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Grants Landscape I: Introduction to Obtaining Federal Funding and the Office of Sponsored Programs. Office of Sponsored Programs Raubinger Hall, Room 107 William Paterson University 973-720-2852 June 2009. Agenda. Grants Landscape I The Office of Sponsored Programs Proposal process
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Grants Landscape I:Introduction to Obtaining Federal Funding and the Office of Sponsored Programs Office of Sponsored Programs Raubinger Hall, Room 107 William Paterson University 973-720-2852 June 2009
Agenda • Grants Landscape I • The Office of Sponsored Programs • Proposal process • Proposal components • Searching for funding • WPUNJ Process, Policies and Procedures regarding grants • Grants Landscape II • Elements of a proposal • Guidelines and proposal review • Narrative components • Budget components
Contact Information: • Staff: • Martin Williams, Director • TBH, Assistant Director for Pre-Award Services • Beth Ann Bates, Program Assistant • Graduate & Undergraduate Assistants • Nina Jemmott, Associate Vice President and Dean, Graduate Studies and Research • Office: • Raubinger Hall 107 • Phone: 973-720-2852, fax: 973-720-3573 • Email: williamsm@wpunj.edu • Webpage: • www.wpunj.edu/osp
Funding at WPUNJ ~ OSP • Federal Sources • NIH (National Institute of Health) • NSF (National Science Foundation) • USED (Department of Education) • State Sources • NJ DOE (Department of Education) • Foundations • Corporate Research Agreements • Foundation and corporate support generally handled by Institutional Advancement
The Office of Sponsored Programs • Primary Focus: • Proposals to government agencies, public charities and large foundations • Support for research, teaching, community service, public programs, creative endeavors, conferences, other agencies • Three Major Areas of Activity: • Pre-Award Services & Resources • Post-Award Services & Support • Compliance
OSP Pre-award Services & Resources • Funder identification & reference resources • Publications: • Dates, Updates & Insights (DUI) email • STAR Report • Web site • Training: at WPU and conferences; funder visits • Idea and project development, proposal preparation guidance/assistance, institutional review, submission • Support and encouragement: • Senate Research Council, University Research & Scholarship Day
Grant Lifecycle • Develop idea, undertake foundation activities • Identify sponsors • Develop & submit proposals • Negotiate contracts • Undertake project and dissemination • Closeout and final reports • Start over
Proposal Development Process Initiate idea for activity or project Find appropriate funders Refine idea, develop project, outline proposal Meet with OSP; contact funder Draft proposal; contact consultants and partners, begin collecting support materials Meet with OSP to review draft, develop budget, schedule submission Submit nearly finished narrative and budget for review and signature, about 10 days to deadline Finalize proposal package, submit early
Preliminary Activities Get Ready • Know Yourself • Who are you? • Keywords: Education, status, expertise, professional goals • Know Your Project • What do you want to do? • Keywords: What, who, how, how much, duration • Preliminary activities, publications, presentations, support • Literature search: Activities, lessons, background • Evaluate your competitiveness • How do you stand up to your peers? • What is special about your project?
Identify and Study Prospects • Search broadly for specific funding opportunities or appropriate agencies • Use databases to identify: GrantSearch; COS • Identify and learn about a funding agency’s mission, programs and deadlines • Use agency publications: NSF Home Page; NEH; US Dept of Education • Study, clarify and analyze program areas and opportunities
Stay up-to-date by regularly obtaining and evaluating information frequently • Subscribe to email announcement services: NSF Custom News; EDInfo • OSP’s Dates, Updates & Insights (DUI) emails • COS Workbench • http://www.cos.com/ • GRC Publications • GRC Homepage • Agency Grants Page Bookmark • US Dept of Education Grant Applications
Analyze Opportunities … • Steps for analyzing a funding opportunity • Summary description and guidelines (COS) • First check • eligibility, limitations, dates, award amounts • Then check • goals, objectives, special issues, application process • Other information • award list, abstracts, sample proposals • Third party analyses: • Guide to Federal Funding For Education
to learn . . . • What they want to accomplish and what they expect you to do to determine if your project will help them achieve their vision, mission and goals. • Who and what they have funded recently to see if you and your project will be competitive, duplicative or too unique. • What they will not fund. • The requirements, preferences and expectations for the format and content of your proposal to know the amount of detail they expect and the order they expect to see your information. • Special issues that may need to be addressed. • Reporting and compliance requirements.
