Title: The Craft of Grant Writing
1The Craft of Grant Writing
- Phyllis McBride, Ph.D.
- Assistant Director
- Office of Proposal Development
- p-mcbride_at_tamu.edu
2Writing for reviewers
3Think about your reviewers
- Remember that while your application will be
submitted to an agency, it will be read by
people - Prepare your application with your reviewers in
mind
4Think about your reviewers
- Smart
- Accomplished
- Dedicated
- Fair
5Think about your reviewers
- Busy
- Overworked
- Tired
- Skeptical
6Think about your reviewers
- Distinguishing between innovations that emerge
from empirical testing of concepts and
pre-existing notions and practices currently
embraced by businesses to distinguish themselves
from competitors in a given local consumer market
illustrates the extent to which competitive
incentives to offer new and potentially
innovative products may encourage such businesses
to adopt practices from other markets, thereby
avoiding costs associated with research and
development of those new products. - Example from GWSW
7Think about your reviewers
- We will use the previously designed data
collection instrument, described in section B.3.1
on page 16, and the statistical analysis, similar
to that which is in the methods section of the
reprint attached as appendix VI, to measure the
extent to which our healthcare assessments
approaches will be reflective of the community
standards described in Section B.2.1 on page 5. - Example from GWSW
8Write for your reviewers
- In language, clarity is everything.
- Confucius
9Write for your reviewers
- Make sure that all of your reviewers no matter
what kind or level of expertise they may have
will be able to follow your argument - You want your reviewers to be your advocate
- For reviewers to be your advocate, they must be
able to understand your proposed research project
well enough to explain it to other reviewers
10Write for your reviewers
- Remember that the proposal is the only reality
- Assume nothing
- Include everything the reviewers will need to
evaluate your proposed research and your
qualifications to conduct that research - Remember that you are telling a story
- Synthesize all key concepts for the reviewers
- Clearly articulate the links between the overall
goal, the individual objectives, the hypotheses,
the rationale, the expected outcomes, and the
significance and impact - Dont count on the reviewers to make leaps of
logic for you
11Create a reviewer-friendly application
- Prepare reviewer-friendly text
- Develop reviewer-friendly formatting
- Incorporate reviewer-friendly graphics
12Create reviewer-friendly text
- Divide the proposal into the required sections
- Place the sections in the required order
- Use parallel structure at the section level
- Incorporate logical paragraph breaks
- Open paragraphs with clear topic sentences
- Avoid the use of inflated language
- Use declarative sentences
- Define potentially unfamiliar terms
- Spell out acronyms and abbreviations
- Employ appropriate style and usage
- Use correct grammar, punctuation, spelling
- Run a spell check and proofread the application
13Create a reviewer-friendly format
- Observe page limitations
- For whole proposal
- For individual proposal sections
- Observe margin requirements
- Observe font and point size requirements
- Incorporate headings and subheadings
- Incorporate ample white space
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16Create reviewer-friendly graphics
- Make graphics large enough to be useful
- Place graphics as close to the text they are
meant to illustrate as possible - Refer to graphics in the text
- Number and title all graphics
- Prepare a caption for all graphics
- Label axes and data points, as needed
- Provide a legend, as needed
17Reading the proposal solicitation
18Read the instructions
- Read the instructions!
- Read all of the instructions!
- Read all of the instructions carefully!
- Read all of the instructions carefully again!
