Title: BRIEF ELIGIBILITY GUIDE FOR AREA AND RUI GRANTS
1BRIEF ELIGIBILITY GUIDE FOR AREA AND RUI GRANTS
- AREA NO MORE THAN 3M IN NIH FUNDING IN 4 OF
PREVIOUS 7 YEARS FOR HEALTH PROFESSIONAL SCHOOL
OR OTHER ACADEMIC COMPONENTS - RUI AWARD AN AVERAGE OF NO MORE THAN 10 PH.D. OR
D.SC. DEGREES PER YEAR IN ALL NSF DISCIPLINES AND
NONE IN THE DISCIPLINE OF THE GRANT PROPOSAL - IF THIS IS NOT YOUR INSTITUTION, THIS SESSION MAY
NOT APPLY TO YOU ?
2CONDUCTING RESEARCH AT A PUI
- HOW THE INCLUSION OF UNDERGRADUATES IN A RESEARCH
PROPOSAL CAN IMPROVE A PIS CHANCE OF BEING FUNDED
3CONDUCTING RESEARCH AT A PUI
- NIH ACADEMIC RESEARCH ENHANCEMENT AWARD (AREA)
GRANTS - NSF RESEARCH IN UNDERGRADUATE INSTITUTIONS (RUI)
GRANTS
4PRESENTERS
- Laura Letbetter, Director of Proposal
Development, lletbett_at_kennesaw.edu - Carolyn Elliott-Farino, Director of Contracts and
Grants Administration, cellio12_at_kennesaw.edu - Kennesaw State University (metro Atlanta), part
of University System of Georgia
5KENNESAW STATE UNIVERSITY
- 2-yr. school from 1960s-80s, 4-yr. college
80s-90s, university since mid 90s - Predominantly undergraduate institution (PUI)
90 undergraduate enrollment. - Mostly non-traditional students until recently
- Traditional focus on teaching, not research no
push for external funding nor emphasis on
research until recently - No Ph.D. programs one Ed.D. and 19 Masters level
programs.
6KENNESAW STATE UNIVERSITY
- July 05 June 06 submitted 114 proposals for
14,903,479 56 funded for 2,695,087. - July 06 June 07 submitted 154 proposals for
24,466,910 78 funded for 4,900,791. - July 07 March 08 submitted 102 proposals for
19,351,085 58 funded for 4,032,321.
7KENNESAW STATE UNIVERSITY
- Prior to 2007, one funded NIH researcher, who
left KSU in 2004 - Prior to 2005, no funded NSF researchers
- Grants for curriculum development, teacher
workshops, local service projects, surveys, but
no pure research (except for the departed NIH
researcher) until we took advantage of some
PUI-friendly funding opportunities .
8KENNESAW STATE UNIVERSITY
- In 2005, awarded NSF RUI grant in biology
- In 2007, two AREA grants awarded in sociology and
biochemistry - In 2008, a To Be Paid AREA grant in
biochemistry
9CONDUCTING RESEARCH AT A PUI
- HOW THE INCLUSION OF UNDERGRADUATES IN A RESEARCH
PROPOSAL CAN IMPROVE A PIS CHANCE OF BEING FUNDED
10NIH AREA GRANTS
- AREA grants support small research projects in
the biomedical and behavioral sciences conducted
by students and faculty in health professional
schools, and other academic components that have
not been major recipients of NIH research grant
funds. - http//grants.nih.gov/grants/funding/area.htm
11WHOS ELIGIBLE FOR NIH AREA (R15) GRANTS?
- Health professional schools/colleges and other
academic components that - offer baccalaureate or advanced degrees in the
biomedical and behavioral sciences - have received less than 3 million per year (in
both direct and FA/indirect costs) in research
grants and/or cooperative agreements from NIH in
at least four of the last seven years
12WHOS ELIGIBLE FOR NIH AREA (R15) GRANTS?
- Health professional schools/colleges include
accredited schools or colleges of medicine,
dentistry, osteopathy, pharmacy, nursing,
veterinary medicine, public health, optometry,
allied health, chiropractic, naturopathy and
podiatry leading to a health sciences degree such
as M.D., D.D.S., M.P.T., D.C., N.D. or
equivalent degree. - "Other academic components" applies to
institutions which include one or more health
professional schools. Once the health
professional schools have been excluded, other
academic components refers to all remaining
schools, colleges, and free-standing institutes
of the institution taken as a SINGLE component.
