Transcript Document

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Getting Started: Developing Your Project Idea
and Finding Funding Sources
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Lesley A. Brown
Director of Proposal Development
Research and Economic Development
UNC Charlotte
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Understand UNC Charlotte support for grants
Learn how to pick a “fundable idea”
Understand sponsors
Learn how to match project ideas to
sponsors’ needs
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Research and Economic Development
College-Based Research Offices
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Research and Economic Development
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Office of Proposal Development
Office of Research Services and Outreach
Office of Research Compliance
Office of Technology Transfer
Office of Grants and Contracts Administration
Charlotte Research Institute
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Developing research agendas
Locating funding
Identifying collaborators
Proposal editing
Training
Providing resources to large-scale proposal
efforts
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Provides institutional approval for
extramural proposals
Reports on grant activity to the UNC Office
of the President
Provides training to departmental
administrators
Maintains NORM (online proposal and award
management system)
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Services for faculty
◦ Agency guideline review and interpretation
◦ Budget development
◦ Proposal submission (electronic and mail)
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Oversight of human subjects in research
(IRB)
Oversight of animal use in research and
teaching (IACUC)
Oversight of institutional biosafety (IBC)
Export control
Research ethics
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Industrial relations
Industry-based sponsored research
Strategic partnerships
Intellectual property (IP) development,
management, and commercialization
Economic development
University spinouts
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Post-award support, including:
◦ Contract review and negotiation
◦ Financial monitoring and reporting of sponsored
research
◦ Following the guidelines of grants and contracts
◦ Account maintenance of grants and contracts
◦ Periodic billings and reports and collecting past
due bills
◦ Monitoring final technical and invention reporting
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Portal for business-university partnerships at
UNC Charlotte
Funding is available to faculty for symposia
and special projects
http://cri.uncc.edu/funding-grants
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College-based Research Offices
◦ Liberal Arts and Sciences: Peter Szanton, Director of
Sponsored Research
◦ Health and Human Services: Vikki Cherwon, PreAward Administrator
◦ Education: Kris Duryea, Director of Research
Development and Management
◦ Engineering: Lauren Beastall, Contracts Administrator
◦ Computing and Informatics: Pat Bridges, Research
Officer
◦ Other colleges work with Erika Cottingham in ORSO
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College-Based Research Offices in Liberal
Arts and Sciences and Engineering submit
single-college proposals directly to agency
Faculty in all other colleges submit
proposals through the Office of Research
Services and Outreach (ORSO)
ORSO submits all multi-college proposals
from more than one UNC Charlotte college
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The college offices and the central offices
work seamlessly together
If you have a college-based research office,
start there
Office of Research Services and Outreach: 71881
Office of Proposal Development: 7-1880
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Proposal routing is handled by filling out
Internal Processing Forms or IPFs
NORM (Niner Online Research Management)
Online proposal and award information
system
Tools needed to manage submission of
proposals and closeout of funded projects
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NORM
https://uncc.myresearchonline.org/ramses/
Use your Novell user name and password
See FAQ and “Help with IPF Questions” for
help
Or contact your College-Based Research
Office or the Office of Research Services and
Outreach
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Proposals must be approved by the following
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All PIs and Co-PIs
Department Chairs
Deans
Center Directors
Head of any unit providing matching funds
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Research
Training
Curriculum or program development
Planning or feasibility studies
Equipment
Community service and outreach
Seminars and conferences
Travel to archives
Fellowships
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Read literature/journals in your field
Serve as a reviewer for major journals in
your field
Serve on proposal review committees
Read winning proposal abstracts
Network with colleagues
Attend conferences/meetings in your field
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Pick a topic within your expertise that has the
potential to make a regional or national
impact
Show how you will contribute to the field by
extending work that has already been done or
combining existing approaches to a problem
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Work that is important and that addresses
a compelling need
A well-designed project that fills a gap in
the field
A project that can be completed within the
timeframe specified and with the funds
requested
An investigator who is competent to carry
out the research
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David A. Stone, “How Your Grant Proposal
Compares.” Chronicle of Higher Education.
