Title: Office of Proposal Development
1Strategies for Writing Successful Grant
Proposals Irma Lerma Rangel College of
PharmacyOctober 8, 2007
- Office of Proposal DevelopmentDivision of
Research Graduate Studies - Texas AM University
- Texas AM Health Science Center
- John IvyResearch Development OfficerJohnIvy_at_tamu
.edu - http//opd.tamu.edu/
2Presentation Topics
- The Office of Proposal Development
- Identifying Funding Sources
- General
- Foundations
- NIH
- New Investigators
- Evaluating the Opportunity
- Components of a "Good Grant"
- The NIH Review Process
- Recent Developments at NIH
3Office of Proposal Development
- Supports faculty in the development and writing
of research and educational proposals to federal
agencies and foundations - Center-level initiatives,
- Interdisciplinary research teams,
- New junior faculty,
- Institutional diversity initiatives
- Health Science Center collaborations,
- Multi-institutional research partnerships
- Offers a full suite of grant writing training
programs to help faculty develop and write more
competitive proposals.
4OPD Proposal Support
- Assistance with finding funding opportunities
- Information on particular programs
- What is the funding agency looking for?
- Experiences of other TAMU faculty who have
applied for that program - What types of projects have been funded?
- Project planning
- Strategic planning based on review criteria
- Education and outreach components
- Proposal editing
- Conformity with solicitation requirements
- Clarity and organization
- Grammar, punctuation, spelling
5Your goal is to intrigue the reviewers OPDs
goal is to help you do it
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8OPD Member List
- Jean Ann Bowman, PhD (Physical Geography/Hydrology
), earth, ecological, and environmental sciences,
jbowman_at_tamu.edu - Libby Childress, scheduling, workshop management,
project coordination, libbyc_at_tamu.edu - Mike Cronan, PE (inactive), B.S. Civil
Engineering, BA, MFA, center-level proposals,
partnerships, new initiatives, mikecronan_at_tamu.edu
- Lucy Deckard, BS/MS Materials Engineering, New
Faculty Initiative, fellowships, engineering and
physical science proposals, equipment and
instrumentation, l-deckard_at_tamu.edu - John Ivy, PhD (Molecular Biology), NIH biomedical
and biological science initiatives,
johnivy_at_tamu.edu - Phyllis McBride, PhD (English), proposal writing
training, biomedical, editing,
p-mcbride_at_tamu.edu - Robyn Pearson, BA/MA (anthropology) social
sciences and humanities proposals, editing and
rewriting, rlpearson_at_tamu.edu
9Seminars and WorkshopsCheck our website at
http//opd.tamu.edu/seminars
- One-day Craft of Proposal Writing Workshop
offered each fall before classes start - Seminar on strategies for competing for funding
with breakout sessions on different agencies
scheduled in the fall - Semester-long grant-writing workshops offered
fall and spring semesters - Seminars on specific programs (instrumentation,
NSF CAREER, NIH K-awards, etc.) offered
throughout the year - Faculty panel discussions on specific agencies
and research areas in spring
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11Resources for Junior Faculty through the Office
of Proposal Development
- One-on-one consultation and proposal support
- Seminars on funding programs that may be of
special interest to Junior Faculty - Seminars and discussion panels on specific
agencies - One-day workshops on the craft of proposal
writing - Semester-long workshops designed to guide
participants through every step of proposal
writing - Information on our website
- The Craft of Writing workbook available on-line
- Toolkits for Programs for Junior faculty
- Funding Opportunities
- Links to other useful information (agency
tutorials, presentations, articles) - Presentation and resource information from past
seminars
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13OPD Proposal Support The Process
- Contact us as soon as possible
- We can offer more help if were involved early in
