760 likes | 1.09k Views
How To Write Your First Grant Penny Cook, Executive Director, Grants and Contracts Sara Rockwell, Ph.D., Director, Office of Scientific Affairs Professor of Therapeutic Radiology and Pharmacology Sponsors: Office of Academic Development Grants and Contracts Office of Scientific Affairs
E N D
How To Write Your First Grant Penny Cook, Executive Director, Grants and Contracts Sara Rockwell, Ph.D., Director, Office of Scientific Affairs Professor of Therapeutic Radiology and Pharmacology Sponsors: Office of Academic Development Grants and Contracts Office of Scientific Affairs July 27, 2005
Today • The funding environment today • Your support • Business Office • Grant and Contract Administration • Other • Your responsibility • Introduction to Sara Rockwell • Writing your application • Questions and answers
Where To Get Help • Department Business Office • Grant and Contract Administration • Other • Sponsor
The Funding Environment Today • Competitive • Reduced Budgets and/or years of support • Falling paylines • ERA • Collaborative multidisciplinary • Clinical relevance
Departmental Business Office • May provide assistance in: • Budget preparation • Administrative pages • Obtaining endorsement letters • Preparing proposal summary sheet (Prosum) • Procuring signatures • Post award financial management
Grant and Contract Administration • Research available support • Communicate changes in policy • Review grants and contracts for policy and compliance • Negotiate terms and conditions • Require complete application at time of submission • Primary contact with funding agency pre and post award • GCFA
Other Support • HIC • HIPPA • IACUC • Safety Office • Conflict of Interest Office • OCR
Sponsor Life Cycle (NIH example) Center for Scientific Review (CSR) 10,000 applications/cycle Assignment 4 months Integrated Review Group (IRG) Assignment Streamlining Study Section Priority Score Summary Statement 3 months Advisory Counsel 3 months Award
PI Responsibilities • Appropriate institutional appointment • Obtain space and resources • Signed patent agreement • Complete application materials • Obtain Letters • Adhere to GCA deadlines • Send proposal to sponsor • Manage post award administration • Compliance reviews/training
The writing process from the Principal Investigator’s perspective • When to start? • At least three months in advance • Longer for new project • Longer for complex project • Don’t assume that at the end of a project cycle that renewal is automatic
Where to find out about funding sources • Talk with colleagues • Talk with business office/chair • Talk to Melanie Smith • Databases on Grants and Contracts website • Alert services • Professional society websites • YSM and Yale bulletin boards, announcements, e-mail list serves, etc.
Research Grants and Career Development Awards • Research grant: focus is on project • Career development award: focus is on potential of applicant • Different focus • Different requirements • Even when you use the same project for both you will write them differently
Youcan(and probably should) apply for more than one grant for a project • “Pay line” is often at ~20% • Same project to different agencies • Research project plus career development award • Acknowledge overlap in “other support” sheets • If they are all funded • Open champagne • Decide which award (or awards) to accept and which to decline
Limited competitions • “Scholars awards” • Usually career development grants – often limited to new faculty • Institution or department may be allowed only 1 or 2 two candidates • Internal competition to select Yale’s nominee(s) • List on Grants and Contracts website • Melanie Smith can send you information on those of interest to you
Internal competitions • Grants through programs at Yale or YSM • Often limited to Yale researchers • Generally in focused area • Fellowships and research grants • Generally small • Often for pilot studies • Sometimes limited to new investigators • Can be very valuable • Get preliminary data • Establish independence and track record
Where to start: Gather information about possible grantmakers • Grantmaker’s areas of interest • Grantmaker’s policies • Amount and duration of funding • Deadlines • Instructions • Application forms • Procedures used to review grants • Time until funding • Probability of funding
Responding to an RFA or RFP • Some RFAs and RFPs are great opportunities; others are not worth the effort • Talk to the contact person • Find out more about the request and the intent and scope • Ask about review process -special panel or regular study sections? • Is money set aside? • How many projects will they fund?