13WHOS ELIGIBLE FOR NIH AREA (R15) GRANTS?
- 3M per year limit (in 4 of last 7 yrs) is per
entity where the PD/PI has an appointment - health professional school/college, e.g. School
of Medicine, College of Nursing OR - other academic components,e.g. Department of
Sociology, Department of Biology, taken as a
single entity - To determine the eligibility of a school or the
other academic components, consult the list of
eligible and ineligible schools/components on the
AREA program Web site at http//grants.nih.gov/gra
nts/funding/area.htm.
14WHOS ELIGIBLE FOR NIH AREA (R15) GRANTS?
- If your school is not on the list at all, youre
- probably okay. If youve had any NIH
- money, youre likely listed one way or the
- other. Check AREA Program Coordinator,
- Dr. Denise Russo, to be sure
- DRusso_at_mail.nih.gov
15WHOS ELIGIBLE FOR NIH AREA (R15) GRANTS?
- Many research institutions are eligible for AREA
grants. For example, U of Georgia - Schools of Pharmacy, Schools of Public Health,
Schools of Veterinary Medicine are all eligible - Other academic components is ineligible
(considered as a single entity)
16WHOS ELIGIBLE FOR NIH AREA (R15) GRANTS?
- UCLA
- Schools of Nursing is eligible
- Hospital, Schools of Medicine, Schools of
Dentistry, Schools of Public Health, and other
academic components are ineligible
17WHY AREA?
- However, although some components of research
institutions are eligible, were here to talk
about why this is a good opportunity for PUIs.
This is from the NIH AREA Guide for Assigned
Reviewers Preliminary Comments
(http//www.csr.nih.gov/CDG/CD20guidelines/areaR1
5.pdf)
18WHY AREA?
- the National Institutes of Health has made a
special effort to stimulate research in
educational institutions that provide
baccalaureate training for a significant number
of our nation's research scientists, but which
have not been major recipients of NIH support.
Funds have been added to the NIH budget
specifically for the AREA program since 1985.
AREA grants are for the support of small-scale
health-related research projects conducted by
faculty in institutions that are not research
intensive. These grants create a research
opportunity for scientists and institutions,
otherwise unlikely to participate extensively in
NIH programs, to contribute to the nation's
biomedical and behavioral research effort.
19WHY AREA?
- The objectives for the AREA Grant program
- are
- strengthening the research environment at
institutions that are not research intensive - exposing students (including undergraduate,
and/or professional/graduate students) at such
institutions to research - providing support for meritorious research
20WHY AREA?
- The review criteria for RO1s and R15s are the
- same, except that under environment, reviewers
- for AREA proposals must ask
- Is the applicant school/academic component
- suitable for an award in terms of strengthening
the - research environment?
- Also, in the overall evaluation, reviewers must
- address the strengths and weaknesses of the
- application in terms of the five review criteria
and - the objectives of the AREA grant program.
21WHY AREA?
- PUI-friendly aspects of AREA grants
- Competing against each other, not the big guns
- PUIs have the kind of research environment NIH
wants to strengthen - No need for graduate students the goal is to
expose students, undergraduate or graduate - Success rates have generally been higher for AREA
(R15) grants
22NEW NIH GRANTS FY 07
- R01 20,648 3,958 1,514,515,667 19.2
- R03 3,023 718 53,972,165 23.8
- R15 784 178 37,262,845 22.7
- R21 11,395 1,853 377,813,686 16.3
- http//report.nih.gov/award/success.cfm
- Better success than R01s and R21s, slightly
- below R03s. But everyone is eligible for
- R03s (and R01s and R21s).