the process - Iterative editing process most effective
- Turn-around times for editing depend on office
workload - Typically 2 days to 1 week
- Giving us a heads-up that your proposal will be
coming will help us to plan
14- There is no amount of grantsmanship that will
turn a bad idea into a good one, but there are
many ways to disguise a good one. - William Raubformer Deputy Director, NIH
15Presentation Topics
- The Office of Proposal Development
- Identifying Funding Sources and Opportunities
- General
- Foundations
- NIH
- New Investigators
- Evaluating the Opportunity
- Analyzing the funding agency
- Components of a "Good Grant"
- The NIH Review Process
- Recent Developments at NIH
16Searching for funding
- Develop search protocols to fit research
interests - Know relevant agencies
- Learn grant cycles
17Types of University Proposals
- Research (basic, applied, applications, mission,
etc.) - Equipment
- Educational
- Institutional (e.g., STEP, T32)
- Direct to applicant (e.g., Fellowships,
dissertation grants) - Hybrid research and educational (REU)
- Small , few PIs
- Large , multiple PIs, center-level
- Supplements to grants (NSF, NIH)
18Searching for research funding
- Define a general disciplinary domain of interest
(e.g., science, social science, humanities,
education, health and biomedical sciences,
engineering) - Characterize the nature of the research interests
within the disciplinary domain (basic, applied,
applications, contract, mission agency) - Identify funding agencies whose mission,
strategic plan, and investment priorities are
aligned with the specific research interests - Further align research interests with funding
agency by reviewing funded research abstracts and
related documentation - Refine your search and agency focus in the search
for funding opportunities, a process that may go
through several search iterations
19Searching for research funding
- Who ya gonna call?
- Network with colleagues
- Funding sources cited in literature
acknowledgements - Companies and Foundations that support
professional societies - Google searches
- University posted listings
- University emails
- Federal agency web sites
- Foundation web sites
- Discussions with Agency and Foundation
Representatives
20HSC web resourceshttp//www.tamhsc.edu/department
s/orgs/research/awards/index.html
21HSC web resources Hot Topicshttp//www.tamhsc.e
du/departments/orgs/hot-topics/
22OPD-Web Funding Opportunities
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24Grants.gov
- The Grants.gov web portal serves as a single
point of access for all federal agency grant
announcements. New funding announcements from
federal agency are posted to this site daily, and
a range of other features allow subscribing to
email funding alerts, linking to agency web
sites, and searching for funding among agencies.
25http//www.grants.gov/
26Search Browse Grant Opportunities
- Searchhttp//www.grants.gov/applicants/search_opp
ortunities.jsp - Browse agencieshttp//www.grants.gov/search/agenc
y.do
27Grants.gov Search
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29Grants.gov Browse by Agency
30Receive Grants.gov Funding Email Alerts
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32http//foundationcenter.org/pnd/rfp/
33Additional Life Science Funding Sources
- Grants.gov http//www.grants.gov
- National Science Foundation http//www.nsf.gov/
- Find Funding http//www.nsf.gov/funding/
- Funded Research http//www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/
- GrantsNet sponsored by AAAS and
HHMI http//sciencecareers.sciencemag.org/funding - Congressionally Directed Medical Research
Programs http//cdmrp.army.mil/funding/default.ht
m - Philanthropy News Digest RFP listings http//found
ationcenter.org/pnd/rfp/ - American Cancer Society http//www.cancer.org/docr
oot/RES/RES_0.asp - American Heart Association http//www.americanhear
t.org/presenter.jhtml?identifier9713 - Cancer Research Institute http//www.cancerresearc
h.org/criprogs.html - Life Sciences Research Foundation http//www.lsrf.