Reviewing and Funding are separate actions by independent groups • Study sections • review applications for scientific merit • prioritize by scientific merit • Institutes and Programs fund projects • consider the scientific merit • also consider priorities of program • consider balance of their portfolio • may “reach for” applications in critical areas • may skip applications of “low interest” to program
Gather the information needed to plan and develop your application • Literature related to project • Resources needed for project • Techniques needed • Possible collaborators and mentors • People who can be asked to write letters • Cost and budget information • Make a list of the things you will need to do before submitting grant
Some critical elements to think about beforeyou begin to write • Are you eligible? • Do you have the resources you need? • Skills • Equipment, facilities • Support from department, institution • If not, can you get them? • What scope of project can you perform with your resources and time? • Don’t waste your time preparing grants that can’t fly
If you have questions • Talk to Grants and Contracts • Contact the grantmaker • Program people (scientists) • Administrators • Talk to your business office • Talk to experienced investigators in your field of research • Senior investigators • Young investigators, a couple years ahead of you • Successful applicants for same grant
Writing the application • Format and content varies dramatically • Read the instructions • Follow them to the letter • May need to alter focus • May need to alter scope to match money and time available • One size does not fit all…or even most
Parts of the application • Cover sheets • Abstract or abstracts • Administrative elements • Assurances • Biosketches or CVs • Scientific sections • Letters (sometimes) • Appendices (sometimes)
The cover sheet • Specific to agency and grant type • Will have very specific format and instructions • May require very specific (and sometimes very bizarre) information • Some you will not know • Go to Grants and Contracts website and business office for help • May require signatures and assurances • Must be complete and accurate
Assurances • With most grants you will see a terrifyinglist of required assurances • Don’t panic: many will already have been handled by the institution • You will need to handle • Human subjects protection • Animal welfare • Safety • Conflict of interest and commitment • Patent assignment • Will require reviews/approvals at Yale and may require discussion in the application
Picking a title for your project • Sounds trivial…but isn’t • Length may be quite limited • Make it informative: titles may be used to assign grants to review committees and reviewers • Should be intelligible to a non specialist • Don’t use jargon • Don’t get cute
Abstract • Draft first; rewrite when application is almost done • May be the most important part of application • Used to assign reviewers • Read by all reviewers on panel • The abstract should summarize your project, describe its importance, and make the reader excited about reading the application and funding the project
Lay abstract • Many foundations require a lay abstract • Very important • There may be non-scientists on the review panel • Some foundations give these to their donors • Can be difficult to write • Write it for an intelligent non-scientist • Describe project in non-technical terms • Emphasize importance and relevance • Ask some non-scientists to read and critique your draft of this abstract
CV or Biosketch • Very important element of any grant • Critical for career development awards • Primary reviewers will examine this carefully • Other reviewers will look at it before and during meeting - especially if there are questions or problems • Different from resume, full academic CV • Focus tightly on information relevant to your research career and to the project
Preparing the Biosketch or CV • Funding agency may provide a form and detailed instructions • Follow them exactly • Do not alter order from that specified • Proofread, proofread, proofread • Do not exceed allowed length • Sections usually included • Current position • Education • Professional Experience • Honors and Awards • Publications
Education and Experience • Generally: start with college • Include areas of study and degrees earned • Non degree programs and education may warrant inclusion • All graduate and postdoctoral training and research should be included • Broad outline: start end dates, institution, city and state, mentor • Don’t give details • Chronological, but watch order
Biosketch: Current position • Current position - be sure it matches that on cover and elsewhere • Use official University titles only • Promotion in progress? • List effective date • List only those made in writing • May be ask to provide documentation • If application includes letter from the Chair or Dean, be sure it mentions the promotion.
