350 likes | 573 Vues
Workshop Agenda. 9:30 am: Introductions 9:40 am: Nancy McNeil, Grants Officer, Office of Research ServicesLogistics of Grant Applications; Joining "nserc-list" email list; Registration (Form 180 or 181); Eligibility; SFU Signature Sheet and Esubmission or paper submission to NSERC10
E N D
1. NSERC Faculty Workshop Fall 2006
Discovery Grants
and
Research Tools and Instruments
Adrienne Drobnies, Ph.D.
2. Workshop Agenda 9:30 am: Introductions
9:40 am: Nancy McNeil, Grants Officer,
Office of Research Services
Logistics of Grant Applications; Joining "nserc-list" email list; Registration (Form 180 or 181); Eligibility; SFU Signature Sheet and Esubmission or paper submission to NSERC
10:00 am: Writing an Effective Proposal
How to Structure an NSERC Research Proposal
Making Your Case
Budgets and Justifications
CV, Research Contributions
How to get meaningful critique for your proposal
Grant Writing Aids and Grants Facilitation
11:00 am: Internal Peer Review and Grants Facilitators to Work with Individual Applicants
11:45 am: Wrap Up
3. Which Agency? See “Selecting the Appropriate Federal Granting Agency and Addressing Other Sources of Funding” at
http://www.nserc.ca/professors_e.asp?nav=profnav&lbi=p8
Beware the summary
.
4. Psychology Proposals NSERC considers applications that relate to fundamental psychological processes, their underlying neural mechanisms, their development within individuals, and their evolutionary and ecological context.
Fundamental processes are understood to include:
sensation and perception;
sensorimotor integration;
motivation, emotion, and reward;
learning and memory;
cognition and language; and
sleep, arousal, and the chronobiological modulation of behaviour.
NSERC also considers applications concerning statistical methods for analysis of psychological data.
Clinical psychology programs are not normally eligible for NSERC support
Social psychology and educational psychology are also ineligible
5. Discovery Grants To support research programs
Scope should suit length of requested funding
(5 years)
Register by deadline if possible and decide on the GSC you want to request
Look at the titles of applications in that GSC,
membership, success rates, and the amounts funded
Take note of Reallocations Process (soon extinct)
6. Discovery Grants (cont.) Templates
Package Consists of Form 101 (Application), Form 100 (CV) and Sample Research Contributions
Each form has a section that is filled in on line, with free form attachments for the proposal (101), budget justification (101), and research contributions (100)
Weighting of Proposal vs Applicant 50:50
7. Making your Case Five pages to describe five years of proposed research plus one page for references
Tailor your grant to the culture of your discipline and the GSC you are applying to
8. Making your Case From “How to Prepare a Winning Proposal”
You need to convince the selection committee that:
your research program promises a notable advancement or innovation in the discipline or results of importance to a broad range of applications;
you have identified well-formulated short- and long-term goals;
attaining these goals would be a significant contribution to the discipline;
you have a good chance of attaining the goals with the resources available.
9. Discovery Grant ProposalsSections Progress
Background
Objectives
Methods
Training
Significance
10. Discovery Grant ProposalsSections Progress
Describe any preliminary results
As a new applicant, explain how your previous research activities have established the basis for the proposed research program
As a renewal applicant, explain how you have achieved the stated objectives in your previous application, and, if not, why not
11. Discovery Grant ProposalsSections Background
Place your work in context
Cite relevant literature, including your own. Analyze the work of others critically but in a balanced fashion. Don’t refer to web sites.
Give enough information for both the expert and non-expert to evaluate the significance and feasibility of your proposed research
12. Discovery Grant ProposalsSections Objectives
A few long-term goals, each with several more specific shorter term objectives
Describe the questions that the proposed research will answer and state hypotheses where appropriate
State expected results and what you are going to do if you don’t get them
13. Discovery Grant ProposalsSections Methods
Give enough detail to clearly demonstrate what you plan to do, but avoid unnecessary detail that doesn’t contribute to your argument
Organize methods so that they are linked to specific objectives
Describe any anticipated methodological difficulties and possible alternatives
Show that the resources needed will be available
14. Discovery Grant ProposalsSections Training (describe briefly)
How does this proposal offer unique training opportunities to graduate students and other researchers in your lab?
What opportunities will this research create for trainees to be employed in specific industries or sectors?
The global value of this type of training
If training opportunities are limited, explain why
15. Discovery Grant ProposalsSections Significance
How will the anticipated results advance knowledge in a significant way in the field?
Could the outcome have a major impact on the field? Stress what is truly innovative about your research.
