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Advance Your Research Career with Europe
2 June 2016, Shanghai
Event Info Package
The EURAXESS event Advance Your Research Career with Europe, co-organised with Shanghai Jiao Tong
University, took place Thursday afternoon, 2nd June 2016. The experience-sharing workshop introduced
hands-on information by outstanding researchers who carry out their research between Europe and
China. They shared their tips on how to develop research careers with EU funding within the framework
of European Research Council (ERC) and Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions (MSCA), two prestigious
funding instruments under Horizon 2020, the EU's Framework Programme for Research and Innovation.
To kick-off the event, Prof Li Weidong, Deputy Director for Research Management division at SJTU, and
Dr Laurent Bocherau, the S&T Counsellor at the EU delegation in Beijing, addressed the participants with
opening remarks, stressing the importance of EU-China research networks and abundance of
collaboration opportunities within and outside EU’s framework programme for research, Horizon 2020.
The workshop, moderated by Ms Andrea Střelcová, Country Representative of EURAXESS China, was
split into two main sessions; the first was dedicated to the grants from the European Research Council
(ERC) while the second focused on the fellowships available from Marie Skłodowska-Curie
Actions (MSCA).
In the report below you will find detailed information from our speakers who shared valuable
information about their achievements in applying for ERC and MSCA.
Part 1:
European Research Council
The ERC's mission is to encourage the highest quality research in Europe through competitive funding
and to support investigator-driven frontier research across all fields, on the basis of scientific
excellence. The ERC complements other funding activities in Europe such as those of the national
research funding agencies, and is a flagship component of Horizon 2020, the European Union's Research
Framework Programme for 2014 to 2020.
Investigator-driven, bottom-up in nature, the ERC approach allows excellent talents to identify new
opportunities and directions in any field of research – there are no priorities set by politicians. This
ensures that funds are channelled into new, promising areas of research with a greater degree of
flexibility.
The ERC grants are competitive, very prestigious grants available to people of all nationalities and all
disciplines. ERC grants are awarded through open competition to projects headed by starting,
consolidators and established senior researchers, irrespective of their origins, who are working or want
to work in Europe. The sole criterion for selection is scientific excellence. The aim here is to recognise
the best ideas, and confer status and visibility on the best brains and talents from all over the world to
do their research in Europe.
You can read information about the grants in Chinese here on ERC website.
Testimonials from China-based ERC grant participants
Dr Manuel Pérez García – ERC Starting Grant Holder, Universidad Pablo
Olavide Seville
Dr Manuel Pérez García, a historian affiliated to Renmin University of China and Universidad Pablo
Olavide in Sevilla, holds a Starting Grant from ERC to carry out a project GECEM: Global Encounters
between China and Europe: Trade Networks, Consumption and Cultural Exchanges in Macau and
Marseille, 1680-1840. In his talk, Dr Pérez explained
how he prepared a winning ERC proposal while
based in China.
Dr Pérez started by emphasizing the impact of
EURAXESS on his work, and encouraged present
researchers interested in applying for an ERC grant
to utilize the network and information EURAXESS
makes available.
Dr Pérez introduced his background as a scholar and
professor of global history at Tsinghua University
and Renmin University of China – to demonstrate an international profile is essential part of preparing a
successful ERC application.
It’s important to use the ERC website, to which Dr Pérez referred to as the “Bible“, as he went into
explaining how to apply. As the ERC Starting Grant is designed to support excellent principle
investigators (PI) starting their independent research team or programme, the PIs need to demonstrate
the ground-breaking and ambitious nature as well as the feasibility of their scientific proposal. In other
words, a successful proposal has to be a project that promises addressing important challenges,
introduces a novel concept that spans across disciplines. The ERC funds high risk/high gain projects.
ERC Starting Grant is for PIs that received their PhD at least 2 years and up to 7 years prior to the year of
a call and show some evidence of research independence and maturity, for example by having
published at least 1 important publication without participation of their supervisor. This includes also
other evidence of an early achievement track record - awards, invitations to conferences, granted
patents and so on.
With regards to researchers based in China, Manuel pointed out that ERC Starting Grantees shall spend
at least minimum 50% of their total working time in an EU member state or Associated Country.1 At
least 50% of their total working time should be spent on the ERC project. He underlined that double
affiliation in China and in Europe is possible – spending 50% of his time in China strengthened his
application with his research project on China/Macau thanks to access to unique Chinese sources and
archives. Having strong ties to institutions in China can help the application if proven relevant to the
project.
The most important aspect of the application procedure is preparing the project well in advance.
Manuel explained that it might be necessary to spend at least 2 years to develop a new idea into a solid
proposal. It’s recommended to avoid hasty preparation, but at the same time not to be afraid of failure.
The ERC is not a project that can be prepared in 2 months, and copying from previous proposals is not
going to work.