23NEW NIH GRANTS FY 06 05
- FY 06
- RO1 22,148 3,610 1,299,711,823 16.3
- R03 3,206 622 48,316,742 19.4
- R15 658 157 32,442,915 23.9
- R21 9,934 1,533 299,243,870 15.4
- FY 05
- R01 21,745 3,894 1,392,849,232 17.9
- R03 3,307 723 55,684,224 21.9
- R15 595 158 31,965,502 26.6
- R21 8,483 1,495 291,665,902 17.6
24WHATS DIFFERENT ABOUT AN AREA GRANT PROPOSAL?
- Facilities and Other Resources section must
- include
- A profile of available students of the applicant
school/academic component and any information or
estimate of the number who have obtained the
baccalaureate degree and gone on to obtain an
academic or professional doctoral degree in the
health-related sciences during the last five
years.
25WHATS DIFFERENT ABOUT AN AREA GRANT PROPOSAL?
- Facilities and Other Resources section must
- include
- A description of the special characteristics of
the school/academic component that make it
appropriate for an AREA grant, according to the
programs three objectives. Include a description
of the likely impact of an AREA grant on the
PD/PI and the research environment of the
school/academic component.
26WHATS DIFFERENT ABOUT AN AREA GRANT PROPOSAL?
- PIs biosketch must include
- information on his or her (a) previous or current
experience in supervising students in research,
and/or (b) other relationships within the
institutional framework (e.g., cross-departmental
research collaborations).
27FACILITIES AND OTHER RESOURCES
- Other (about 4 pages) this can be AREA-specific
institutional narrative modified for individual
proposals - Description of the university and the PIs
department and college - Graduates entering health-related fields
- Research environment
- Impact of AREA grant on PI and university
- Institutional support
- Institutional Statement Summary (optional)
28DESCRIPTION OF THE UNIVERSITY AND THE PIS
DEPARTMENT AND COLLEGE
- 2 paragraphs on university demographics, degree
programs, brief history - 1-2 paragraphs on department programs, number
of declared majors, number of degrees awarded,
faculty - 1-2 paragraphs on college other departments,
enrollment - 4-5 paragraphs total
29GRADUATES ENTERING HEALTH-RELATED FIELDS
- 1 paragraph number of graduates enrolled in
graduate, medical, dentistry, pharmacy, nursing,
or other health program, or in industry - Expectations for future growth (if applicable)
30RESEARCH ENVIRONMENT
- Intro paragraph for KSU for 2006-07
- Though primarily a teaching institution, the
university is highly supportive of faculty
research initiatives. The attainment of
university status in 1996 and the increased focus
on research within the last few years have
brought about a higher expectation for faculty
scholarship. To build research capability while
upholding the teaching mission, KSU has taken a
strategic approach to encouraging and supporting
a faculty research/teaching model with a focus on
involving undergraduates. Since the early 1980s,
the university has awarded internal Faculty
Incentive Grants of up to 8,000 each to enable
faculty to develop pilot programs and gather
preliminary data. The intent is that faculty
will produce results to be used in securing
external funding as well as for publication.
Faculty Incentive Grants have supported
successful applications for NIH R01 (this was the
one researcher who left in 2004), NSF RUI, and
private foundation grants, as well as a number of
peer-reviewed publications. In 2004, despite
significant state budget cuts, the university's
administration made a strong commitment to assist
faculty in building active research programs to
provide meaningful research opportunities for
students. In addition, the administration
recognizes that new faculty hires will need
reduced course loads and start-up funds if they
are to have time to conduct research and apply
for external support. In 2005, the university
allocated 200,000 to provide new hires with
start-up funds. First semester course loads were
also reduced.
31RESEARCH ENVIRONMENT
- Description of college-level grants program for
faculty-undergraduate research recognized by
Georgia BOR - Example of new university-wide internal grants
program to encourage research by tenured faculty
who have primarily engaged in teaching - Departmental environment student researchers,
active student chapters, scholarships and grants
for students, student presentations, available
equipment, opportunities for inter-departmental/un
iversity collaboration
32IMPACT OF AREA GRANT ON PI AND UNIVERSITY
- Explanation of how this grant will affect the
PIs research at the institution - Explanation of how the grant will impact
undergraduate scientists with training in several
aspects of biomedical research, including
dedicated time in the summer to do research - Description of the PIs experience in mentoring
undergraduate researchers - Description of how the grant will enable the PI
to provide leadership to other faculty in
combining teaching and research
33INSTITUTIONAL SUPPORT
- Description of departmental resources available
to the project equipment, laboratory
facilities, operating funds, course releases
34INSTITUTIONAL STATEMENT SUMMARY
- As XYZ has grown into a comprehensive university,
the ABC College has recognized the importance of
research to an outstanding undergraduate science
education and has sought to enhance faculty
research and research opportunities for
undergraduates by making significant investments
to improve the research environment. The need for
extramural support has grown commensurately. An
AREA award would be a primary support for Dr.
