stratification and mobility,
family, social networks, socialization, gender
roles, and the sociology of science and
technology. - Jan 15 and Aug 15
29Specific Programs
- NSF Social Psychology Program
- http//www.nsf.gov/funding/pgm_summ.jsp?pims_id5
712orgSBEfromfund - The Social Psychology Program at NSF supports
basic research on human social behavior,
including cultural differences and development
over the life span. Among the many research
topics supported are attitude formation and
change, social cognition, personality processes,
interpersonal relations and group processes, the
self, emotion, social comparison and social
influence, and the psychophysiological and
neurophysiological bases of social behavior. - Jan 15, July 15
30Specific Programs
- NIH Independent Scientist Award (K02)
- http//grants1.nih.gov/grants/guide/pa-files/PA-0
0-020.html - The Independent Scientist Award (K02) provides up
to five years of salary support for newly
independent scientists who can demonstrate the
need for a period of intensive research focus as
a means of enhancing their research careers. The
candidate must have a doctoral degree and
independent, peer-reviewed research support at
the time the award is made. Some of the NIH
Institutes and Centers, require the candidate to
have an NIH research grant at the time of
application. Other NIH Institutes and Centers
will accept candidates with peer- reviewed,
independent research support from other sources.
Candidates are encouraged to explore this issue
with the proper NIH funding unit before preparing
an application.
31Specific Programs
- NIH Mentored Career Award for Faculty at Minority
Institutuions - http//grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/rfa-files/RFA-
HL-04-026.html - The Mentored Career Award for Faculty at Minority
Institutions (K01) is a three to five-year
non-renewable career development award made to
faculty at a minority institution. The faculty
member must hold a Ph.D., M.D., D.V.M., D.O., or
equivalent professional degree and wish to
develop research capabilities in research areas
relevant to the mission of the NHLBI. The
candidate or the awardee is in the career stage
that will benefit from a mentor who is an
accomplished investigator, either at the same
institution or at a collaborating research
center. - May 20, 2006
- 300,000/yr average
32Specific Programs
- NIH Health Disparities Among Minority and
Underserved Women - http//grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/pa-files/PA-04
-153.html - The purpose of this initiative is to stimulate
research aimed at reducing health disparities
among racial/ethnic minority and underserved
women. More specifically, this initiative seeks
applications for (1) research related to health
promotion or risk reduction among minority and
underserved women age 21 and older and, (2)
intervention studies that show promise for
improving the health profile of minority and
underserved women.
33Specific Programs
- NIH School-Based Interventions to Prevent Obesity
- http//grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/pa-files/PA-04
-145.html - This Program Announcement (PA) encourages the
formation of partnerships between academic
institutions and school systems in order to
develop and implement controlled, school-based
intervention strategies designed to reduce the
prevalence of obesity in childhood. This
initiative also encourages evaluative comparisons
of different intervention strategies, as well as
the use of methods to detect synergistic
interactions between different types of
interventions.
34Specific Programs
- NIH Research on the Economics of Diet, Activity,
and Energy Balance - http//grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/pa-files/PA-05
-009.html - Obesity has become a major focus of public health
efforts at the national, State, and local levels.
The major focus of the Program Announcement (PA)
is to solicit projects that enhance the
state-of-the-science on the causes of obesity and
to inform federal decision making on effective
public health interventions for reducing the rate
of obesity in the United States. Research
strategies that nest economic analysis within a
broader interdisciplinary context of other social
and behavioral sciences as well as the
epidemiological, bio-statistical, medical, and
biological disciplines relevant to public health
policy are especially encouraged.
35Specific Programs
- NIH Understanding Mechanisms of Health Risk
Behavior Change in Children and Adolescents - http//grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/pa-files/PA-04
-121.html - The concept of health risk behavior change is
used in this program announcement to encompass
the evolution of specific health impairing
behaviors. Of particular interest are factors and
processes that influence the initiation,
continuation, and/or cessation of one or more of
the following health risk behaviors (1)
substance abuse, (2) inadequate exercise and poor
dietary practices as they relate to being
overweight or obese, and (3) intentional and
unintentional injuries.
36Specific Programs
- US Department of Education - Institute for
Educational Sciences - http//www.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ies/programs.
html - Students with disabilities are as defined in the
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act as
a child (i) with mental retardation, hearing
impairments (including deafness), speech or
language impairments, visual impairments
(including blindness), serious emotional
disturbance (referred to in this title as
emotional disturbance), orthopedic impairments,
autism, traumatic brain injury, other health
impairments, or specific learning disabilities
and (ii) who, by reason thereof, needs special
education and related services. - The Institute supports research that contributes
to improved academic achievement for all
students, and particularly for those whose
education prospects are hindered by conditions
associated with poverty, minority status,
disability, family circumstance, and inadequate
education services.