Experience and awards • Experience goes beyond your primary appointment • Secondary appointments • Advisory boards • Awards and honors • Select with care • Begin with college • Do not include trivial awards • Awards relevant to professional career • Describe if implications unclear to outside observer
Publications • Follow instructions for format and content very carefully • Reviewers will look at • Number of publications • Quality of publications • Peer reviewed journals? • Quality, impact of journals? • Full article or brief notes and case reports? • Position as author • How many authors? • Who are the authors? • Negotiate authorships carefully
Publications • Include • Papers published in peer reviewed journals • Papers in press ( this means accepted for publication) • Book chapters, papers in proceedings, reviews (may be separate) • Abstracts - maybe. Specify and list separately • Do not include • Papers in preparation • Papers submitted but not yet accepted Plan ahead - submit early Can sometimes send newly accepted papers after acceptance
Publications • NIH: “All publications in last 3 years and representative earlier publications pertinent to this application” • If you have more publications than can fit into the allowed space, include an opening statement such as “Selected from a total of 195 publications” • Some agencies ask for the total number of publications
Budget • Format and information required varies dramatically • Some agencies specify a fixed budget and define how you must spend it. • Some want details • Some want none • Give them what they want • Use the forms or follow the format given in the instructions • Check agency guidelines: what costs are allowable and what are not?
Developing your numbers • Even if the agency doesn’t want details, work up a detailed budget so you know what you can do with the funds available • Use real numbers • Real salaries and fringes • Real costs of supplies, animal care, etc • Include everything you will need • Extrapolate costs to start date of grant • Don’t “low ball” • Don’t forget indirect costs
Future years • Extrapolate from first year • Consider changes in project over time - the science and the budget should always correspond • Project future salaries as accurately as possible • Include expected raises and promotions • business office can help here • Increase other costs to allow for inflation
PROBLEM: NIH modular grants • NIH now funds modular grants at a constant level for future years • Allows carryover of funds • Remember to plan for raises and inflation in deciding how many modules you request in the first year • E.g. for 3 year grant use second year cost estimates, not current or first year cost estimates to develop the budget
Budget justification • Format and detail required vary greatly • Follow instructions carefully • Should justify your costs in terms of the science of the project • Will be examined by study section members (scientists) during their review • Will be examined by business people later
Time and effort of investigators is often examined closely • Does it match the scientific activities you have described? • Do you have enough time from the essential people? • Do you have all the skills you need? • Do you have enough technical support? • A problem with many first applications is that the project cannot possibly be done with the time and resources available
Expectations on time and effort • Percent Salary = Percent Effort • If not, you must justify the difference • No effort is allowed without salary support • You cannot have more than 100% professional effort • All Yale assignments • All external professional activities • Watch time and effort carefully
Resources and Environment • Space • Equipment • Core facilities • Departmental • School of Medicine • University • Expertise and facilities available from your co-investigators • External resources to be used
Resources and Environment • For critical resources and expertise that you don’t have yourself, get letters of collaboration • You have an advantage by being at Yale • Many talented scientists, willing to share their expertise and resources • Great core facilities • E.g. Keck center • Internationally known • Available on fee for service basis • If you’re going to use them, say so
Scientific Sections • Format varies with sponsor • Follow instructions exactly • Conform to required length • Can be shorter • Can never be longer • Don’t try to get around length limits by using tiny fonts, small margins or appendices. • Many agencies return such grants without review • Even if they don’t, the reviewers are usually ruthless
Scientific sections of an NIH RO1 application • Specific Aims • Background and Significance • Preliminary Data • Research Plan and Methods • Literature Cited • Appendices - sometimes
Specific Aims • Short paragraph describing overarching goal of project • Brief list of specific things you plan to accomplish during the project • 3 - 5 Aims • May have sub-aims • length 1/2 to 1 page • Broad overview of goals, hypotheses to be tested and approaches to be used, in telegraphic form
Background and Significance • Give scientific background and context for project • Establish importance and novelty of proposed project • Review prior work in area of project and literature related to the project • Goals of this section • Orient reader to subject and importance of project • Prove your knowledge of the area through a solid review and objective citation of prior related work