Title: Grant Applications Made Simple(r)
1Grant Applications Made Simple(r)
- Rose Wiles, David Martin, Sue Heath
- National Centre for Research Methods
- University of Southampton
2Overview
- Sources of funding
- How to convert a research idea into a grant
application with a good chance of success - Who and what you need to know
- How costings work
- How the application process works
- Dos and donts of grant applications useful tips
- Small print this guidance based on past
experience offered in good faith and without
guarantees!
3Who we are
- Rose Wiles, Principal Research Fellow, NCRM 8
NHS grants, 5 charity grants, 2 ESRC grants - David Martin, NCRM co-director, ESRC Census
Programme coordinator 16 ESRC awards, plus
others - Sue Heath, NCRM co-director, Centre for
Population Change co-director 6 ESRC grants,
plus 2 others
4Out of scope
- What makes a good research idea
- Why seek research funding
- How to manage a grant once youve got it
5Funding opportunities
- ESRC opportunities
- Postdoctoral Fellowships
- Research Grant Scheme
- Research Fellowship Scheme
- Other early career opportunities
- Nuffield foundation small grants scheme new
career development fellowships - Leverhulme early career fellowships
6ESRC post-doctoral fellowships
- For those just about to complete a PhD or who
have no more than 3 years active postdoc
experience (career breaks for family or health
reasons allowable) - Applications in 2008 specifically encouraged in
priority discipline areas economics education
management and business studies advanced
quantitative methods social work socio-legal
studies - Not confined to UK citizens
- Apply any time
- 1 year FT or 2 years PT funding on research
salary scale plus limited expenses
7Post-doctoral fellowships objectives
- Time to gear up for a successful academic
career - To produce publications to help secure a track
record in your chosen specialisation to improve
opportunities for long-term employment in the HEI
sector - To disseminate your research findings to both
academic and non-academic audiences - To improve research and related skills through
specialised training - To carry out further limited research linked to
your PhD and through developing proposals for
further funding
8ESRC research grants scheme
- Single projects from 15K to 1.5M
- Up to five years funding
- Small grants lt100K good starting point for
funding - Basic criteria quality, timeliness, track record
and value for money
9ESRC Research Fellowship Scheme
- A period of concentrated research activity a
significant career development opportunity for
promising researchers - Open to applicants in all disciplines and at all
stages of postdoctoral research career - Open to applicants in established posts and
contract researchers - If lt10 years experience, a mentor will be
appointed, career development must be a strong
theme - Full salary plus research expenses
- Can apply at any time
10Research Fellowship Scheme Objectives
- A programme of work, not a single project
- Focus on career development - 2-3 years funding
- To include training in, eg, advanced methods,
teaching, research management - To consolidate previous research and
theoretical/methodological development
11Nuffield Foundation Social Science Small Grants
Scheme
- Up to 7.5K or exceptionally 12k
- For those new to social science research for
outstanding small or pilot projects or for
projects linked to the advancement of social
well-being - Can apply at any time
12Nuffield Foundation New Career Development
Fellowships
- Aimed at post-doctoral researchers who have the
potential to become outstanding in their field - Collaborative scheme postdoctoral researchers
and established researcher - Up to 170K over 3 years money for partner
researcher - Designed to facilitate a change in direction
for exceptional new scholars - Date for 2009 to be announced
13Leverhulme Trust Early Career Fellowships
- To provide career development opportunities for
people at an early stage of career but with a
proven research record - not in an established post
- Normally under 35 (unless career break or late
starter) - 2-3 years funding 50 salary costs, 50 from
institution, plus 5K expenses per annum - Next round January 2009
14Turning a research idea into a grant proposal
- (Assuming you already have a great idea)
- Be clear about what will make your application
unique - Ensure promised outputs are in proportion to the
inputs - Get all the details of the proposal spot-on
- A research grant proposal has to combine a small
business plan with an academic research paper
15Programme call
Research idea
Response mode
16Programme call
Costing
Research idea
Develop project proposal
Response mode
17Programme call
Costing software (pfact)
Costing
J-eS
Research idea
Develop project proposal
Response mode
18Focus of this presentation
Programme call
Costing software (pfact)
Costing
J-eS
Submission
Research idea
Develop project proposal
Response mode
To research councils
19Developing a workplan
- Workpackages, timescales, start and finish dates,
sequencing of work - Who is going to do the work?
