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Grant Applications Made Simple(r)

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Grant Applications Made Simple(r) Rose Wiles, David Martin, Sue Heath National Centre for Research Methods University of Southampton – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Grant Applications Made Simple(r)


1
Grant Applications Made Simple(r)
  • Rose Wiles, David Martin, Sue Heath
  • National Centre for Research Methods
  • University of Southampton

2
Overview
  • 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!

3
Who 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

4
Out of scope
  • What makes a good research idea
  • Why seek research funding
  • How to manage a grant once youve got it

5
Funding 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

6
ESRC 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

7
Post-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

8
ESRC 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

9
ESRC 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

10
Research 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

11
Nuffield 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

12
Nuffield 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

13
Leverhulme 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

14
Turning 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

15
Programme call
Research idea
Response mode
16
Programme call
Costing
Research idea
Develop project proposal
Response mode
17
Programme call
Costing software (pfact)
Costing
J-eS
Research idea
Develop project proposal
Response mode
18
Focus of this presentation
Programme call
Costing software (pfact)
Costing
J-eS
Submission
Research idea
Develop project proposal
Response mode
To research councils
19
Developing 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!

20
Other 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.

21
Costings 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

22
Costings 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.

23
J-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.

24
Structure 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

25
Submisson 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

26
How 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

27
Do
  • 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)

28
Do
  • 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)

29
Do
  • 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

30
Do
  • 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)

31
Dont
  • 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)

32
Dont
  • 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)

33
And finally
  • Even though the odds may be against being funded,
    DONT give up!
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