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Robert Noyce Teacher Scholarship Program. Proposal Writing Workshop Features of Effective Proposals. Features of Effective Proposals. Use a sample proposal to launch discussion of ways to put together an effective Noyce Scholarship Phase 1 poposal
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Robert Noyce Teacher Scholarship Program Proposal Writing Workshop Features of Effective Proposals
Features of Effective Proposals • Use a sample proposal to launch discussion of ways to put together an effective Noyce Scholarship Phase 1 poposal • Highlight general tips for NSF proposal writing
Brief Review of the Phase 1 Scholarship Track Goal is to recruit STEM majors and career changers who might not otherwise have considered a career in K-12 teaching • Scholarships for undergraduate STEM majors preparing to become K-12 teachers • Internships for freshman and sophomores • Stipends for STEM professionals seeking to become K-12 teachers
Key Features of the Project Description • Results from prior NSF support • Proposed scholarship program • Description of teacher preparation program • Recruitment activities • Selection process • Management and administration • Support for new teachers • Collaboration and partnerships • Monitoring and enforcing compliance • Evidence for institutional commitment • Evaluation plan
Key Features of the Project Description: Proposed Scholarship or Stipend Program & Description of Teacher Preparation Program • Is there sufficient information about the numbers, size of scholarship/stipend, and activities to convince you that this would be a strong scholarship program? • In what ways has the PI most effectively documented the quality of the teacher preparation program? • Is the proposed program likely to enable scholarship recipients to become successful teachers?
Key Features of the Project Description:Recruitment Activities & Selection Process • What aspects of the recruitment plan do you think are the most likely to be effective? (and why?) • Will this plan be effective in recruiting STEM majors who might not otherwise consider a career in teaching? • Will this selection process effectively identify the ‘best’ candidates for the scholarships?
Key Features of the Project Description:Support for New Teachers • Will the planned induction support adequately meet the needs of new teachers?
Key Features of the Project Description:Evaluation Plan • Will this plan provide useful information about important program outcomes?
Jigsaw Activity • Four features, one per table • Management & administration • Collaboration & partnerships • Evidence of institutional commitment • Monitoring & enforcing compliance • In your Jigsaw Groups • Discuss the questions • Decide on main points to report to group All Tables: Results from prior NSF support
Key Features of the Project Description:Management & Administration • What aspects of the administration and management plan did the most to convince you that the project will be well run?
Key Features of the Project Description:Collaboration and Partnerships • Has the PI persuaded you that the collaboration and partnerships are well-functioning?
How to Demonstrate a Strong Partnership • Individuals from all institutions have clear roles and communication structures • Management plan includes a description of how communication, meetings, roles, division of responsibilities, and reporting will occur • Distribution of resources is appropriate to the scope of the work • All partners contribute to the work and benefit from it • Letters of commitment are provided from non-lead partners (consult the solicitation for which letters are required, and which are optional)
Key Features of the Project Description:Evidence for Institutional Commitment • Consider the information about institutional commitment • What other lines of evidence could a PI use to demonstrate that the sponsoring institution is committed to making the program a central institutional focus?
Key Features of the Project Description:Monitoring & Enforcing Compliance • Consider the monitoring and enforcing compliance strategies presented in the proposal • Are these plans likely to be effective?
Key Features of the Project Description:Results from Prior NSF Support • Does the proposal adequately address prior support?
Robert Noyce Teacher Scholarship Program:Strengths and Weaknesses of Submitted Proposals
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
Review Criteria: Phase I Scholarship Proposals • Capacity and ability of institution to effectively conduct the program • Number and quality of students that will be served by the program • Justification for number of students and amount of stipend & scholarship support • Quality and feasibility of recruitment & marketing strategies Strong: Provides data to justify need and realistic expectations; indicates number of participants Weak: Projections not supported by data
Review Criteria: Phase I Scholarship Proposals • Ability of the program to recruit STEM majors who would not otherwise pursue a teaching career Strong: Indicates they will recruit beyond those who are already in the program Weak: Not expanding beyond current pool
Review Criteria: Phase I Scholarship Proposals • Quality of the preservice educational program Strong: • Provides detailsabout program • Provides evidence that graduates are successful • Research based Weak: Little information provided
Review Criteria: Phase I Proposals • Extent to which STEM & education faculty are collaborating in developing & implementing the program Strong: Good representation of STEM and education faculty; defined roles in management plan; shared responsibility Weak: No evidence of collaboration (“in name only”)
Review Criteria: Phase I Proposals • Quality of the preservice student support and new teacher support infrastructure • Strong: A clear plan for supporting students and new teachers to ensure success; strong partnership with school district • Weak: No support beyond the financial support