- Agencys proposal preparation guide
- Programs proposal solicitation
- Solicitations supplemental instructions
19Analyze the solicitation
- The proposal solicitation is not
- A list of suggestions
- A menu or smorgasbord from which you can choose
what to address - The proposal solicitation is
- A non-negotiable list of proposal requirements
- A treasure map
20Analyze the solicitation
- Use information presented in the announcement to
help you develop a competitive proposal strategy - Remember that a proposal is a persuasive sales
document - Emphasize hot buttons
- Echo language of announcement
- Address the review criteria
- Call your program manager with questions
21Preparing the application
22Prepare the application
- Cover sheet
- Title
- Abstract
- Executive summary
- Background
- Significance
- Project description
- Project schedule
- Biographical sketch
- Resources
- Grant support
- Budget
- Budget justification
- Supplementary materials
23Cover Sheet
- Requires that you provide basic information
- Program name and number
- Principal investigator information
- Administrative official information
- Organization name and type
- Requested award amount
- Proposed project period
- Human and animal subjects assurance numbers
- Signatures
- Oftentimes offers you the opportunity to indicate
if you are a new investigator
24Title
- Create a good first impression
- Must be informative
- Must be interesting
- Conform to restrictions on length
- Know if restrictions apply to characters only,
or to characters and spaces - Conduct market research
- Ask colleagues to help you select the most
compelling title
25Abstract
- Provides a concise overview of the proposed
project - Requires that you provide a great deal of
information within a tightly prescribed format - Who, what, when, where, why, and how
- Additional agency-specific information
- NIH Relevance of the research to public health
- NSF Intellectual merit and broader impacts
- Frequently becomes public record if the project
is funded - Should be written in third person
- Should not include confidential or proprietary
information
26Introduction / executive summary
- Critically important
- Often the only part of the proposal that all
reviewers will have an opportunity to read - Must be able to stand alone
- Must be clearly written
- Must provide a conceptual overview
- Must generate enthusiasm
- Serves as a roadmap to the application
27First paragraph
- Introduce the project
- Relate the project to the agencys mission
- Educate the reviewer
- Summarize the important knowns
- Identify the gap in the knowledge and/or state
the critical need - Explain why the gap or need presents a problem
- Remember You must present a way to solve the
problem or fill the need
28Second paragraph
- Describe your long-term research goal
- Should support the agencys mission
- State the objective of the proposed research
project - Should represent a step toward reaching your
long-term goal - Present your central hypothesis or statement of
need - If presenting a central hypothesis
- Make sure it is a real hypothesis, not a
predetermined conclusion, i.e., make sure it can
be objectively tested to determine its validity - Explain your rationale
- Explain what it will be possible to accomplish
when your research is complete
29Third paragraph
- Describe your qualifications
- Special training, and/or expertise
- Quantity and quality of preliminary data
- Unique approach, technology
- Describe your research environment
- Access to unique equipment and resources
- Access to research subjects
- Collaborations and partnerships
30Fourth paragraph
- Delineate your objectives / specific aims
- Provide a reasonable number of objectives
- Dont be under- or over-ambitious
- Present objectives in a logical order
- Make sure each objective can stand alone
- Make sure no objective is dependent on the
successful completion of another objective - Provide conceptual objectives that focus on your
idea rather than descriptive objectives that
focus on tasks
31Fifth paragraph
- Describe the projects innovation
- Delineate the projects expected outcomes
- List specific deliverables
- Summarize the projects significance / impact
- Fill a gap in the knowledge
- Advance the field
- Meet a need
- Provide an application
32Background
- Demonstrate your familiarity with the field
- Provide a context for the proposed project
- Literature review
- Preliminary studies
33Literature Review
- Cite only literature relevant to the proposed
project - Dont try to be comprehensive
- Provide a critical review of the relevant
literature - Dont simply summarize contributions
- Situate your proposed research project in the
field - Explain how your proposed research project will
contribute to and/or advance the field dont
expect reviewers to make this leap for you
34Preliminary Studies
- Provide an account only of the preliminary
studies relevant to the proposed research project - Determine how much preliminary data to include
- Published studies
- Summarize the results and provide offprints in
the appendix - Unpublished studies
- Describe the results in more detail to assure
reviewers of the reliability of the results - Present the results in a logical order
- Illustrate the results with graphics
35Project Description
- Organize the project description around the
objectives - Try to devote an equal number of pages to each
of the objectives - Use parallel structure to describe each of the
objectives
36Project Description
- Title of objective
- Introduction to objective
- Hypothesis or statement of need
- Strategy
- Rationale
- Project / experimental design for objective
- Emphasize concept
- Be specific when describing approach /
methodology - Refer to your previous work, if appropriate
- Expected outcomes for objective
- Express confidence
- Anticipated problems for objective
- Provide solutions and/or alternative strategies
37Project schedule
- Indicate anticipated start date
- Obtain this date from the proposal solicitation
- Delineate key milestones
- Base milestones on the objectives
- Incorporate agency and program requirements
- Include dates for reports and other deliverables
38Project Schedule
39Biographical Sketch
- Highlight accomplishments that demonstrate your