PQs research, strengthen the research
environment, expose more undergraduates to
research and enhance their prospects for
health-related careers.
35WHAT IS THE ROLE OF THE STUDENT RESEARCHERS?
- Research Plan include information in this
section where appropriate about the student
researchers who will be recruited, what they
will be doing and the training they will receive,
how the PI will ensure their safety (if
applicable), how the research is suitable for
student researchers this could be a separate
section or the information could be woven into
the fabric of the research plan
36AREA GRANT PROPOSALS
- 150,000 in direct costs, modular budget, 1-3
yrs. - Renewable, standard deadlines
- 25 pages for research plan and the research
must be of significant scientific merit! - Reviewed in study sections on the basis of
scientific emphasis of proposal - Compete for funds with other AREA proposals to
participating ICs check success rates of the
ICs at http//grants.nih.gov/grants/funding/area.h
tm) shop around if you can
37AREA SUCCESS RATES FY 2007
38AREA SUCCESS RATES FY 2006
39AREA GRANT PROPOSALS
- Table of contents of March 2004 CUR Quarterly
focused on AREA proposals http//www.cur.org/Qu
arterly/mar04/mar04toc.pdf - Most Common Questions about NIH-AREA Grant
Applications (full article by an NIH program
director) - http//www.cur.org/Quarterly/mar04/mar04p111_119.p
df
40KSUS HISTORY WITH NSF
- 36 NSF grants since 1996
- 10 current awards 2 basic research, 8 curriculum
development and student scholarships. - Range from 34K to a little over 1M
- About three faculty have applied for RUI grants.
- One RUI award took three tries.
41(No Transcript)
42WHAT RUI SUPPORTS
- Faculty Research Projects
- Research Instrumentation Grants
- Research Opportunity Awards
43WHAT RUI SUPPORTS
- Faculty Research Projects
- Research Instrumentation Grants
- Research Opportunity Awards
44SPECIFIC OBJECTIVES OF RUI
- To support high-quality research by faculty
members of predominantly undergraduate
institutions - To strengthen the research environment in
academic departments that are oriented primarily
toward undergraduate instruction - To promote the integration of research and
education.
45INSTITUTIONAL ELIGIBILITY FOR NSF/RUI
- Must be predominantly undergraduate, (i.e.,
more undergrads than grads) - Must offer undergraduate programs in
NSF-supportable disciplines. - Must award an average of no more than 10 Ph.D. or
D.Sc. Degrees per year in all NSF-supportable
disciplines. - Must provide certification that the above
characteristics apply to your institution.
46DEPARTMENTAL ELIGIBILITY FOR NSF/RUI
- Eligible department means the PIs department
- (1) must offer courses that qualify for
bachelor's degree credit in NSF-supportable
fields and - (2) may offer master's degrees, but may not
award a doctorate or offer doctoral courses and
supervise doctoral research. - (3) Its OK for co-PIs to be from a doctoral
department.
47WHY RUI?
- Predominantly undergraduate institutions
play a critically important role in U.S. science
and technology through their substantial
contributions to research and education. NSF
encourages research by faculty members of these
institutions, both to ensure a broad national
base for research and to help faculty members
stay at the cutting edge of their disciplines.
Such research not only contributes to basic
knowledge in science and engineering, but also
provides an opportunity for integration of the
excitement of scientific discovery into
undergraduate education. As the ultimate in
inquiry-based learning, undergraduate research is
a critical component of high-quality education in
science, mathematics, engineering, and technology
(SMET), providing a strong foundation for careers
in science and engineering and for graduate
study. A significant fraction of SMET
professionals receive bachelor degrees from
predominantly undergraduate institutions.