org/geninfo.htm - National Multiple Sclerosis Society http//www.nat
ionalmssociety.org/
34NIH Overview
- Mission improve the health and well-being of
humans and reduce the burden of illness on
population - NIH is a basic research agency
- Different from a mission-based agency (e.g.,
NASA, DoD) - Fund basic science research (molecules to humans)
in health-related topics - Encourage translation of bench research into
patient practices
35DHHS Overview
- Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS)
- Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
Administration (SAMHSA) - Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry
(ATSDR) - Health Resources and Services Administration
(HRSA) - Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ)
- Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS)
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
- Administration for Children and Families (ACF)
- Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
- National Institutes of Health (NIH)
- Administration on Aging (AoA)
- Program Support Center (PSC)
- Indian Health Service (IHS)
36NIH Culture
- Top down approach to strategic planning
- Information on the strategic plan for NIH can be
found at http//www.nih.gov/about/researchplanning
.htm - Office of the Director sets the tone for research
priorities - Advice from many sources solicited
- Scientific community
- Patient and health associations
- Institute Center Advisory Councils
- Congress the Administration
- NIH Staff
- Institute and Center (IC) Directors use this
information to develop their institutes
strategic plan - Important to review the individual IC web pages
and talk to program officers about the current
research focus within an IC
37NIH 20 Institutes, 7 Centers
38NIH Culture
- Trans-NIH initiatives research that cuts across
typical agency boundaries of various ICs - http//www.nih.gov/about/transnih.htm
- Model Organisms for Biomedical Research
- Blueprint for Neuroscience Research
- Bioengineering Consortium
- Biomaterials and Medical Implants
- Bioinformatics at the NIH
- Mammalian Gene Collection
- Cognitive Emotional Health
- Translational Research
- Part of the NIH Roadmap for Medical Research
- http//nihroadmap.nih.gov/
- http//nihroadmap.nih.gov/clinicalresearch/overvi
ew-translational.asp
39NIH Funding Investments and Priorities
- NIH has investment priorities based on past
research findings and current trends in science - Targeted areas (FY 2008 proposed budget)
- HIV/AIDs
- Biodefense
- Roadmap for Biomedical Research
- Enhanced Support for New Investigators
- Physical Infrastructure
- NIH FY2007 budget is 28.8 billion (FY2008
proposed 28.85 billion) - NIH funds research projects inside their own
laboratories (intramural) and outside their
laboratories at national and international
locations (extramural) - Extramural funding 85
- Intramural Funding 10
- Research Infrastructure 5
40NIH Research Awards
- Numerous funding mechanisms
- R01 Research Project Grant
- Supports discrete, specific, highly successful
outcome projects - All ICs support this mechanism
- R03 Small Grant
- Supports small research projects limited time
and resources are the key elements - R21 Exploratory/Independent Research Grant
- Supports high risk-high yield research projects
- R15 Academic and Research Enhancement Award
(AREA) Grant - Small research projects in the biomedical and
behavioral sciences conducted by students and
faculty in health professional schools and other
academic components that have not been major
recipients of NIH research grant funds
41NIH Training Awards
- Individual Training awards for predoctoral
(F31), postdoctoral (F32), or senior fellowships
(F33) - Limited to US citizens or legal aliens
42NIH Kareer Awards
- Some directed at retraining, professional career
development, and recognition of career success
(may be restricted to certain ICs) - K Kiosk
- http//grants1.nih.gov/training/careerdevelopmenta
wards.htm - K01 Mentored Research Scientist Award
- Provide mentored career development in a new
research area - K02 Independent Scientist Award
- Develop career of funded scientist 5 yr, 75
effort - K05 Senior Scientist Award
- Recognize outstanding scientist with sustained
level of high productivity - K08 Mentored Clinical Scientist Award
- Development of independent clinical research
scientist - K18 Career Enhancement Award for Stem Cell
Research - K25 Mentored Quantitative Research Career
Development Award - Foster collaborative research in areas
integrating biomedical science and engineering - K99/R00 NIH Pathway to Independence (PI) Award
- 2 years mentored postdoctoral research 3 years
independent research in tenure track position (or
equivalent)
43Office of Extramural Research (OER)
http//grants1.nih.gov/grants/oer.htm
- Distinction between solicited versus unsolicited
proposals - Unsolicited (investigator-initiated) proposals
(82) - Solicited (agency-defined topics) proposals (18)
- Program Announcements (PA)
- New research programs and updates to ongoing
programs (renewable) - Request for Applications/Proposals (RFA/RFP)
- One time request to fulfill specific agency
research objective or need
44Funding Opportunity Announcements
45Identifying NIH Funding
- NIH funding opportunities page
- Includes funding opportunities for NIH IC only
- Located at http//grants1.nih.gov/grants/guide/ind
ex.html - Subscribe to weekly listserv
- Grants.gov
- Includes funding opportunities for NIH in
addition to the other 25 federal grant-making
agencies - Located at http//www.grants.gov/
- Subscribe to weekly listserv
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47Grants Process Overview
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49Parent Announcements
50Application Due Dates
51Remember, investigator-initiated grants represent
gt80 of those funded by NIH!