37ED - Institute for Educational Sciences
- Within each research program one or more of the
goals may apply (a) Goal One identify
existing programs, practices, and policies that
may have an impact on student outcomes and the
factors that may mediate or moderate the effects
of these programs, practices, and policies (b)
Goal Two develop programs, practices, and
policies that are potentially effective for
improving outcomes (c) Goal Three establish
the efficacy of fully developed programs,
practices, or policies that either have evidence
of potential efficacy or are widely used but have
not been rigorously evaluated (d) Goal Four
provide evidence on the effectiveness of
programs, practices, and policies implemented at
scale and (e) Goal Five develop or validate
data and measurement systems and tools.
38IES FY2005 Research Grant Competitions
- Reading and Writing Education Research
- Mathematics and Science Education Research
- Cognition and Student Learning Education Research
- Reading and Writing Special Education Research
- Mathematics and Science Special Education
Research - Language and Vocabulary Development Special
Education Research - Serious Behavior Disorders Special Education
Research - Early Intervention and Assessment for Young
Children with Disabilities Special Education
Research - Secondary and Post-Secondary Outcomes Special
Education Research - Teacher Quality Read/Write Education Research
39IES FY2005 Research Grant Competitions (Cont)
- Teacher Quality Math/Science Education Research
- Special Education Teacher Quality Research
Read/Write - Special Education Teacher Quality Research
Math/Science - Individualized Education Programs Special
Education Research - Education Finance, Leadership, and Management
Research - Assessment for Accountability Special Education
Research - National Assessment of Educational Progress
Secondary Analysis Research Program - Research on High School Reform
- Education Research and Development Centers
- Postdoctoral Research Training Fellowships in the
Education Sciences
40Specific Programs
- ED Special Education Research on Individualized
Education Programs - http//www.ed.gov/programs/specediep/2006-324i.do
c - For the purpose of this Request for Applications
(RFA), students with disabilities are as defined
in the Individuals with Disabilities Education
Act as a child (i) with mental retardation,
hearing impairments (including deafness), speech
or language impairments, visual impairments
(including blindness), serious emotional
disturbance (referred to in this title as
emotional disturbance), orthopedic impairments,
autism, traumatic brain injury, other health
impairments, or specific learning disabilities - Due 11/17
41Specific Programs
- ED - Special Education Research on Secondary and
Post-Secondary Outcomes - http//www.ed.gov/programs/specedoutcomes/2006-32
4s.doc - The Institute supports research that contributes
to improved academic achievement for all
students, and particularly for those whose
education prospects are hindered by conditions
associated with poverty, minority status,
disability, family circumstance, and inadequate
education services. - Due 11/17
42Specific Programs
- ED Special Education Teacher Quality Research
Grants Program - http//www.ed.gov/programs/specedtqmath/2006-324mw
.doc - The Institute's Special Education Teacher Quality
Research program holds two competitions (1)
Special Education Teacher Quality Reading and
Writing and (2) Special Education Teacher Quality
Mathematics and Science. - Improvement of the following education outcomes
(a) readiness for schooling (pre-reading,
pre-writing, early mathematics and science
knowledge and skills, and social development)
(b) academic outcomes in reading, writing,
mathematics, and science (c) student behavior
and social interactions within schools that
affect the learning of academic content (d)
skills that support independent living for
students with significant disabilities and (e)
educational attainment (high school graduation,
enrollment in and completion of post-secondary
education). - Aug 4 and Nov 17
43Specific Programs
- ED Research on High School Reform
- http//www.ed.gov/programs/hsresearch/2006-305r.d
oc - (a) Goal One identify existing programs,
practices, and policies that may have an impact
on student outcomes and the factors that may
mediate or moderate the effects of these
programs, practices, and policies (b) Goal Two
develop programs, practices, and policies that
are potentially effective for improving outcomes
(c) Goal Three establish the efficacy of fully
developed programs, practices, or policies that
either have evidence of potential efficacy or are
widely used but have not been rigorously
evaluated (d) Goal Four provide evidence on
the effectiveness of programs, practices, and
policies implemented at scale and (e) Goal Five
develop or validate data and measurement
systems and tools - Due 11/10
44Specific Programs
- ED Reading and Writing Special Education
Research Grants Program - http//www.ed.gov/programs/specedreading/2006-324
g.doc - (a) Goal One identify existing programs,
practices, and policies that may have an impact
on student outcomes and the factors that may
mediate or moderate the effects of these
programs, practices, and policies (b) Goal Two
develop programs, practices, and policies that
are potentially effective for improving outcomes
(c) Goal Three establish the efficacy of fully
developed programs, practices, or policies that
either have evidence of potential efficacy or are
widely used but have not been rigorously
evaluated (d) Goal Four provide evidence on
the effectiveness of programs, practices, and
policies implemented at scale and (e) Goal Five
develop or validate data and measurement
systems and tools. - Due 8/4
45Specific Programs
- USDA - Higher Education Program Hispanic-Serving
Institutions Education Grants Program - http//www.csrees.usda.gov/fo/fundview.cfm?fonum
1094 - This competitive grants program is intended to
promote and strengthen the ability of
Hispanic-Serving Institutions to carry out higher
education programs in the food and agricultural
sciences. Programs aim to attract outstanding
students and produce graduates capable of
enhancing the Nation's food and agricultural
scientific and professional work force.