48WHAT RUI ISNT
- RUI IS NOT A SEPARATE PROGRAM OR A SEPARATE POT
OF MONEY - PA states RUI is fully integrated into the
regular disciplinary programs of the Foundation
and No specific funds are set aside for
proposals submitted under this announcement.
49WHAT RUI ISNT
- RUI IS NOT A DIFFERENT COMPETITION OR AN EASIER
COMPETITION - PA states . . . RUI proposals are evaluated and
funded by NSF programs in the disciplinary areas
of the proposed research. - Intellectual Merit Broader Impacts Criteria
apply as always.
50WHAT RUI ISNT
- RUI IS NOT THE SAME THING AS REU.
- RUI is a designation (Research at Undergraduate
Institutions) for faculty research awards. - REU is a program (Research Experiences for
Undergraduates) that primarily funds participant
support for undergraduate researchers through
sites supplements.
51How much money is there for RUI projects?
- Projects are usually 3 years.
- Annual award size has ranged from 10,000 to over
100,000. - KSUs RUI is 300,000 for 3 years.
- PA says 26M for 1999.
52How much money goes to RUI research projects?
- FY 2007 182 awards, 31,885,442
- FY 2006 159 awards, 32,205,039
- FY 2005 157 awards, 39,825,508
- Source NSF Award Search Tool http//www.nsf.gov/
awardsearch/ - Go to the More Options tab, select date range,
and RUI program code
53(No Transcript)
54(No Transcript)
55How much should you ask for?
- Consultation with the cognizant NSF disciplinary
program officer is strongly encouraged to
determine if the proposed budget is within the
appropriate funding range for the particular
program and circumstances.
56WHAT IS UNIQUE ABOUT RUI?
- The principal difference between RUI proposals
and "regular" NSF proposals is the additional
requirement that RUI proposals must include an
RUI Impact Statement that describes the expected
effects of the proposed research on the research
and educational environment of the institution.
57WHAT MAKES THE RUI DESIGNATION RIGHT FOR PUIs?
- The RUI designation means reviewers are
instructed to pay attention to the Impact
Statement and the special circumstances under
which RUI investigators work. - Typically the review panel includes PUI folks.
58A FEW NOTES ABOUT PROPOSAL PREPARATION
- Title must begin with RUI (15 seconds)
- Proposal must include Certification of
Eligibility (15 minutes, depending ) - Proposal must contain a separate RUI Impact
Statement (15 days, depending!)
59CERTIFICATION OF ELIGIBILITY
- This is a simple one page document that MUST be
included. - Get the wording from the RUI guidelines.
- Get your AOR to sign it.
- Scan and upload to Supplementary Documents
section of FastLane.
60CERTIFICATION OF ELIGIBILITY
61RUI IMPACT STATEMENT
- Describes how you expect the proposed research to
impact your institutions research and
educational environment. - Five page max.
- Institutional narrative plus some project
specific information. - Opportunity to highlight what your PUI brings to
the table.
62WHAT DOES RUI IMPACT MEAN TO NSF?
- Increased faculty involvement in research
- Opportunities for students to be involved
directly in research - Acquisition of instrumentation that helps both
students and faculty - Enhanced ability to prepare students for careers
and graduate studies in STEM fields.
63WHAT ELSE TO HIGHLIGHT
- What is your departments track record in
educating undergrads for STEM careers? - How will your project identify qualified
undergraduates to partcipate in the research? - How will your project increase participation of
underrepresented groups? - How will you measure the impact you have on
students?
64WHAT ELSE TO HIGHLIGHT
- Do heavy teaching loads impact research
productivity at your PUI? How will this award
help? - What is unique about your student population?
- What is your administrations commitment to
building and enhancing your PUIs research
programs and infrastructure?
65RUI IMPACT STMT TEMPLATE
- Institutional Context a couple of brief
paragraphs about the history of the institution,
the PIs department, degrees offered,
accreditation, student faculty demographics,
graduation stats, etc. - Research Environment How it has developed, how
it has been supported by the institution, what
kinds of active research programs you have, how
departments work together to leverage resources,
relationships w/other orgs that contribute to
research environment, etc.