capacity to conduct and manage the project - Adhere to agencys formatting requirements
- Use the required form (if applicable)
- Follow the prescribed page limits
- Include the required headings
- Place information in the required order
- If you are collaborating
- Format your colleagues resumes like your own
40Biographical Sketch
- Name
- Title
- Institutional affiliation
- Education
- Field of study, degrees, years degrees were
earned - Professional appointments
- Department, institutional affiliation, term of
appointment - Publications
- Full bibliographic citations
- Verify if inclusion of publications in press or
submitted is allowed - Grant awards
- Completed, ongoing, and pending support
- Collaborators
- Co-authors, co-editors, advisors, advisees
41Resources
- Demonstrate that it is feasible to conduct the
proposed research project at your institution - Facilities
- Office, laboratory, library
- Equipment and instrumentation
- Clinical
- Animal
- Computer
- Other
- Demonstrate that you are part of an
intellectually stimulating and supportive
research environment - Collaborations and partnerships
- Affinity groups
42Completed, Ongoing, and Pending Grant Support
- Show that you have a clear research agenda
- Show that you have been productive on past
projects - Presented results of research at professional
conferences - Published papers in peer-reviewed journals
- Demonstrate that you have sufficient time to
conduct and manage the proposed research project - Demonstrate that there is no overlap between one
of your already funded projects and your
proposed research project
43Completed, Ongoing, and Pending Grant Support
- Contract number
- Principal investigators name
- Sponsors name
- Project title
- Project period
- Project summary
- Investigators role
- Investigators percent effort
- Annual and/or total direct costs
44Budget
- Adhere to agency and program requirements
- Include only allowable costs
- Request what you need to complete the project
- Make sure the budget reflects the research
projects objectives, scope, and duration - Base budget on real costs
- Remember that reviewers know what things cost
- Factor in cost escalations for multi-year
projects - Factor in both direct and indirect costs
45Budget
- Understand typical budget categories
- Direct costs
- Personnel
- Equipment
- Materials
- Travel
- Indirect costs
46Budget Justification
- Use this section to continue to persuade
reviewers that you are a thoughtful investigator - Provide a clear and persuasive explanation of
why each budget request is needed - Include sufficient detail
- Enables program managers to understand how the
budget was calculated so that they can see that
the request was reasonable - Allows program managers to negotiate the budget
in the most appropriate way
47Supplementary Materials
- Verify that supplementary materials are accepted
- Avoid using supplementary materials to circumvent
page limitations - Include only supplementary materials that support
the application - Offprints or photocopies of publications
- Samples of curricula
- Samples of surveys, questionnaires, or data
collection instruments - Clinical protocols or informed consent documents
- Photographs, graphics, or other media
- Letters of support or other endorsements
48Vetting, editing, and proofreading the application
49Vet your application
- Identify colleagues to review the application
- Select reviewers carefully
- Provide reviewers with the information they need
- Proposal solicitation
- Complete application
- Give reviewers ample time
- You want them to conduct a thorough review
- You want them to help you catch fatal flaws
- In scholarship and/or science
- In grantsmanship
- Review, evaluate, and incorporate feedback
50Revise your application
- You will have to write and put away or burn a
lot of material before you are comfortable in
this medium. You might as well start now and get
the necessary work done. For I believe that
eventually quantity will make for quality. - Ray Bradbury
51Edit your application
- Set aside the instructions and application for a
few days - Re-read the instructions and application
- Ensure that you have included all required
sections - Confirm that you have placed sections in the
required order - Verify that you have addressed all review
criteria - Ask yourself if you have told the story of
your proposed research project in the most
clear, compelling, and convincing way possible
52Proofread your application
- Check for errors
- Facts
- Spelling
- Punctuation
- Grammar
- Usage
- Style
- Run a spell check
53Route and submit your application
- Remember that your institution will submit your
application on your behalf - Allocate ample time to route your application
for institutional approvals - Allow time to finalize application
- Paper submissions
- Allow ample time to photocopy, bind, and mail
application - Electronic submissions
- Allow ample time to e-mail and upload application
54Wait for news
- And wait . . .
- And wait . . .
- And wait . . .
55Receive review comments
- If your proposal is funded, celebrate!
- Or, if it is not funded, . . .
- Deal with rejection
56Deal with rejection
- We have read your manuscript with boundless
delight. If we were to publish your paper, it
would be impossible for us to publish any work of
lower standard. And as it is unthinkable that in
the next thousand years we shall see its equal,
we are, to our regret, compelled to return your
divine composition, and to beg you a thousand
times to overlook our short sight and timidity. - Rejection slip from a Chinese economic journal
57Revising and resubmitting the application
58Revise and resubmit your application
- Respect the views of reviewers
- Review the reviews
- Discuss the reviews with senior faculty and with
your program manager - Decide whether or not you have a viable project
- If you dont, revise the idea or come up with a
new one - If you do, revise and resubmit the application
- Verify that the targeted program is the best one
for the project - Respond to reviewer comments
- Focus on submitting a great proposal
59Revise and resubmit your application
- Never give in, never give in, never, never,
never, never in nothing, great or small, large
or petty never give in except to convictions or
honor and good sense. - Winston Churchill
60Questions