and then make choices. • Refine and prioritize list of opportunities based on your perception of your ability to respond to the funding agency’s needs. • Refine your idea and methodology based on what the funding agency is willing to support and what you are willing to do. • Decide: Are you still “happy” with the project? • Will the project be the one you want and need to do? • Are the time commitment, the amount of funding that will be provided and project outcomes right for you?
“Chance favors the prepared mind.” Louis Pasteur
Search Tools: People • Office of Sponsored Programs Staff • Colleagues • In department, professional associations, peers • Conferences • Grants Major Element: • Grant Resource Center, Training Workshops • Agency Technical Assistance Sessions, Regional Meetings, Webinars • Grants Minor Element: Session or exhibitor
Search Tools: The Internet • Internet-based Databases Subscriptions & Free Sites • GrantSearch, COS Funding Opportunities • Grants.Gov • Free Internet Search Tools • What’s your favorite metasearch engine? • Organizations: e.g. Foundation Center • Helpful Hints: • Use “Keywords” or their terms • Start narrow then broaden • Agency Websites and Program Pages • NSF, NIH, USED
Overview of a Complete Proposal • Cover Page, forms, signatures • Abstract • Narrative • Background and problem statement • Goals and objectives • Activity Plan • Evaluation • Budget, budget support, other forms • Appendix and support material
Guidelines First! • Read the Guidelines Thoroughly to: • Verify Eligibility for the grant program • Establish Connection to the funder’s mission, goals and the grant program’s expected outcomes • Learn the Details of the application process, format, including special information or review requirements • Get Answers to Questions: Call the Program staff! • Evaluate whether the program is right for you, your project and the University
Review Criteria: Content • Narrative Requirements • Their language for sections of the whole proposal • Order of sections • Information expectations for sections • Point value for sections • Evaluation Criteria • The “Grading Rubric” for proposals • Checklist MAY BE IN SEPARATE OR MULTIPLE DOCUMENTS
Proposal Review Process 1. Self/Institutional review before submitting 2. Technical review when received 3. First program staff review 4. Peer/Committee review: selection and scoring 5. Second program staff review: ranking and selection 6. Program executive officer/board review: approval 7. Contract office review: negotiation and award
WPUNJ Policies & Procedures: • Grant Approval Sheet: • Documents official support for project • Summarizes key elements, identifies special review needs • Assists in time management and in orchestrating the final review process to meet submission deadline • Project Director obtains Chair & Dean signatures • OSP obtains Administration & Finance signatures, Provost Office signatures, and signatures on proposal, support letters and other required documentation • Due in OSP 10 days before due date to: • Obtain final signatures • Assemble packet and prepare final documents and copies • Submit
Helpful Hints:General Tips for Success Follow the directions/answer their questions Talk to the Program Officer Fulfill their review criteria Ask for what you need Be thorough in describing the project Do not do the project or writing alone Schedule time to write Start early to insure there is enough time Everything must “fit together”
Workshop Evaluation All responses are completely anonymous. Data will not be reported in a way that could divulge the identity of any respondents. Grants Landscape I: Introduction to Finding Grants and the Office of Sponsored Programs June 2009
Contact Information Staff: • Martin Williams, Director EXT 3263 • TBH, Ass’t Director, Pre-Award EXT 3794 • Beth Ann Bates, Program Assistant EXT 2852 • Nina Jemmott, Asso VP & Dean, Graduate Studies and Research EXT 3093 Office: • Raubinger Hall 107 • Fax: 973-720-3573 Webpage: • www.wpunj.edu/osp