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Writing the Perfect Bid

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Writing the Perfect Bid Professor David Shemmings PhD Deputy Head SSPSSR – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Writing the Perfect Bid


1
Writing the Perfect Bid
  • Professor David Shemmings PhD
  • Deputy Head SSPSSR

2
Basic Principles
  • Bids are not very well written
  • Give ME money
  • Referees dont make the decision
  • Mistake to write a full literature review
  • Systematic structuring of an application
  • For each RQ (about 4) clarify fully
  • WNTK - We Need To Know
  • (HOW?)
  • TWTU - This Will Tell Us
  • Testing an application
  • Dont give it to your mates!

3
Why do funders give grants?
  • Realistic promise of an answer
  • Investigators
  • Ability
  • Opportunity
  • Resources
  • Sufficient
  • Necessary
  • i.e.VFM
  • Important question
  • How is importance defined?
  • Directed mode
  • Responsive mode

4
How do funders make decisions?
  • Who?
  • Panel
  • Expertise
  • How?
  • Panel Meeting
  • Role of Referees
  • Role of Designated Members

5
What are the key componentsof a research
proposal?
  • The question
  • Break the question down into answerable
    components (about 4)
  • Why it is important?
  • How you will answer the question?
  • Break the research down into components that
    answer each component of the question
  • What you will do with the knowledge?

6
What are the essential attributes of a
grant application?
  • Quick to read
  • Especially to speed read
  • And to read in snatches
  • Easy to understand
  • Convincing

7
phraseology
  • situates micro-processes of social well-being
    within global social development.
  • The socially and culturally contructed nature of
    mean that macro strategies and community level
    intervention has limited impact
  • this research has wide-ranging relevance to the
    study of

8
How do you make a grant application
convincing?
  • Use the literature to make your case
  • NOT to write a literature review
  • Prime with relevant information
  • Say how resources will be used in description of
    research project prepares for justification of
    resources
  • We Need To Know (WNTK)
  • Explain how and why WE NEED TO KNOW the answer to
    each part of the research question
  • This Will Tell Us (TWTU)
  • As you describe the research project explain what
    THIS WILL TELL US.
  • If it's not something that WE NEED TO KNOW, go
    back to the previous step and write another WNTK.

9
Structure
  • State the problem
  • then break down into a 3/4/5 item list' of
    things we need to know (WKTK)
  • this is easier to grasp and is convincing
  • it also forces you to be clear about the
    direction and detail
  • State the research approach
  • then break the research activity into a 'four
    item list' of things you will do to get your
    answers.
  • State what each of these four activities will
    tell us (TWTU)
  • State how you will disseminate the research

10
How do you get started?
  • Start with what you will do and why.
  • Write a piece of the research project, including
    the TWTU.
  • Write the corresponding bit of background and the
    WNTK.
  • Repeat the above until you have described the
    whole project and its background.
  • Add the dissemination
  • Take bits for the summary
  • Add the reason for importance

11
Planned ESRC proposal
  • Title
  • The visibility and invisibility of men in the
    lives of children where there are safeguarding
    concerns
  • (Part of) background and (beginning) of Main RQ
  • Media reports of the death of (Baby) Peter
    Connelly made frequent mention of two men who
    managed to stay invisible during the 60 visits
    by social workers, police officers and various
    health professionals. Along with the mother,
    these men were subsequently found to have been
    responsible for his death. The proposed research
    uses a mixed methods design to understand how
    social workers assess the presence, involvement
    and influence of men in the lives of children
    where there are allegations of maltreatment

12
RQs
  1. How do social workers describe their response to
    referrals and their approach to assessment?
  2. How do social workers engage with the family when
    men are known to be involved?
  3. How do social workers analyse their practice when
    men are thought not to be involved?
  4. How do social workers analyse their practice when
    the possibility of a child being abused by
    unknown male/s is thought likely?

13
How do social workers describe their response to
referrals and their approach to the assessment?
  • WNTK
  • How social workers analyse the background details
    of a referral
  • How they determine who is involved in the childs
    life
  • Whether and how social workers actively consider
    the possibility of male involvement in the care
    of a child or their regular proximity to the
    child
  • (How?)
  • File study with content analysis, narrative
    interviews, Q-Methodology

14
How do social workers describe their response to
referrals and their approach to the assessment?
  • TWTU
  • Whether and how social workers consider the
    presence of men in the mind of a child
  • Whether and how they assess the male contribution
    (i.e. as benign, malevolent or positive) to the
    childs care and protection
  • Types of reasoning and logics used in assessments
  • Amount and quality of multi-agency information
    gathering

15
How do social workers work with the family when
men are known to be involved?
  • WNTK
  • Delineation of methods for engaging family
    members
  • Extent of use of theory and research when
    assessing, interviewing and drawing up protection
    plans
  • (How?)
  • File search and content analysis, interviews

16
How do they work with the family when men are
known to be involved?
  • TWTU
  • Clarity, specificity and articulation of concerns
  • How they assess positive male influence (e.g.
    social fathers)
  • Level of openness and honesty
  • Underlying implicit value base

17
How do social workers analyse their practice when
men are thought not to be involved?
  • WNTK
  • How social workers determine the non-presence of
    men
  • Whether and how they update their assessments
  • (How?)
  • Interviews around practice, scenario-and
    vignette-based case discussion

18
How do social workers analyse their practice when
men are thought not to be involved?
  • TWTU
  • Extent of use of techniques aimed at observing
    and analysing the childs behaviour and
    representations as an indicator of the presence
    and proximity of men
  • Knowledge of such techniques (independent of
    usage)
  • Use of the Public Law Outline to increase
    leverage

19
How do social workers analyse their practice if
the possibility of a child being abused by
unknown male/s is thought likely?
  • WNTK
  • How social workers evaluate risk from the
    presence and influence of invisible men
  • (How?)
  • Interviews around practice, scenario-and
    vignette-based case discussion

20
How do social workers analyse their practice if
the possibility of a child being abused by
unknown male/s is thought likely?
  • TWTU
  • Social workers ability to hold situations
    together to protect a child when the presence of
    men is being denied (but thought likely)
  • How social workers protect civil liberties and
    human rights
  • Whether and how managerial consultation and legal
    advice are sought (dont add and how effective
    they are if you arent going to!)
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