1 For a complete list of Associated Countries as of April 2016 see
http://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/data/ref/h2020/grants_manual/hi/3cpart/h2020-hi-list-ac_en.pdf
Click here to see video of Manuel Pérez García’s testimonial!
As Dr Pérez explained, after passing the first proposal (Stage 1), selected researchers are invited to
Brussels for an interview (Stage 2) to defend their project in front of a panel of experts. Dr Pérez
succeeded and therefore became one of the 300 successful out of 3000 total applicants for the ERC
Starting Grant call in 2015-
Dr Pérez also introduced the ERC project that he got funding for. As Global History in China is a relatively
new field, he intends to use both Chinese and European sources to shed a new light on processes of
consumption and trade. He wants to achieve this through a case study of two port cities (Macau and
Marseille) and study the connections and differences of 2 localities of China and Europe through diverse
processes of consumption and trade in luxury goods (tea, porcelain, silk), and assess the reasons behind
acceptation (or rejection) of new goods in China and Europe.
Dr Pérez also stressed that to demonstrate your international profile is a must, therefore several
mobility experiences and international networks are helpful. Dr Pérez himself, after his relocation to
China in 2011, initiated the Global History Network2 which has grown successfully and now lists many
prestigious institutions from Italy, Spain, China, Mexico or the UK, working in the field of global history, -
this experience with developing an international network helped him in his application.
2 Thee GHN includes e.g. Renmin University, Tsinghua University, University of Oxford, London School of Economics, European
University Institute, see more at http://www.globalhistorynetwork.com/
Key points by Manuel Pérez García: ERC Starting Grants
For researchers at the start of their independent research career (2-7 years after PhD)
Competitive grant for groundbreaking research, high risk but high gain
No more than 50% of working time can be spent outside of Europe although connection to
China can be asset, and cross-affiliation is allowed
The ERC website is the applicant’s Bible
Do spend enough preparing your proposal = hastiness not recommended.
To find out more, read a “Meet the Researcher” interview with EURAXESS from
January 2016 here. Learn about Manuel Pérez García’s achievement as the first
China-based researcher to win an ERC grant.
Dr Eugene Ch’ng
ERC Advanced Grant Team Member, University of Nottingham Ningbo China
Dr Eugene Ch’ng is an associate professor in
computer science, based at Nottingham Ningbo
University China. He is a part of a research team of
ERC Advanced Grantee Prof Vincent Gaffney
(University of Bedford, UK) of a project called Europe
Lost Frontiers. In his talk Dr Ch’ng went into the
details how it is to participate on ERC projects from
China.
At the start of his talk Dr Ch’ng explained his position
in this project as a co-PI in charge of computer
simulation, and how the set-up is working for
Vincent Gaffney, the project’s principle investigator (PI).
He mentioned that a way to enter a project like this is finding a senior scientist to work with, somebody
to lead the project - the PI has to be strong and respected in his field.
Dr Ch’ng works as the director of Big Data and Visual Analytics lab and as an associate scientist at NVIDIA
Technological Centre at University of Nottingham Ningbo China. His work contributes to a pioneering
centre for archaeological computing work; everything from data analysing, scanning, to final
visualization. The team he works with on this ERC project has done similar archaeological computer
works in the past; for example a project that scanned the ancient geography in the wider area around
Stonehenge, England as well as discovering the world‘s oldest calendar. In addition to the research work,
they disseminate their research as widely in public as possible.
The ERC Advanced Grant of Prof Gaffney project is called the Europe’s Lost Frontiers’ and focuses on
three points: Exploring climate change, settlement and colonization of the inundated landscapes of the
North-Sea by using soil core sampling, seismic mapping and complex system modelling.
As for the application procedure, Dr Ch’ng underlined the importance of highlighting the most
important points immediately in the first overview of the project proposal (Stage 1 proposal) – how the
Click here to see video of Eugene Ch’ng’s testimonial!
project will be the first to use new technology to explore inundated land, and what methods they will
use to achieve that. The application stressed that the project can establish a new sub-discipline,
submerged landscape archaeology. The impact of the project would be global, as there are vast
landscapes all over the world that have been lost to climate change which forced humans to abandon
former settlements. The team he works on doesn’t only rely on the new technology but also creates
new models to track simulated movements of settlements and human activities.
The project profile is very important when it comes to achieving success in applying for an ERC grant.
Eugene‘s project has an interdisciplinary team, which is important to create new knowledge where their
expertise overlap. Another approach is to be multidisciplinary, where experts from different fields work
together but each of them mostly stays within his or her framework. The upside of going the
interdisciplinary route is that it makes the teams more able to deal with problems that highly complex
(not necessarily complicated).
What makes the ERC team work?