52Identifying NIH Solicitations by Topic
- Search by Keyword(s) or Phrase(s)
- Identify funding opportunities
- Determine supporting ICs
- Identify mechanism (R, T, U, etc.)
- Determine eligibility
- Identify review criteria
53Example Sequencing Technology
54Example Sequencing Technology
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56Example R21 in Advanced Search
57Identifying NIH Solicitations by IC
- Search by Agency (IC)
- Identify funding opportunities within an agency
- Steps for searching.
- Identify Agency (IC)
- Go to their homepage (http//www.nih.gov/icd)
- Go to their Research Funding or Extramural
Funding section - Perform search
58Identifying NIH Solicitations by IC
59Identifying NIH Solicitations by IC
60Staying Informed on NIH FOAs
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62NIH RSS feed
63Presentation Topics
- The Office of Proposal Development
- Identifying Funding Sources
- General
- Foundations
- NIH
- New Investigators
- Evaluating the Opportunity
- The solicitation
- The funding agency
- Components of a "Good Grant"
- The NIH Review Process
- Recent Developments at NIH
64Reading the proposal solicitation
- The solicitation represents an invitation by a
funding agency for applicants to submit requests
for funding in research areas of interest to the
agency or foundation.
65Program Solicitation
- The RFP contains most of the essential
information the researcher needs to develop and
write a competitive proposal that is fully
responsive to the agencys funding objectives and
review criteria. - It is used continuously throughout proposal
development and writing as a reference point to
ensure that an evolving proposal narrative fully
addresses and accurately reflects the goals and
objectives of the funding agency, including
the review criteria.
66Program Solicitation
- The RFP is not a menu or smorgasbord offering the
applicant a choice of addressing some topics but
not others, depending on interest, or some review
criteria but not others. - The RFP is a non-negotiable listing of
performance expectations reflecting the stated
goals, objectives, and desired outcomes of the
agency.
67Map your expertise to the RFP
- Is it a fit?
- Is it really a fit?
- No partial fits allowed
- No wishful thinking
- Close doesnt count
- If you are not a fitdont submit
68Contents of the RFP
- Agency research goals, objectives, and
performance expectations - Statement and scope of work
- Proposal topics to be addressed by the applicant
- Deliverables or other outcomes
- Review criteria and process
69Contents of the RFP
- Key personnel, evaluation, management
- Eligibility requirements
- Due dates, available funding, funding limits,
anticipated number of awards, performance period,
proposal formatting requirements, budget and
other process requirements, and reference
documents.
70Contents of an NIH PA
- Part I. Overview Information
- Issuing Organization
- Participating Organizations
- Components of Participating Organization
- Title
- Announcement Type
- Program Announcement Number
- Key Dates
- Executive Summary
71Contents of an NIH PAPart II. Full Text of
Announcement
- Section I. Funding Opportunity Description 1.
Research Objectives Section II. Award
Information 1. Mechanism(s) of Support 2. Funds
Available Section III. Eligibility Information
1. Eligible Applicants    A. Eligible
Institutions    B. Eligible Individuals 2. Cost
Sharing or Matching3. Other - Special
Eligibility Criteria Section IV. Application
and Submission Information 1. Address to Request
Application Information 2. Content and Form of
Application Submission 3. Submission Dates and
Times   A. Submission, Review and Anticipated
Start Dates      1. Letter of Intent    B.
Sending an Application to the NIH Â Â Â C.
Application Processing 4. Intergovernmental
Review 5. Funding Restrictions6. Other
Submission Requirements
- Section V. Application Review Information 1.
Criteria 2. Review and Selection Process   A.
Additional Review Criteria    B. Additional
Review Considerations    C. Sharing Research
Data    D. Sharing Research Resources 3.