Review Criteria: Phase I Proposals • Extent to which the proposed strategies reflect effective practices based on research • Strong: based on literature; research findings • Weak: no references or not clear how the project is based on research
Review Criteria: Phase I Proposals • Degree to which the proposed programming will enable scholarship or stipend recipients to become successful mathematics & science teachers • Strong: Program designed to address specific needs of Noyce Scholars • Weak: Program does not appear to be designed to support needs of Noyce Scholars
Review Criteria: Phase I Proposals • Feasibility & completeness of an evaluation plan that will measure the effectiveness of the proposed strategies • Strong: an independent evaluator; clear objectives and measures; describes data collection and analysis aligned with evaluation questions • Weak: No objective evaluator; evaluation not aligned with project objectives
Review Criteria: Phase I Proposals • Institutional support for the program and the extent to which the institution is committed to making the program a central organizational focus • Strong: Evidence of support from departments and administrators; likely to be sustained; integrated with other STEM initiatives • Weak: Lack of supporting letters from Administrators; little involvement beyond the PI
Summary of Common Weaknesses • Proposal does not follow guidelines for Noyce Program • Students must complete STEM major (not change to Science education or Math Education major) • Little information about teacher preparation program • Unrealistic projections • Recruitment and selection strategies not well described • Lack of support for new teachers • Lack of involvement of STEM faculty (or education faculty) • Lacks plans for monitoring compliance with teaching requirement • Weak evaluation or lacks objective evaluator • Does not address Prior Results or Lessons Learned • Lacks details
Review Criteria: TF/MTF Proposals • Capacity & ability of institution to effectively conduct the program • Number & quality of Fellows that will be served by the program • Justification for number of Fellows served & amount of stipend & salary supplements • Quality & feasibility of recruitment & marketing strategies
Review Criteria: TF/MTF Proposals • Extent to which the proposed strategies reflect effective practices based on research • Degree to which the proposed programming will enable the participants to become successful mathematics and science teachers or Master Teachers • Extent to which STEM & education faculty are collaborating in developing & implementing a program with curriculum based on the specialized pedagogy needed to enable teachers to effectively teach math & science & to assume leadership roles in their schools.
Review Criteria: TF/MTF Proposals • Feasibility & completeness of an objective evaluation plan that will measure the effectiveness of the proposed strategies • Institutional support for the program & the extent to which the institution is committed to making the program a central organizational focus • Evidence of cost sharing commitments • Plans for sustainability beyond the period of NSF funding
Review Criteria: TF/MTF Proposals NSF Teaching Fellows only: • Ability of the program to recruit individuals who would not otherwise pursue a career in teaching & to recruit underrepresented groups • Quality of the Master’s degree program leading to teacher certification • Quality of the preservice student support and new teacher support infrastructure NSF Master Teaching Fellows only: • Quality of the professional development that will be provided
Strong TF/MTF Proposals include: • Strong partnership with school district • Matching funds identified • Clear description of preservice program for Teaching Fellows and professional development program for Master Teaching Fellows • Detailed recruitment and selection plans • Clear vision of Master Teacher roles and responsibilities, including involvement in preservice • Attention to content and pedagogy • Detailed evaluation plans
Weaknesses of TF/MTF Proposals • Insufficient details for preservice and induction program for Teaching Fellows and professional development program for Master Teaching Fellows • Vague recruitment plans • Selection plans do not follow guidelines • Master Teacher roles and responsibilities not discussed • Matching funds not identified • Role of non-profit organization not clear • School district partnership not strong • Evaluation weak
What Makes a Proposal Competitive? • Original ideas • Succinct, focused project plan • Realistic amount of work • Sufficient detail provided • Cost effective • High impact • Knowledge and experience of PIs • Contribution to the field • Rationale and evidence of potential effectiveness • Likelihood the project will be sustained • Solid evaluation plan
Tips for Success • Consult the program solicitation and NSF Proposal & Award Policies & Procedures Guide (NSF 11-1) • Test drive FastLane • Alert the Sponsored Research Office • Follow page and font size limits • Be aware of other projects and advances in the field • Cite the literature • Provide details • Discuss prior results • Include evaluation plan with timelines and benchmarks
Tips for Success • Put yourself in the reviewers’ place • Consider reviewers’ comments if resubmitting proposal • Have someone else read the proposal • Spell check; grammar check • Meet deadlines • Follow NSF requirements for proposals involving Human Subjects • Call or email NSF Program Officers
Return Without Review • Submitted after deadline • Fail to separately and explicitly addressintellectual merit and broader impacts in the Project Summary • Fail to follow formatting(e. g. page limitation, font size, and margin limits) requirements FastLane will not accept if: • Fail to describe mentoring activities for postdoctoral researchers if any included in proposed budget • Fail to include data management plan
Not ready to submit a proposal this year?Consider serving as a reviewerSend a letter of interest and a CV to one of the program officers
Questions? Contact us: Joan Prival jprival@nsf.gov Richard Alo ralo@nsf.gov Mary Lee Ledbetter msledbet@nsf.gov • Other resources: linneaf@austincc.edu www.nsf.gov www.nsfnoyce.org