Strong leadership
The team needs confident members, who are experts in their own areas. But it is important to
not be selfish or defensive about your particular area
Mutual trust, respect and willingness to build the team and project rather than being
destructive.
Members have to be willing to come to terms with arrangement of budgeting.
Understanding each other‘s field specific language.
Love for the job.
A good starting point to an ERC application is a well-crafted story that introduces clearly what you are
doing. Bring forward state-of-the-art and the objectives of the project. Clearly formulate the research
questions – and make sure that you have at least some idea about how you will be answering them.
You have to prove the significance of the project: In what way is it ground breaking? Is it first of its kind?
Will it affect established theories? What form will your outcomes take? Map the potential impact, in
which disciplines, what kind of knowledge and methods will be created etc. You also have to convince
them why this is feasible and why the timing is right; why it is something that should be funded right
now?
Dr Ch’ng put a special focus on the pitch, how you should sell yourself. He mentioned that you have to
show motivation and enthusiasm in the tone of the proposal and consider what makes you stand out in
your research area.
It’s important to show you have a relevant track record
Good way is to keep a website and make sure to update it with your latest information
It is recommended to get your research into the public consciousness, not only the internet but
also TV, documentaries, interviews and so on. When putting up the proposal pitch you have to
make sure that you are very clear, since you only have 5 pages for the first (Stage 1) proposal
Start by writing for all audiences - then expand with details later
Keep in mind that the evaluators will be specialists, but not necessarily specialists in your area.
Clearly explain how the project will be managed and how it will be disseminated.
Keep on repeating yourself, all the key elements of your proposal should be repeated in all
parts of the grant proposal.
Make use of good relevant illustrations but don’t put in diagrams that no one will understand.
Before applying you should make sure to get an independent reviewer to go over it. If they
don’t understand it, nobody will. Iterate and polish!
As for team management, Dr Ch’ng stressed the following:
Make sure that your team is solid. The key to that is to work with like-minded people and get
long-term project partners.
Tasks and work should be assigned early and deadlines should be managed.
Make sure that the team members have clearly assigned roles and tasks so you can explain in
your proposal what each time member is doing and what credentials he/she has to take up the
role!
“We can all dream… but the EU doesn‘t fund dreams,” said Dr Ch’ng, who stressed that ERC likes
projects that are ambitious yet feasible. You need to explain clearly how this research will lead to new
developments and make sure you have the right publications, the most relevant and strongest one listed
in the proposal.
When it comes to budget consideration:
It is a good to start the calculations early. The whole estimation process will take time as it
relies on different actors providing different information. It‘s good to have something to
compare to early on. Some of the costs will be wrong but the budget can be finalised later in
the application.
You should ask for more money on grant submission day but you also have to know where you
can shave off money from in case of emergency
Talk to your institutions’ project grant administrators, some of them are excellent and can
provide a lot of help in the budgeting process.
Justify your costs; show clearly the links between the costs and the research methodology
Money is always an issue; there is always a risk of not getting the funding you need even
though the research is recognized as worthwhile.
Dr Ch’ng ended his ERC work with Prof Gaffney by pointing out that „the real problem actually starts
only when you get the grant, because delivery is harder than writing applications, and interdisciplinary
work is harder than multidisciplinary. If you are operating at this level, managing a bunch of egoists –
and if you have a good team they will be egoists – is a nightmare. You will spend time managing the
team. We just got the grant - I’ll tell you if it worked for our team in 5 years!”
His recommendation to early career researchers and PhD students is to associate yourself with the right
research group(s) early in your career. Invest yourself in good projects and stick with it. Continue
working for the group after your PhD.
Read a “Meet the Researcher” Interview with Eugene Ch’ng’s PI,
Professor Vincent Gaffney, ERC Advanced Grantee, here (originally
published in December 2015).
Key points from Dr Eugene Ch’ng: Member of an ERC Advanced Grant Team
Find a senior scientist and a team to associate yourself with early in career and stick with it.
When applying, highlight the most important points immediately in the proposal. Your proposal
should have a well-crafted story, clear objectives and research questions and ways to answer
them, prove of significance and potential impact, and that the project is ambitious but feasible.
Important to not be afraid to sell yourself. Reach out to the public!
Make sure your proposal is understandable to all audiences and reviewed by independent
colleague.
Work with like-minded people with clearly assigned roles.
Start budget considerations early, activate your institutions’ project grant administrators and
formulate an early draft. It can be finalized later.
Part 2:
Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions (MSCA) – Individual Fellowships (IF)
The Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions, named after the double Nobel Prize winning Polish-French
scientist famed for her work on radioactivity, support researchers at all stages of their careers,
irrespective of nationality.