Anticipated Announcement and Award Dates
Section VI. Award Administration Information
1. Award Notices 2. Administrative and National
Policy Requirements 3. Reporting Section VII.
Agency Contact(s) 1. Scientific/Research
Contact(s) 2. Peer Review Contact(s) 3.
Financial/ Grants Management Contact(s) Section
VIII. Other Information - Required Federal
Citations
72Reading Material Referenced in the RFP
- If the RFP refers to any publications, reports,
or workshops, it is important to read those
materials, analyze how that work has influenced
the agencys vision of the program, and cite
those publications in the proposal in a way that
illustrates the topics are acknowledged and
understood. - Echo the language of the agency.
73Analyzing the funding agency
- Analyzing the mission, strategic plan, investment
priorities, and culture of a funding agency
provides information key to enhancing proposal
competitiveness.
74Know the funding agency
- In marking our 50th anniversary, we are
celebrating vision and foresight Dr. Rita R.
Colwell, former NSF Director. The recently
retired hockey-great, Wayne Gretzky, used to say,
"I skate to where the puck is going, not to where
it's been." - At NSF, we try to fund where the fields are
going, not to where they've been. We have a
strong record across all fields of science and
engineering for choosing to fund insightful
proposals and visionary investigators.
75Analyzing the funding agency
- Funding agencies have a clearly defined agenda
and mission. - Funded grants are those that best advance the
mission of the funding agency. - If a proposal does not meet an agency's mission,
it will not be funded.
76Analyzing the funding agency
- Who is the audience (e.g., program officers,
reviewers) and what is the best way to address
them? - What is a fundable idea and how is it best
characterized within the context of the agency
solicitation?
77Know what was recently funded
- Learning about recently funded research in your
area helps you understand what an agency is
looking for in the review process - Review abstracts of funded proposals on agency
web sites - Talk to the principal investigators of funded
proposals in your area - Obtain copies of funded proposals
- Ask the PI
- Ask the agency (funded proposals are public)
78CRISP http//crisp.cit.nih.gov/
- Computer Retrieval of Informationon Scientific
Projects - A searchable database of federally funded
biomedical research - What similar projects have been funded?
- Has someone already been funded to pursue my
idea? - Who are my competitors?
- Who are potential collaborators?
79Finding information on funded projects
- NIH Award Search Sitehttp//crisp.cit.nih.gov/cr
isp/crisp_query.generate_screen - Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ)
Grants On-Line Database (GOLD) http//www.gold.ah
rq.gov/ - Department of Health and Human Services
http//taggs.hhs.gov/AdvancedSearch.cfm - NSF Award Search Sitehttp//www.nsf.gov/awardsea
rch/index.jsp - USDA Awards Searchhttp//cris.csrees.usda.gov/
80Presentation Topics
- The Office of Proposal Development
- Identifying Funding Sources
- General
- Foundations
- NIH
- New Investigators
- Evaluating the Opportunity
- The solicitation
- The funding agency
- Components of a "Good Grant"
- The NIH Review Process
- Recent Developments at NIH
81RFP Read Follow Directions
82Identify the review criteria
- Most agencies publish standard review criteria on
their web pages and in each solicitation. - Some programs will have additional review
criteria specific to the solicitation. - Addressing the review criteria is a key part of
the proposal. - Make the reviewers job easier by using language
similar to that used in the solicitation.
83Addressing Review Criteria
- A competitive proposal must clearly address each
review criterion, and the proposal should be
structured so that these discussions are easy for
reviewers to find, compare, and contrast.
84Developing the proposal narrative
- Contrary to what some people seem to believe,
simple writing is not the product of simple
minds. A simple, unpretentious style has both
grace and power. By not calling attention to
itself, it allows the reader to focus on the
message. Richard Lederer and Richards Dowis,
Sleeping Dogs Don't Lay, 1999.
