1 / 16

Funding: A Grants Overview May 2 & 4 2012 Ann Combs, MLS Ebling Library

Funding: A Grants Overview May 2 & 4 2012 Ann Combs, MLS Ebling Library. Today’s Session Includes Types of grantors; types of grants resources Public/private; Free/Fee-based How to access and use resources Where to get help. Public Funding examples State, Municipal

connor
Télécharger la présentation

Funding: A Grants Overview May 2 & 4 2012 Ann Combs, MLS Ebling Library

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. Funding: A Grants Overview May 2 & 4 2012 Ann Combs, MLS Ebling Library

  2. Today’s Session Includes • Types of grantors; types of grants resources • Public/private; Free/Fee-based • How to access and use resources • Where to get help

  3. Public Funding examples • State, Municipal • WDNR (AIS; conserve; etc.) • US Federal • NIH, NSF, NEA, NEH, NASA, SSA, DOE, DOT, DOD, AID, etc. • Marine Mammal Commission and other, lesser-known • Non-US Federal

  4. Private Funding examples • Foundations • Ford Foundation • WK Kellogg Foundation • Anesthesia Patient Safety Foundation • Societies • Am Soc for Laser Medicine & Surgery • American Association of Anatomists • Gerontological Society of America

  5. Two UW libraries focused on your funding needs • Ebling Library Funding resources and services • Online databases, in-person help • Memorial Library’s Grants Information Collection

  6. Grants Information Collection • Memorial Library Room 262 D/E • Foundation Center Cooperating Collection • Website http://grants.library.wisc.edu • Unique information and resources • Foundation Directory Online, Associations Unlimited , • DonorSearch.net, more • Travel free via #80 Bus • Library Collection, not a research service

  7. Ebling Resources, Services • Presentations to your Dept. or Laboratory • Individual consultations • Drop-in classes • Grants & Funding databases and resources • http://ebling.hslc.wisc.edu/bjd/index.php#databasesbytopic • NIH Public Access Policy Compliance • http://ebling.hslc.wisc.edu/help/nih.php • Research Data Services (NSF Data Plans) • http://researchdata.wisc.edu/make-a-plan/nsf-data-plans4/

  8. Aspects to keep in mind • What has this grantor funded in the past • How can you spend the money • Who are they willing to fund • Where are they willing to fund • Subjects/topics of interest

  9. General Types of Funding • Individual • Study (scholarship, fellowship, doctoral completion or planning, etc.) • Research • Travel • Conference attendance • Sabbatical • Organizational • Research, Projects • Curriculum development • Conference development • Outreach • Equipment • Use of facility • Scholarship funds • Endowments

  10. For Individual Funding • Level of study completed • Demographic characteristics • (Gender, race/ethnicity, single-parent, returning student, etc.) • Citizenship/residency • Long-term goals • Geographic location of the activity to be funded • Time constraints, amount sought

  11. For organizational funding • Type of organization (university, research group, lab, hospital, types of populations served, etc.) • Geographic location (Wisconsin, Midwest, US, etc.) • Time constraints • Amount

  12. Specific topic has broader implications, connections • Disease complex • Technique/approach/treatment • Technology used • Population studied • Population to benefit • Other translational relevance • Future application of technology, approach • Outcomes

  13. Before Searching • Be clear on topic and its context • Zebra muscles in lake or Airport construction near Pacific bay • Environmental studies; Fresh water Biology; Limnology; Environmental Biology; Marine Ecology; Conservation Biology, etc. • Be clear on the following • Education level, Citizenship, Residency • Where research will happen geographically • Sponsor types • Amount, Deadlines • Set up alert account in databases that offer it

  14. Learn about funding entities • Article databases – who funded the research results you’re currently reading in journals? • Web of Science, PubMed include funding info • IRS Tax Returns of funding organizations • Foundation Directory Online at Memorial • Check Funders’ track records: to whom, how much, how often, resultant papers and patents. • RePORTER, other sources

  15. RFP Sites • Philanthropy News Digest RFPs • Health http://foundationcenter.org/pnd/rfp/cat_health.jhtml • Medical Research http://foundationcenter.org/pnd/rfp/cat_medical_research.jhtml • Science and Technology http://www.foundationcenter.org/pnd/rfp/cat_science_technology.jhtml • Chronicle of Philanthropy Deadlines for Grants and Awards http://philanthropy.com/section/Deadlines/269/ • Then limit by Health, Healthcare, Medical Education, Medical Research

  16. Need additional help or have more questions? http://ebling.library.wisc.edu/services/ask-a-librarian.cfm 608-262-2020 Class materials can be found under “Classes and Tutorials” http://ebling.library.wisc.edu/classes_tutorials/index.php#tutorials

More Related