1 / 19

Dissertation Funding: A Workshop

CLA GRANTS Alexandra Brown, Ph.D., Grants Coordinator for Arts and Humanities (akbrown@umn.edu) Gayle Anderson, Fiscal Administration (ander104@umn.edu). Dissertation Funding: A Workshop. Dissertation Funding, Oct. 21, 2011. Work with your dissertation Advisor to determine that your

daria
Télécharger la présentation

Dissertation Funding: A Workshop

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CLA GRANTS Alexandra Brown, Ph.D., Grants Coordinator for Arts and Humanities (akbrown@umn.edu) Gayle Anderson, Fiscal Administration (ander104@umn.edu) Dissertation Funding: A Workshop Dissertation Funding, Oct. 21, 2011

  2. Work with your dissertation Advisor to determine that your Idea is: • Interesting • Innovative • Intellectually sound • Feasible • It must also be fundable Developing a Grant Proposal Requires a Strategy

  3. All this takes time… Plan accordingly

  4. We can help!! Look for the Right Funders

  5. Grants team Website: Graduate REsources • http://grants.cla.umn.edu/resources/ • Databases • Navigate • https://apps.cla.umn.edu/cla_grants • Proposal preparation • Writing Tips

  6. Register for a workshop • http://www.lib.umn.edu/services/workshops/registration • Databases they cover • COS • IRIS • SPIN • Foundation Directory online • More may be available through your department UMN Library Funding Search Workshops

  7. COS: US, Commonwealth, Foundations SPIN: mainly US & Federal Funders The IRIS database Grants.gov: US federal funding NSF, NIH, FIPSE Searchable databases

  8. Graduate School’s Fellowship Office http://www.grad.umn.edu/fellowships/ External Funding: http://www.grad.umn.edu/prospective_students/Financing/other.html University Resources

  9. The funder’s mission must be compatible with your project. Read the guidelines, objectives, & Grant Proposal Guide. Read the review criteria Look at the funded grants Develop a list of possible funders Keys to success

  10. Prepare a one-page overview – explain why your project is important • Known background • Gap in knowledge/understanding/problem • Hypothesis/research question/project • Significance for your field & for society • Run it past colleagues—listen to critiques. • Refine your message. Prepare to Approach Funders

  11. Federal Agencies: list program officers & their contact information. Professional Organizations: if no program officer, stick to the guidelines. Consult with your dissertation advisor, other faculty, and other grad students. Foundations: program officers? Or letters of inquiry? Approaching funders

  12. Tells reviewers… • Your idea is significant • You’ve researched it thoroughly • You’re the right investigator • Your methods are sound • The project is feasible • You will publish & disseminate your results • Is clear & easy to read! A strategic grant proposal

  13. The Program Officer • The Review Panel General Scholarly Audience Not all in your area of expertise Consider your audience

  14. Descriptive title • Abstract or summary • Budget • Applicant’s credentials (CV & publications) • Narrative • Introduction: Key conceptual contributions upfront • Goals & Objectives • Background • Methods/Timetable/Work plan • Discussion/Significance • Bibliography What does a proposal look like? Depends on the Funders Guidelines

  15. Be Realistic • Make cost estimates COMPLETE and ACCURATE • Write a complete and DETAILED budget justification Preparing the budget

  16. Keep your audience in mind • Write clearly and simply • Avoid jargon • Use active voice • Simplify text • Structure proposal clearly • Grab the readers attention at the outset Writing an Effective Proposal

  17. Modesty is not a virtue in proposal writing • Stress the contributions of your work • Use the grant guidelines as a tool • Proofread, eliminate unnecessary words • Resources: University Writing Center http://writing.umn.edu/sws/index.html • Collaborate Colleagues Professors Writing An Effective Proposal

  18. www.irb.umn.edu • Required for research on human subjects • Living people • Survey data • Human tissue samples • Categories of review • Exempt • Expedited • Full review Institutional Review boards

  19. Thank you.

More Related