- How much academic direction?
- What can be done by RAs/tech/admin?
- What are the interdependencies?
- Beware risky elements beyond own control
- Inter-institutional will take (much) longer!
20Other considerations
- Ethics approval School/University processes?
- Collaborators and letters of support?
- Inclusion of studentships? (esp. timings)
- NB ALWAYS follow any funder- and
programme-specific rules! - Nominated reviewers?
- Implications for own workload? If so, discuss
very early with Head of School/dept.
21Costings the FEC wonderland
- FEC Full economic costing
- Used to be overheads
- Main driver is academic/research staff time
- Investigators own time must be costed
- FEC based on financial analysis of costs to
institution (estate costs, heat/light, etc.) - Research councils only currently pay 80 of FEC
22Costings homework
- Make a complete list of what you need
- Staff, travel, equipment, services, etc.
- Use own University rates that is how youll
claim - Collate staffing details start and end dates,
time worked, salary points for new staff - NB technical/admin no institutional drivers
- Get exemplar costs for all travel, equipment etc.
and be prepared to justify - No general office expenses etc.
23J-eS
- Have to be registered first and use annually!
- Online grant application website for UK research
councils - Most elements completed by applicants
- Approved costings information to be uploaded
- Need to organize and chase everyone involved CVs
of collaborators and named staff approvers to be
ready on the day, etc.
24Structure of a J-eS bid
- Simple questions PI, Co-Is, previous apps, etc.
- Short text answers (summary, objectives, ethics)
- NB character counts not the same as Word!
- Attachments typically Case for support,
applicant CVs, Justification of resources,
Bibliography, Letters of support etc. - All completed in shared online workspace
- Submission and approval sequence leading to
submission to research council
25Submisson of a J-eS bid
- All documentation completed
- Submitted by PI to School/dept. approvers
- Submitted by School/dept. approver to University
approver (usually finance dept.) - Submitted by university approver to research
council - All electronic, but requires chain of people who
are expecting it in advance and already know its
OK
26How the application will be judged
- Receipt acknowledged by research council registry
- Checked by office against funding rules and
specifics of call - Despatched to reviewers and assessors
- Grades considered by commissioning panel,
decisions made and ratified - Contract negotiated with university
- The real work begins
27Do
- Familiarise yourself with the funding bodys
strategy and ethos - Familiarise yourself with the specific
requirements of a funding body or a specific call - Make sure that you are eligible for the scheme
for which youre applying (and check with them if
youre unsure)
28Do
- Start the application process in good time
- Make the case for your project directly and
strongly why should your project be prioritised
(given that it will be in competition with
others)? - Set out your research questions and objectives
clearly (a research proposal is not a literature
review get right the balance of background and
proposal)
29Do
- Set out your methodology clearly, and flag up
where it is cutting edge and interdisciplinary - Ensure that methods address the research
questions set out - Acknowledge awareness of potential problems and
possible criticisms of approach chosen - Include a timetable for your activities
30Do
- Use the bibliography to show up-to-date knowledge
of the field - Choose an appropriate and reliable nominated
reviewer - Engage with potential research users
- Address the issue of knowledge transfer
- Draw on other peoples expertise (e.g. that of
staff in the research office)
31Dont
- Promise to solve all the problems in your field
in one project - Assume that key points are too obvious to need
stating explicitly (referees can comment only on
what is before them) - Undersell yourself or your project (the total
cost will look dauntingly big)
32Dont
- Miss the opportunity to spell out how well your
project fits the scheme/call - Give up at the first hurdle, or be put off by the
odds of success of the average application - Be afraid to ask colleagues to see applications
they have made (successful and unsuccessful, with
comments)
33And finally
-
- Even though the odds may be against being funded,
DONT give up!