1 / 11

Prof. Ken Vickers Research Professor, Physics

So You Want to Write a Proposal – Finding, Understanding, and Beating a Solicitation into Submission!. Prof. Ken Vickers Research Professor, Physics Director, Microelectronics-Photonics (microEP) Grad Program February 5, 2010. Purpose of this Section. Help you understand how to:

atira
Télécharger la présentation

Prof. Ken Vickers Research Professor, Physics

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. So You Want to Write a Proposal – Finding, Understanding, and Beating a Solicitation into Submission! Prof. Ken Vickers Research Professor, Physics Director, Microelectronics-Photonics (microEP) Grad Program February 5, 2010

  2. Purpose of this Section • Help you understand how to: • Find appropriate solicitations, • Dissect them to determine appropriateness, • Lay out your proposal story to match the solicitation, and • QC your draft proposal against the solicitation

  3. Finding appropriate solicitations • Start with known successful researchers in your field – get their search patterns • Modify search patterns to meet your interests (old dogs unfortunately do have old tricks sometimes) • Select key search criteria • Total grant amount/years • Number of researchers • Solicitation specific goals • Etc, etc, etc…

  4. For Instance, How About the NSF • Let’s play for about five minutes at www.nsf.gov to see what solicitations are interesting…

  5. Dissecting the Solicitation for Appropriateness • Consider past awards – do they share scope of your proposal? • Consider if institutional resources are required to be competitive. • Consider your own time commitments – single researcher or team approach? • Consider solicitation due dates’ interactions with your other obligations. • Etc, etc, etc…

  6. For Instance, How About the NSF • Let’s play again for about five minutes at www.nsf.gov to dissect a solicitation or two…

  7. Organizing to Meet the Solicitation’s Criteria • Start early, write every day! • Solicitation component that predicts funding success  was the proposal submitted? • If you hate the solicitation format  follow it anyway! • Don’t omit any requested information! • Reorganize solicitation into outline, then add your information. • Etc, etc, etc…

  8. An Original NSF Solicitation Section Impact on Research and Training Infrastructure (suggested length: 2 pages). Describe how the instrument will serve to attract researchers and make a substantial improvement in the institution's capabilities to conduct leading-edge research. Describe how the instrument will improve the quality of student education, research and research training. Any proposal requesting direct student support in operations and maintenance or development efforts must justify that involvement in terms of both project needs and the training of the next generation of instrumentalists (reviewers will be asked to evaluate the appropriateness of this type of involvement). Proposals should also address how the instrumentation will broaden the participation in science and engineering research by women, underrepresented minorities, and persons with disabilities.

  9. Outlined NSF Solicitation Section • Impact on Research and Training Infrastructure (suggested length: 2 pages). • Describe how the instrument will serve • to attract researchers • make a substantial improvement in the institution's capabilities to conduct leading-edge research. • Describe how the instrument will improve • the quality of student education, • research and research training. • Any proposal requesting direct student support in operations and maintenance or development efforts must justify that involvement in terms of both • project needs and • the training of the next generation of instrumentalists • (reviewers will be asked to evaluate the appropriateness of this type of involvement). • Proposals should also address how the instrumentation will broaden the participation in science and engineering research by • women, • underrepresented minorities, and • persons with disabilities.

  10. QC Your Draft Proposal Against the Solicitation • Arrange early for editor/auditors! • Leave solicitation outline in place for first draft QC. • Perform the first audit yourself  be vicious! • Deliver draft to editor/auditors one week before submission deadline! • Accept their observations  act on them! • Etc, etc, etc…

  11. Questions? Ken Vickers Physics 248 vickers@uark.edu http://microEP.uark.edu 479 575-2875

More Related