66IMPACT STMT TEMPLATE, CONTD
- Impact of RUI Grant on PI, Users, and
Institution Explain how funding this project
would benefit each group. - Institutional Support what resources are
available to the PIs? Have they had seed funding
from the institution? Startup funds from their
departments? - RUI Impact Statement Summary A one paragraph
recap of the above.
67SAMPLE TEXT WRAP-UP PARAGRAPH
- As KSU has grown into a comprehensive
university, the College of Science and
Mathematics has recognized the importance of
research to an outstanding undergraduate science
education and has sought to enhance faculty
research and research opportunities for
undergraduates by making significant investments
to improve the research environment. The need for
extramural support has grown commensurately. A
RUI award would support the research efforts of
many faculty, substantially strengthen the
research environment, enhance collaborations,
expose more students to research, train them in
the use of cutting-edge biomolecular technology,
brighten their prospects for research careers and
positively impact science education across the
universitys service delivery area.
68WHAT ELSE MAKES THE PROPOSAL MORE COMPETITIVE?
- The RUI Impact Statement does NOT preclude a
discussion of RUI Impact within the context of
the project description. - PA encourages description of how students will be
involved in research AND presentation of results
how research education will be integrated how
any requested equipment will enhance both
research education, etc.
69WHAT ELSE, CONTINUED
- Dont overlook the importance of the Biographical
Sketch. - Include publications with undergraduate
co-authors (with student names labeled by an
asterisk). - Synergistic activities section is an
opportunity to highlight involvement with UR.
70ABOUT DUPLICATE PROPOSALS
- No duplicate proposals submitted for the same
deadline. Same program officers handle all
disciplinary proposals. - You can simultaneously submit proposals for two
different projects. - You can simultaneously submit the same proposal
to NSF and to another federal agency, as long as
its not BIO. - Exception New investigators in BIO can submit
simultaneously to two agencies.
71RUI DEADLINES
- Proposals Accepted Anytime??? Really???
72IT DEPENDS!
- Proposals must be submitted by the
investigator's home institution in accordance
with the target dates or deadlines, if any, of
the NSF disciplinary program in the proposed
research area.
73WHEN IS IT DUE?
- Many NSF programs have deadlines or target
dates to allow time for consideration by review
panels that meet periodically. Proposals must be
submitted by the investigator's home institution
in accordance with the target dates or deadlines,
if any, of the NSF disciplinary program in the
proposed research area.To confirm a date, refer
to the program's page on the NSF Web site
(http//www.nsf.gov/) or to the NSF E-Bulletin,
at http//www.nsf.gov/home/ebulletin/. Inquiries
about deadlines may be made also to the
appropriate research program officer.
74Budget Internet Information system
http//dellweb.bfa.nsf.gov/
75NSFS BUDGET INTERNET INFORMATION SYSTEM
- Provides statistical and funding information.
- Allows users to query award data based on
variables such as state, institution, and
program. - Use this to collect meaningful data for your
campus and include it when you interact with
faculty.
76EXAMPLE
- With an annual budget of almost 6 billion,
the National Science Foundation funds 20 of all
federally supported basic scientific research
conducted by Americas colleges and universities.
Within the state of Georgia in FY 2006, NSF made
418 awards totaling approximately 89.5 million
to the states public and private institutions of
higher education. About 80 of the funds were
awarded to Georgia Tech, UGA, and Georgia State
(50, 19, and 11 respectively), and 20 went to
other public and private colleges and
universities, including KSU.
77WHY DEVELOP THIS KIND OF INSTITUTIONAL NARRATIVE?
- Helps the academic side of the house explain to
the business side of the house what is at stake,
where we stand, what kind of progress we are
making. - Helps encourage faculty to apply confirm whats
true, dispel myths, paint a real picture.
78An interesting note about collaborative RUI
projects
79A final word about the importance of the role of
the Program Officer
80A Good Format for RUI Proposal Development
WorkshopS
- Two-hour format one hour on applying unsolicited
and one hour on applying under RUI. - Organize the information so that one session
builds on the other, but either works as a
standalone. - Encourage faculty to sign up for one or both,
whatever their schedule allows.