http://chronicle.com/article/How-YourGrant-Proposal-Com/47471
To win grant money your idea must be wellpositioned in the literature
Context is everyting
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Show how your idea relates to efforts that
have come before
Show how you will fill a gap in knowledge
Lit review should be comprehensive, but
narrow enough to isolate the critical question
Show that the next important study in the
field will be yours
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Know the big players
Have a good track record
Integrate teaching and service into research
proposals
Disseminate your ideas
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David A. Stone, “Becoming a Successful
Principal Investigator,” Chronicle of Higher
Education
http://chronicle.com/article/Becoming-aSuccessful/66133/
Grants are the end of a process, not the
beginning
Take steps to raise your profile for review
committees
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Position yourself as a scholar
◦ Develop your publishing agenda
◦ Contribute to your discipline
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Position yourself as a researcher
◦ Demonstrate your have the skills to get the
research done
◦ Establish long-term research agenda
◦ Develop partnerships
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Position yourself as a grant writer
◦ Effective literature review
◦ Assemble the right team
◦ Understand what the sponsoring agency wants
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Sponsors want to solve problems
Sponsors want to make life better for groups
and communities
Sponsors want to add to knowledge
Your job is to match your project and
capabilities to what the sponsor wants to
achieve
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Every funding agency has its own agenda:
◦ NSF funds basic research
◦ NIH funds research with broad, health-related
outcomes
◦ DOD funds applied research
◦ Federal agencies, including the national arts and
humanities agencies, fund work that has national
significance
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◦ National foundations fund work that addresses
national or international problems
◦ Regional foundations and state agencies fund
work that addresses regional, state and local
problems
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An agency’s agenda can be determined by
examining its website and printed materials
and by talking to program officers
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Federal Agencies
State Agencies
Foundations
Corporations
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Government support for nonprofit
organizations is five times greater than
private (foundation or corporation) grant
support.
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Match the needs of the project to the
priorities of the agency
Get to know the agency personnel
Send a concept paper for review and
comment before submitting a full proposal
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State initiatives in social welfare, health,
criminal justice, etc.
Funded by state appropriations and federal
“pass through” money
Few states fund research
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http://state.nc.us/government/
agencies/index.aspx
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Community
National
Special Purpose
Family
Corporate
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Foundation Proposal Committee determines
whether the proposal will be handled by
ORSO (or colleges) or the Office of University
Advancement
Determined by whether the award will come
in as a gift or a sponsored agreement
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Faculty and staff can contact either their
Director of Development or their CollegeBased Research Officer or ORSO
Doesn’t matter where you start—we will
direct you to the appropriate office to handle
your foundation proposal
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•The Research and Economic
Development website has links to
online databases and state and
federal agency websites
•Susan Robinson can do a custom
funding search for you
•Contact Susan at [email protected]
or ext. 7-1869
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Pivot Funding Opportunities Database
Formerly COS
International database of faculty expertise
and funding opportunities
Claim your profile in Pivot to receive weekly
updates on funding in your field
Email Susan Robinson for instructions
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Presented by Susan Robinson, Office of
Proposal Development
Thursday, Oct. 2
12:30-2:00 p.m.
COED 007
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Foundation Directory Online
Provides information on foundations,
corporate giving, and related subjects
Atkins Library maintains a subscription
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“One-stop-shopping” for Federal grants
Find and apply for grant opportunities from
all Federal agencies
Register to receive email notifications of
grant opportunities
Over 900 grant programs offered by the 26
Federal grant-making agencies
http://www.grants.gov/
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Introduce yourself and outline your
background/expertise
Give a brief synopsis of the project and ask if
it falls within the agency’s funding priorities
If it does not, ask for other agencies that
might be interested
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If your project fall within the agency’s
priorities
◦ Are there aspects of the project that should be
emphasized?
◦ Are there unallowable costs?
◦ Will a program officer review a preliminary draft?
◦ Who will review the proposal?
◦ When is the next deadline?
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