85Introductory writing tips
- Summary and introduction are key
- May be all reviewers read
- Must excite and grab the attention
- Reviewers will assume errors in language and
usage will translate into errors in the science - Dont be overly ambitious in what you propose,
but convey credibility and capacity to perform
86Introductory writing tips
- Sell your proposal to a good scientist but not an
expert - Some review panels may not have an expert in your
field, or panels may be blended for
multidisciplinary initiatives - Agencies reviewers fund compelling, exciting
research - Proposals are not journal articles proposals
must be user-friendly and offer a narrative that
tells a story that is memorable to reviewers
87Following agency guidelines
- Read solicitation and/or proposal guide carefully
for formatting requirements and follow
scrupulously - Font and font size
- Arial, Helvetica, Palatino Linotype, or Georgia
typeface - Black type face
- 11 pt. or larger
- At least ½ in margins
- Page limits
- Biosketch formats
- Avoids disqualification of your proposal
- Avoids irritating reviewers
88Make your proposal easy to read
- Reviewers often have 8 or 10 proposals to read
- Use white space, underlining, bold, bullets,
figures, flowcharts to make main points easy to
find - Put main idea of sections and paragraphs up front
89Must Convince Reviewers
- Your proposed research should be funded
- Its important and supports the agency mission
and program goals - Its exciting
- It has a good chance of succeeding
- You are the person who should conduct the
proposed research - You are knowledgeable and well-qualified
- You have the support and resources required
90Structure of Proposal
- Often dictated by solicitation or other agency
document - NIH SF424
- NSF Grant Proposal Guide
- DoD Broad Agency Announcement (BAA)
- Also guided by evaluation criteria
91Preparing Proposals
- All NIH proposals use either the electronic form
SF424 or the paper PHS398. - The transition to SF424 for F and K awards is
delayed - Step 1 Download the Instructions and Forms
- http//grants2.nih.gov/grants/funding/424/
- http//grants1.nih.gov/grants/funding/phs398/phs39
8.html - Step 2 READ THE INSTRUCTIONS
92Speak with the Program Officer early and often
93Common Elements of PHS398 R01
- Cover page/face sheet (1 page)
- Abstract, performance site, key personnel (2
pages) - Table of contents (1 page)
- Budget page(s)
- Budget justification
- Biosketch of PI, biosketch of all other major/key
personnel (4 pages each) - Resources (no page limit)
- Research Plan (Items A-D) (25 page limit)
- Other Information under Research Plan (Items E-J)
(no page limit) - e.g., references cited, human or animal research
subjects, inclusion of minorities/children in
clinical studies, data sharing plans, etc. - Appendix items (in-press publications, surveys,
photos) - Checklist
94Budget Budget Justification
- Budget
- Get help (institutional grants administrator)
- Be reasonable. The reviewers also do research!
- Budget Justification
- Personnel
- Who? What will they do? How much effort ()? Why
is this person critical to the success of the
project? - Equipment
- What do you need? Why do you need it? Is there a
similar apparatus nearby that you can use (if
yes, why not use it)? - Travel
- Where do you need to go? How many times will you
go there? How many of the project personnel will
go? Approximately how much will it cost and why? - Other Supplies
- Equipment maintenance contracts? Fee for service
resource?
95Connect narrative text to budget
- Budget categories are defined by the funding
agency - Be sure activities discussed in narrative are
reflected in budget - In budget justification, personnel, materials,
supplies, equipment, travel should reflect that
necessary to complete Research Plan
96NIH Biographical Sketch
- Four page maximum
- Section A. Positions and Honors
- Section B. Publications
- List publications reflective of the topic of the
current proposal (or maximum) - Section C. Research Support
- Current and completed support
- Begin with projects that are most relevant to the
research proposed in the application
97Abstract or Summary
- May be the only thing the reviewer reads
- Must grab the reviewer
- Should communicate concisely
- Intellectual framework of proposed project
- The goals and signficance of the proposed project
- Specific Aims
- Who will be conducting the project and, briefly,
their qualifications - Project outcomes
- Must communicate excitement
- Check for additional requirements
- E.g., intellectual merit and broader impacts in
NSF proposals
98Research Plan
- Introduction (Resubmissions only)
- A) Specific Aims
- Long-range goals
- Hypothesis
- B) Background Significance
- C) Preliminary Studies / Progress Report
- D) Research Design and Methods
- Structure based on Specific Aims
99Specific Aims
- Provides a framework for the reviewer
- State a long-range goal of your research program
- Tie to program/agency mission and goals
- State a specific hypothesis that your experiments
will address - State specific, measurable Specific Aims
- Discuss expected outcomes
- Do not be overly ambitious!