Global significance and benefits of the research
16. Discovery Grant Form 101
Basic info
Time Commitment
Budget
17. Sample Contributions See guide for how to package up to 4 publications or other sample contributions (and number of sets required by your GSC)
To help reviewers assess the quality of your work
18. Budgets Discovery Grants
Allowed amounts for salaries and stipends
$16,500 M.Sc. Maximum $19,000 Ph.D. Maximum
$25,000 post-doc minimum for each of two years
Amount for non-discretionary benefits should be added to each of the above
Usually salaries are largest component
Each piece of equipment requested must be <$7000 (but NSERC will not prevent you from using your funding however you wish in your research program)
19. Budget Justification Structure According to Budget Form
Show how each item relates to proposal
Give names of trainees and roles and describe other sources of support - external and internal
20. Explain Relationship to Other Support
Use “Other Documents” section if you need to include budget from other applications to explain this
21. Letters of Support Don’t include general letters of support for Discovery Grants
Include letters only if necessary to explain significance of specific contributions (e.g., tech reports)
Only include letters of commitment for matching funding for RTIs.
22. Form 100 CV Five most significant Contributions
Can be statement about areas of research (preferred), including reference to one or more publications (numbered), or you can simply cite the publications themselves and explain their significance to the field
In each case, be sure to show impact on your field
23. Form 100 CV
Other Contributions (5 pages for past 6 years)
Highlight names of trainees in bold
Note in parentheses main funding sources for cited work (Suggest giving a key at the start of the section)
Other Evidence of Impact - lectures, awards, consulting, editorial boards and reviewer
Delays in Research Activity
Training
24. Form 100 CV
HQP Table - get permissions
As a new applicant, use training section to describe your contributions to training during post-doc, industrial experience, etc. Emphasize any particularly noteworthy aspects of your training record.
Link Form 100 to 101
25. RTIs
Must hold or have applied for Discovery Grant
Equipment and systems up to 150 K from NSERC before taxes, shipping, and handling (new this year up to 250 K with matching funds). Include a letter of commitment from SFU or other source supplying matching funding.
Help for new investigators to set up their labs
26. RTIs (cont.) You must get quotes for equipment (2 quotes for equipment over 25 K)
If there are multiple users of the equipment, this is beneficial to your application. You may consider having one or more co-applicants.
The onus is on you to demonstrate need, to show lack of duplication or accessibility, and to explain the impact of delay in funding
27. RTIs Two page proposal including references - Discuss research supported by the requested equipment and how that equipment is essential to it
Reason for the proposed configuration
Training opportunities afforded by the requested equipment
28. Explain how this is complementary or relates to other equipment funding - CFI new op or Innovation Fund award
Why wasn’t this included in the CFI request?
How is this integrated into a larger research program? What is unique about the proposed system? Why this particular system?
If asking for high performance computer equipment, other than to CS GSC, explain why you can’t use available shared facilities
29. Budget Justification for RTI Give detailed configuration of major components of the system. Use a diagram if that is more descriptive. Justify need for system as a whole and for each component
Model numbers, prices, other fees associated with acquisition of the equipment
Explain need for extended warranties if they are requested
30. Some Final Thoughts When you begin to write, you simply need to get your thoughts down in whatever way works best for you.
As you progress through your drafts, focus on organizing and refining the material according to NSERC guidelines.
31. Next view the proposal from
the perspective of
The tired primary and secondary reviewers on the GSC who have just read 50 - 100 other proposals in past 3 days
The non-expert reviewer
The expert reviewer
32. If new to the process, make an appointment with your GF as early as possible to design a strategy to develop and review the application.
Get critique from individuals in the same GSC, especially if they have been members of that GSC.
Consult your Dept. Chair and/or FRLO about who would be a good internal reviewer, who to contact for an example of a good grant application in your field. (GFs may also aid you here.)
Contact your faculty mentor for advice.
33.
Be specific when asking for critique
Are the methods well explained?
What is the most serious weakness?
Is the budget appropriate?
Justified adequately?
One specific suggestion for improving the proposal
34. Get critique if possible from colleagues outside SFU (disinterested parties).
Proofread, proofread, proofread. Get at least one other person to proofread your application.
35. The NSERC Web Site Home page
http://www.nserc.ca
What’s New
http://www.nserc.gc.ca/professors_e.asp?nav=profnav&lbi=summ
On Line Services
http://www.nserc.gc.ca/forms/formtable_e.htm
Programs
http://www.nserc.gc.ca/professors_e.asp?nav=pg
36. The NSERC Web Site Awards Search
http://www.ost.uqam.ca/CRSNG/Outil.aspx?Langue=Anglais
Grant Selection Committees http://www.nserc.gc.ca/professors_e.asp?nav=profnav&lbi=gsc
GSC Members
http://www.nserc.gc.ca/commit/gsc_e.htm
Proposal Writing Guide
http://www.nserc.gc.ca/professors_e.asp?nav=profnav&lbi=winprop
Reallocations Exercise
http://www.nserc.gc.ca/programs/real2000/report_final_e.htm