46Specific Programs
- 2005 Herbert W. Nickens Award
- http//www.aamc.org/about/awards/nickensaward.htm
- The award is given to an individual who has made
outstanding contributions to promoting justice in
medical education and health care of the American
people. The recipient receives a 10,000 award
and presents the Nickens Lecture at the AAMC
annual meeting. - Dr. Nickens believed that a multidisciplinary
approach is needed to address inequities in
health. Because of this, nominees may come from a
wide range of fields, including medicine, public
health, education, law, nursing, and the social
sciences.
47Specific Programs
- Kenneth and Mamie Clark Award for Outstanding
Contribution to the Professional Development of
Ethnic Minority Graduate Students - http//www.apa.org/apags/members/schawrds.htmlcl
ark - Sponsored by APAGS and developed by the APAGS
Committee on Ethnic Minority Affairs
(APAGS-CEMA), the purpose of the award is to
recognize the efforts of ethnic minority
psychologists (researchers, academics,
clinicians, and/or administrators) for their
contributions and commitment to the academic and
professional development of ethnic minority
graduate students - 500 June 1, 2006
48Specific Programs
- American Association for the Advancement of
Science (AAAS)Awards Mentor Awards - http//www.aaas.org/aboutaaas/awards/mentor/index
.shtml - The AAAS Mentor Award honors individuals who,
during their careers, demonstrate extraordinary
leadership to increase the participation of
underrepresented groups in science and
engineering fields and careers. These groups
include (1) women of all racial or ethnic groups
(2) African American, Native American, and
Hispanic men and (3) people with disabilities.
The award recognizes an individual who has
mentored and guided significant numbers of
students from underrepresented groups to the
completion of doctoral studies or who has
impacted the climate of a department, college, or
institution to significantly increase the
diversity of students pursuing and completing
doctoral studies. - 5,000 July 31, 2006
49Specific Programs
- Lydia Donaldson Tutt-Jones Memorial Research
Grant - African American Success
Foundationhttp//www.blacksuccessfoundation.org/l
cdtj20research20grant.htm - The purpose of the Lydia Donaldson Tutt-Jones
Memorial Research Grant is to support research
that identifies attitudinal and behavioral
contributors to African American academic
success. The interest is to increase the body of
knowledge about African American students who are
excelling in school to aid in the replication of
that success for others. Focus may be upon
student or parental variables, or both. - 2,000 June 9, 2006
50Specific Programs
- Andrew W. Mellon Foundation HBCU
- http//www.mellon.org/programs/highered/hbcu/hbcu
.htm - Support of programs in the arts, humanities,
social sciences, interdisciplinary fields,
faculty career enhancement, and institutional
building - Institution Building program, designed to provide
support for curricular or administrative projects
that are important parts of the institutions
intermediate or long-range strategic plan. - Continuous deadline variable award amounts
51Specific Programs
- SBC Foundation Grant
- http//www.sbc.com/gen/corporate-citizenship?pid
6418 - The SBC Foundation supports organizations and
programs that enrich and strengthen diverse
communities across the United States, with
emphasis on education, community development,
health and human services, and arts and culture. - The SBC Foundation funds programs designed to
- Increase access to information technologies
- Broaden technology training and professional
skills development - Integrate new technologies to enhance education
and economic development - Reach disadvantaged populations
- 1,000 continuous
52Summary What have we learned?