100Background Significance
- Background should tie closely to your proposed
research - Be thorough and concise
- Describe state of the field
- Do not be dismissive of previous research
- Identifies the opportunity
- Provides a rationale for your approach
- Specify how your research will extend and advance
knowledge in the field
101Significance
- Explain explicitly why proposed research is
important - Tie to agency and program goals
- Relate to review criteria
- Make this easy to find
- Opportunity to make important points up front
- Communicate your excitement!
102Preliminary Data / Progress Report
- Be aware of expectations regarding amount of
preliminary data - Varies by agency
- Varies by program
- Varies by discipline
- Higher risk projects may require more preliminary
data - Discussion of preliminary data must connect
clearly to proposed project
103Research Design Methods
- Structure based on Specific Aims
- Be very clear about how you will accomplish your
stated goals and objectives - Include details
- What, specifically, will you do when you get the
money? - Schedules and milestones may be helpful
- This is especially important if you are a
relatively new researcher - Address any potential results and problems and
how you will deal with them - Avoid ambiguous terminology be specific!
104Beware of Boiler Plate
- Thinking of proposal narrative as boiler plate
will result in a mediocre, disjoint proposal - Begin each proposal as a new effort, not a copy
paste - Be very cautious integrating text inserts
- Strong proposals clearly reflect a coherent,
sustained, and integrated argument grounded on
good ideas
105Additional Resources
- Office of Proposal Development,
TAMU http//opd.tamu.edu/ - Funding Opportunitieshttp//opd.tamu.edu/funding-
opportunities - Resources for Junior Facultyhttp//opd.tamu.edu/r
esources-for-junior-faculty - The Craft of Grant Writing workbookhttp//opd.tam
u.edu/the-craft-of-writing-workbook - National Institutes of Health http//www.nih.gov/
- Grant Application Basicshttp//grants.nih.gov/gra
nts/grant_basics.htm - All About Grants Tutorialhttp//www.niaid.nih.gov
/ncn/grants/default.htm - Annotated R01 Research Plan and Summary
Statementhttp//www.niaid.nih.gov/ncn/grants/app/
- Mock Peer Review Videohttp//www.csr.nih.gov/Vide
o/Video.asp - CRISP funded biomedical researchhttp//crisp.cit.
nih.gov/
106Albert Einstein on Grant Writing
- If you can't explain something simply, you don't
understand it well." - Most of the fundamental ideas of science are
essentially simple, and may, as a rule, be
expressed in language comprehensible to everyone. - Any fool can make things bigger, more complex,
and more violent. It takes a touch of genius
and a lot of courage to move in the opposite
direction.
