Transcript MSP

2012 Proposal Writing Workshop
Co-sponsored by the:
National Science Foundation
&
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Workshop Objectives
As the result of this workshop, participants will better
understand:
 Key elements of the Robert Noyce Teacher Scholarship
Program
 Key features of a successful proposal to the program
Workshop Agenda
 Welcome & introductions
 Program overview
Q & A
 Features of effective proposals
 Sample proposal – Scholarship or TF/MTF track
 Meet with an NSF program director
“NSF invests in the best ideas generated by scientists, engineers and educators
working at the frontiers of knowledge, and across all fields of research
and education. Our mission, vision and goals are designed to maintain and
strengthen the vitality of the U.S. science and engineering.”
National Science Foundation Investing in America’s Future
Strategic Plan FY 2006-2011
Organization of EHR Directorate
Directorate of Education & Human
Resources (EHR)
Division of Research on Learning in Formal &
Informal Settings (DRL)
Division of Undergraduate Education
(DUE)
Division of Graduate Education
(DGE)
Division of Human Resource Development
(HRD)
Robert Noyce Teacher Scholarship Program
 Initiated by Act of Congress in 2002
 Reauthorized in 2007 (America COMPETES
Act) and in 2010 under America COMPETES
Reauthorization of Act of 2010
 To encourage talented mathematics, science,
and engineering undergraduates to pursue
teaching careers
 To encourage STEM professionals to become
teachers
 To prepare Master Teachers
2012 Noyce Scholarship Program (NSF 12-525)
Robert Noyce Teacher Scholarship Track
 Scholarships for undergraduate STEM majors preparing to become
K12 Teachers
 Internships for freshmen and sophomores
 Stipends for STEM professionals seeking to become K12 teachers
NSF Teaching Fellowships & Master Teaching
Fellowships
(TF/MTF) Track
 Fellowships for STEM professionals receiving teacher certification
through a master’s degree program with teacher certification
 Fellowships for science and math teachers preparing to become
Master Teachers
2012 Noyce Scholarship Program
Capacity Building Track
To establish the infrastructure and partnerships for
implementing a future Noyce Teacher Scholarship or NSF
Teaching Fellowship (TF/MTF) project
 Development of new teacher preparation programs for
STEM majors and STEM professionals
 Development of new programs for developing Master
STEM Teachers
Noyce Scholarship Program Eligibility
Proposals may only be submitted by:
 Universities & 2- or 4-year colleges (including
community colleges)
 Nonprofit entities that have established consortia
among such IHEs
Principal Investigators:
 The PI, or at least one Co-PI, must be a faculty member
in a STEM department.
Noyce Scholarship Program Scholarship Track
To recruit undergraduate STEM majors and STEM career
changers who might otherwise not have considered a
career in K-12 teaching:
 Summer internships for freshmen and sophomores to
interest students in STEM teaching
 Undergraduate Scholarships of at least $10,000 per year
for up to three years beginning in junior year
 Undergraduate students graduate with a degree in a STEM
discipline and teacher certification and/or licensing.
 One-year stipends of at least $10,000 for STEM
professionals (career-changers) and post-baccalaureate
students to obtain teacher certification
Noyce Scholarship Program Scholarship Track
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Scholarship and stipend capped by cost of attendance
Recipients commit to teaching in a high need school
district for 2 years for each year of scholarship/stipend
support.
Recipients failing to meet service requirement must
repay scholarship
Noyce Scholarship Program
Projects include:
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STEM faculty collaborating with Education faculty
Strong partnership with school district
Recruitment and selection strategies
Exemplary teacher preparation programs leading to certification
and/or professional development programs for Master Teaching
Fellows)
Support for new teachers
Mechanism for monitoring recipients
Institutional support
Evaluation
Noyce Scholarship Track
Phase I: For new awardees or new project with different
focus
Phase II: For previously funded awardees 
Scholarships & Stipends: To expand and extend evaluation efforts
begun under previous award and support additional cohorts of
scholarship and stipend recipients
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Monitoring and evaluation: To expand and extend evaluation efforts
of previous project without support for additional cohorts.
Noyce Scholarship Track
Phase I
 Scholarships, Stipends, Internships
 Award size up to $1,200,000
 Additional $250,000 for collaboration with two-year colleges
 Duration up to 5 years
 Administrative/programmatic costs may not exceed 25%
of total direct costs
 75% of total direct costs must directly support participants
 No cost sharing
Noyce Scholarship Program
Scholarship Track Phase II
 Scholarships and Stipends plus longitudinal evaluation
studies of previously supported cohorts of students
 Award size up to $800,000; up to 5 yrs.
 Up to 25% of
budget for admin./programmatic costs)
 75% of budget for direct support to participants
 No cost sharing
 Monitoring and Evaluation
 Award size up to $200,000; up to 3 yrs.
