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Getting started. Remember that grant funding is a competitive situation ?so aim to make your application as competitive as possible ?through a process of rigorous self-assessment and peer review.. Generally . . .. Know your audienceUnderstand the marketKnow your abilitiesKnow how to evalua
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1. Writing a SuccessfulResearch Grant Application
Getting Started
Aims and Expected Outcomes
Background
Significance and Innovation
Research Plan, Methodology, Timing
Budget and its Justification
Benefits of Your Research
2. Getting started Remember that grant funding is a competitive situation
so aim to make your application as competitive as possible
through a process of rigorous self-assessment and peer review.
3. Generally . . . Know your audience
Understand the market
Know your abilities
Know how to evaluate your results
Audience reasons for failure:
Artificial adaptation of purpose and significance in order to meet funding bodys objectives.
Guidelines not adhered to.
Abilities reason for failure:
unsuitable track record
Audience reasons for failure:
Artificial adaptation of purpose and significance in order to meet funding bodys objectives.
Guidelines not adhered to.
Abilities reason for failure:
unsuitable track record
4. Answer these questions . . . What do you intend to do?
What work has already been done?
Why is your research important?
How do you intend to do your work?
5. . . . which equate to Aims and Expected Outcomes
Background
Significance and Innovation
Research Plan, Methodology, Timing
6. Aims and Expected Outcomes Make sure your aims are
logical
well-defined
reasonable
attainable
7. Aims and Expected Outcomes Write the aims section first, and revise it last
Dont confuse outcomes with outputs
8. Background Background information should justify the necessity of your project.
Do preliminary studies indicate that your project is necessary and feasible?
Reason for failure:
lack of understanding of published work in the field
Reason for failure:
lack of understanding of published work in the field
9. Significance and Innovation Show how the results of your research will fill identified gaps in existing knowledge
Describe the unique and innovative features of your proposed research Ask the questions:
What will it matter if I dont do this work?
What difference will my research make?Ask the questions:
What will it matter if I dont do this work?
What difference will my research make?
10. Research Plan, Methodologyand Timing
Experimental design
Innovations
Limitations / anticipated difficulties
Alternative approaches
Time sequence Experimental design should be
original
valid
carefully and clearly designed
well organised and logical
The methods should be
appropriate
carefully documented
correspond to specific aims
Innovations
Will you use innovative procedures to overcome anticipated difficulties?
Difficulties/Alternatives
Demonstrate that you are aware of them, and how they can be overcome
suggest alternatives that are logical and appropriate.
Experimental design should be
original
valid
carefully and clearly designed
well organised and logical
The methods should be
appropriate
carefully documented
correspond to specific aims
Innovations
Will you use innovative procedures to overcome anticipated difficulties?
Difficulties/Alternatives
Demonstrate that you are aware of them, and how they can be overcome
suggest alternatives that are logical and appropriate.
11. Budget
Make accurate calculations
Dont inflate figures
12. Budget Direct Costs
can be specifically documented, eg:
salaries;
operating expenses (printing, consumables);
travel (kilometerage, fares, lodging, sustenance);
equipment;
etc.
13. Budget Indirect Costs
real costs that cannot be easily identified as specific to a particular project, eg:
utilities;
maintenance of space and equipment;
security;
computer services;
legal services;
accounting services;
payroll services.
14. Budget Justification Justify every item. Do not merely restate proposed expenditure.
Explain why the project could not proceed/would not be successful without these items
15. Benefits of your Research
Will the results of your research have benefits for Australia and/or the funding agency?
16. Roles and responsibilities
Clearly explain what each participant in the project will be doing.
17. Useful Web Links Research Grants & How to Get Them - Prof P Bergquist, DVC(R), Macquarie University
http://www.ro.mq.edu.au/howtoget.htm
Basic Elements of Grant Writing - US Corporation for Public Broadcasting
http://www.cpb.org/grants/grantwriting.html
Hints for Writing Successful NIH grants
http://chroma.med.miami.edu/research/Ellens_how_to.html
Five Things to Know about Writing Better Grant Proposals - QED Education Network
http://home.earthlink.net/~dimedio/5tips.html
Grant Writing Tips - University of Southern Colorado
http://www.uscolo.edu/faccntr/tips.html
Grant Proposal Writing Guide - University of Michigan Research Center
http://www.research.umich.edu/research/proposals/proposal_dev/pwg/pwgpage.html
Hints for Writing Grants - University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
http://www.utc.edu/Grants-and-Research/grants-gen.html
Tips for Grant Applications - University of Texas at Austin
http://www.utexas.edu/ogs/international/tipsgrad.html
18. Research Development Section Jennifer Halfpenny, ext 7242, j.halfpenny@unsw.edu.au
Pamela OHara, ext 7250, p.ohara@unsw.edu.au
Deborah Mckay, ext 7240, d.mckay@unsw.edu.au
Sharon Doyle, est 7244, sc.doyle@unsw.edu.au
19. Writing a SuccessfulResearch Grant Application Research Development Section
Research Office
University of New South Wales