107Presentation Topics
- The Office of Proposal Development
- Identifying Funding Sources
- General
- Foundations
- NIH
- New Investigators
- Evaluating the Opportunity
- The solicitation
- The funding agency
- Components of a "Good Grant"
- The NIH Review Process
- Recent Developments at NIH
108Review of NIH Proposals
- Center for Scientific Review (CSR)
- http//www.csr.nih.gov/default.htm
- Divisions (4)
- Integrated Review Groups (IRG) 23
- Study Sections (SS) 220
- Scientific Review Administrator (SRA)
- Members (peers with expertise in SS research)
- Standing members
- Ad hoc members
- http//www.csr.nih.gov/Roster_proto/sectionI.asp
109CSR Integrated Review Groups
110CSR Review Streamlining
- Proposal received at CSR
- Assigned to an IRG, then to a Study Section (SS)
- The Scientific Review Administrator (SRA) assigns
a primary, secondary, and tertiary reviewer - Investigator-initiated proposals (R01, R03, R21)
are read by the 1, 2, 3 reviewers - Bottom 50 of proposals are identified about 1
week prior to the SS meeting (triaged or
streamlined) - Streamlined applications receive summary
statements verbatim from each reviewer, but are
not discussed nor scored - All 3 reviewers must agree on the streamlined
proposals in order for the proposal to be triaged
111NIH General Review Criteria
- Investigator
- Education, training, relevant experience
- Environment
- Suitability of facilities and institution support
- Significance
- Ability of the project to improve health
- Approach
- Feasibility of methods and appropriateness of
budget - Innovation
- Originality of research
112CSR Scoring Proposals
- SS meets to review applications
- Primary reviewer presents your proposal to the
group (reads the abstract) - SS members discuss your application, the primary
reviewer is able to answer questions about the
proposal - SS members assign a score to the proposal between
1-5 (1outstanding, 5forget it) - After the meeting the SRA calculates the average
score for each proposal, multiply by 100 to get a
3 digit score (100-500) - SRA calculates a priority score or percentile
ranking of the score based on the past 3 cycles
of grant scores within SS - SRA prepares a written critique of your proposal
based on reviewers comments
113Dual Review System for Grant Applications
- First level of review
- Scientific Review Group
- Provides initial scientific merit review of grant
applications - Rates applications and makes recommendations
concerning level of support and duration of award
- Second level of review
- Council
- Makes recommendations to IC staff concerning
funding - Evaluates program priorities and relevance
- Advises on policy
114Summary Statement - Triaged
115CSR Scored Proposal
116Revisions Resubmission
- Three strikes youre out
- Read the reviewers comments
- Take a break
- Re-read the reviewers comments
- Dont take them personally
- Read the reviewers comments, AGAIN
- Call the program officer for more feedback
- Evaluate if you should resubmit
- Begin working on the revisions, incorporating the
revisions that you think make your proposal
better than the previous submission
117Interpreting Reviews Planning to Resubmit
- Were certain issues mentioned consistently?
- Plan how to address those issues
- Did the reviewers misunderstand your proposal?
- Plan how to make your text more clear
- Was no clear issue mentioned?
- May not have excited reviewers enough
- May not be an area they wish to fund now
- May not fit into their research portfolio
- Many funded proposals were funded after multiple
submissions ? intelligent perseverance is the key!
118Summary Statement for Revised Proposal
119Success at NIH
- Understand NIHs mission and overall goals
- Propose research topics that cross the boundaries
of various IC leverage tools and resources from
other research areas to approach your research
topic create multidisciplinary research teams - Focus on NIH priorities
- Search for funding opportunities often and using
different strategies, e.g., agency or topic
search, and submit unsolicited proposals when
possible - Look for various opportunities to acquire
funding, e.g., diversity supplements, career
awards - Partner with established NIH investigators
120Presentation Topics
- The Office of Proposal Development
- Identifying Funding Sources
- General
- Foundations
- NIH
- New Investigators
- Evaluating the Opportunity
- The solicitation
- The funding agency
- Components of a "Good Grant"
- The NIH Review Process
- Recent Developments at NIH
121New Investigator Programhttp//grants.nih.gov/gra
nts/new_investigators/index.htm
122New Investigators
- K99/R00 Pathway to Independence
- 2 yr Post-doc 3 yr Independent, both periods
mentored - R01 fast review for new investigators
- Check box on cover page for new investigators
- Example Oct 5 Submit Mar 1 Summary
Statement Mar 20 Resubmit (Jul 5, Nov 5, Mar
5) - Director's New Innovator Award Program (DP2)
- a special program to fund new investigators who
propose highly innovative research projects that
could have an exceptionally great impact on
biomedical or behavioral science.
123Multiple PIs
- The multiple-PI option is targeted specifically
to those projects that do not fit the single-PI
model, and therefore is intended to supplement,
and not to replace, the traditional single PI
model. - http//grants.nih.gov/grants/multi_pi/overview.htm
124Questions?
- Copies of this presentation will be available on
the OPD websitehttp//opd.tamu.edu/