 No cost sharing
NSF Teaching Fellowships & Master
Teaching Fellowships Track (TF/MTF)
NSF Teaching Fellows
STEM professionals enroll in a master’s degree program
leading to teacher certification or licensing
 Receive one-year stipend of at least $10,000 while enrolled in the
Master’s degree program
 Selection of Fellows based on professional achievement,
academic merit, and demonstration of advanced content
knowledge in STEM
 Commit to teach for 4 years in a high need school district
 Receive annual salary supplement of at least $10,000 while
fulfilling four-year teaching commitment
NSF Teaching Fellowships & Master Teaching
Fellowships Track
NSF Master Teaching Fellows:
 Fellowships for math and science teachers preparing to
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become Master Teachers
Selection of Fellows based on professional achievement,
academic merit, demonstration of advanced content
knowledge in STEM, demonstrated success in improving
student achievement
Must have Master’s degree
Commit to teach for 5 years in a high need school district
Receive annual salary supplement of at least $10,000 for 5
years plus professional development while fulfilling the
teaching commitment
NSF Teaching Fellowships & Master Teaching
Fellowships Track
 Award size up to $3 million over 5-6 years
 Additional $250,000 for collaboration with two-year colleges
 Matching funds required:
 30% of total budget for request less than $1.5 million, excluding twoyear college incentive
 50% of total budget if request is $1.5 million or more, excluding twoyear college incentive
 At least 50% of cost share must be cash
 At least 75% of total direct costs must be for direct support to
participants (stipends, salary supplements, professional development)
TF/MTF Proposals Must Include:
1. A department within an IHE that provides an
advanced program of study in math and science,
2. A department or entity within an IHE that provides
teacher preparation or a 2-year institution that offers a
teacher preparation program or a dual enrollment or
an articulation agreement with an IHE that
credentials teachers,
3. At least one high need school district and public
school(s) within this district, and
4. At least one nonprofit organization with the capacity
and expertise to support the goals of the project.
Noyce Scholarship Program
Capacity Building Track
Development of new programs, partnerships,
infrastructure for future Noyce project
 Award size up to $300,000; up to 2 yrs.
 May
include an additional $50,000 over 2 years for collaborations
between two-year and four-year institutions.
 No restriction on budget allocation (within standard NSF
policies)
 No cost sharing
Preparing the Proposal
Project Description: Phase I Scholarship Track
 Results from relevant prior NSF support
 Descriptions of:
 proposed scholarship or stipend program
 teacher preparation program
 recruitment and marketing activities
 selection process
 management & administrative structure for
administering scholarship or stipend program
 plans to monitor & enforce compliance with the
required teaching commitment
Project Description: Phase I Scholarship Track
 Provide evidence of:
 infrastructure to support new teachers,
 collaboration between STEM & education faculty,
 a functioning partnership between the IHE(s) & school
districts,
 a commitment to making the program a central
institutional focus
 Include an objective evaluation plan
Project Description: TF/MTF Proposals
 Results from Prior NSF Support
 Description of proposed Fellowship program:
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For NSF Teaching Fellows
 Description of the Master’s degree program
 Evidence of an infrastructure that is supportive of new
teachers
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For NSF Master Teaching Fellows
 Description of the professional development program
 Evidence of an infrastructure that will support and facilitate
the Fellows’ work as Master Teachers
Project Description: TF/MTF Proposals
 Describe:
 Recruitment activities
 Selection
process
 Management and
 Cost sharing,
administrative structure
including source and amount; enter
amount on Budget form Line M
Project Description: TF/MTF Proposals
 Describe:
 Plans to monitor and enforce compliance with the required
teaching commitment
 Plans for sustaining activities beyond NSF funding period
 Evaluation plan
 Provide evidence of:
 Collaboration between STEM faculty and education faculty
 Functioning partnerships between IHEs, school districts, and non-
profit organizations
 Commitment to make the program a central institutional focus
Project Description: Capacity Building
Projects
 Results from Prior NSF Support: Address prior support
relevant to the proposed project
 A description of the activities planned, timeline, and
outcomes expected to result from the proposal.
 Plans for evaluating progress and outcomes of the
project.
The Process
 Proposals may be submitted to FastLane or
grants.gov (Use FastLane for TF/MTF proposals)
 All proposals are peer-reviewed according to
standard NSF merit review criteria
 Notification of results within six months of receipt
 Reviewers’ comments may be accessed through
FastLane after final decision is made
NSF Review Criteria
 NSF Merit Review Criteria
 Intellectual Merit
 Broader Impacts
 Additional Considerations
 Integration of Research & Education
 Integrating Diversity into NSF Programs
 Additional Noyce Program specific review criteria,
dependent on proposal type
All Proposals Must Include:
 One page Project Summary: Must address Intellectual
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Merit and Broader Impact
Project description (15 pages)
Budget forms and narrative for each year
Biosketches
Current & Pending Forms
Facilities document
References
Mentoring Plan for Postdoctoral Researchers (if in budget)
Data Management Plan (consult NSF Proposal & Award
Policies & Procedures Guide (PAPPG), NSF 11-1)
Indicate Human Subjects status on cover sheet (pending,
approved, or exempt)
Data Management Plan
The Proposal & Award Policies & Procedures Guide (PAPPG)
contains a clarification of NSF’s long standing data policy.
 All proposals must describe plans for data management
and sharing of the products of research, or assert the
absence of the need for such plans.
 FastLane will not permit submission of a proposal that is
missing a Data Management Plan.
 The Data Management Plan will be reviewed as part of the
intellectual merit or broader impacts of the proposal, or
both, as appropriate.
 More information can be found in the Grant Proposal
Guide Chapter II.C.2j (NSF 11-1).
Noyce Budget
Appropriations & Supplemental Funds
FY 2002-2012
FY 2009 Stimulus
60
Funds
Millions of Dollars
50
40
FY 2008
Supplemental
Funds
30
20
Appropriation
Supplemental
10
0
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
Fiscal Year
2009
2010
2011
2012
FY 2012 Noyce Scholarship Program
Deadlines
 Letters of Intent (optional): February 27, 2012
 Full Proposal Deadline: March 26, 2012
Questions?
Contact a Noyce Program Officer:
Joan Prival
[email protected]
Mary Lee Ledbetter
[email protected]
Richard Alo
[email protected]
Other Resources:
www.nsf.gov
www.nsfnoyce.org