Researchers working across all disciplines, from life-saving healthcare to 'blue-sky' science, are eligible
for funding. The MSCA also support industrial doctorates, combining academic research study with work
in companies, and other innovative training and exchange that enhances employability and career
development. In addition to generous research funding, scientists have the possibility to gain experience
abroad and in the private sector, and to complete their training with competences or disciplines useful
for their careers.
MSCA Individual Fellowships (IF) fund researchers with a PhD (or at least 4 years of full time research
experience) looking to enhance their career development and prospects by working abroad. There are
two types of Individual Fellowships:
1. European Fellowships (MSCA-IF-EF)
European Fellowships are held in the EU or Associated Countries and are open to researchers
either coming to Europe or moving within Europe.
2. Global Fellowships (MSCA-IF-GF)
Global Fellowships fund secondments in third countries outside Europe for researchers who are
nationals or long-term residents of the EU or Associated Countries. There is a mandatory one-
year return period to the European institution.
Testimonials from Chinese and China-based MSCA Fellows
Dr Ludovico Dreni – MSCA Global Fellow based in China
Dr Ludovico Dreni is a Marie Curie Global Fellow
working at the Spanish Council for Scientific Research,
Institute of for Plant Molecular and Cell Biology
(IBMCP), currently at Shanghai Jiao Tong University.
In his talk Dr Dreni shared his experience of being a
European scientist preparing and getting a MSCA
Global Fellowship and moving to China. Global
Fellowship allows him to participate in a research
project at a Chinese host institution at no cost to the
host.
Dr Dreni stressed that the best starting point to
follow closely instructions on the website of the fellowship.
As Dr Dreni explained, the Individual Fellowship (IF) covers the salary and the mobility allowance of the
researcher but also the bench fee for the host institution. This makes it an attractive option for PIs who
want to invite researchers to their projects. The IF is open to researchers of any nationality but these
are mobility fellowships so they have to include some movement of a researcher. It‘s not possible to get
funded to do research within your own country. The main evaluation criteria are excellence; the
evaluators look at the background of the applicant, the quality of the host institution(s) and the quality
of the project proposals in terms of implementation and outreach.
Ludovico’s project proposal concerns plant developments and plant genetics and is titled „Carpel
evolution: A walk in the rice side“. The host institution for the outgoing phase is the Lab of Rice
Developmental Biology at Shanghai Jiao Tong University lead by Prof. Dabing Zhang. For the return
phase he will be hosted by the Lab of Evolution and Development of Carpels and Fruits, led by Dr.
Cristina Ferrándiz at the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC) in Valencia, Spain. He will also make
use of an extra secondment, to spend a month in a lab in Italy.
The timeline from application to starting the project took about 1 year; in Ludovico’s case the deadline
for submission was in September 2014 with the results in February 2015. The grant agreement was
finalized in late autumn 2015 and the project started in the beginning of 2016. It takes to finalize the
agreement can vary from project to project, depending on the circumstances at the host institutions.
Understandably, it takes time to coordinate the agreement between institutions in different countries.
Click here to see the testimonial on video
Read “Meet the Researcher” interview of Dr Ludovico Dreni with EURAXESS
here to learn more about Global Fellowships.
Key points from Dr Ludovico Dreni- MSCA Global Fellows
Allows European researchers (or long-term residents of EU member states or Associated
Countries) to undertake research projects in third country (e.g. China)
1-2 years outgoing phase in China, followed by 1 (last) year return phase in EU or associated
country
It is also possible to be seconded to another institution within the outgoing phase, for up to 6
months
Mobility schemes open to researchers of any nationality outside of own country.
Acceptance timeline up to 1 year, depends on how many institutions involved.
Dr Jin Bao –MSCA European Fellowship
The last testimonial was delivered in Chinese by Dr
Jin Bao, based at the University of Science and
Technology in Hefei as a researcher in neuroscience.
She introduced her experience as a Chinese national
who applied successfully for a Marie-Curie European
Fellowship to continue her research in Dr Alain
Marty’s lab in Paris after her PhD.
The talk was titled How to apply to Marie Curie
Individual Fellowship as a Chinese national. In the
talk Jin Bao went into some aspects of researchers’
early career developments, what it means to be a
European Marie Curie Fellow, some tips for how to apply and finally how it is to be a Chinese researcher
going to Europe.
Dr Jin Bao outlined several fundamental elements for researchers to be successful in their early careers:
The first thing to consider is picking the right team to be part of - put effort into mapping out
potential cooperation resources and evaluate the best people to work with
Make sure that to find people that can coach you so you can be constantly acquiring new skills
and learning new methods
Try to stay motivated and learn from examples to your mentors, about project application and
project management
The other side of the coin, but just as important, is to take it upon you to teach others and be
part of scientific outreach.
Always stay inspired and have a vision for your career development
As a researcher your vision of your career doesn’t necessarily have to be limited to your home
country, internationalize!
It is important to have a mentor that you can rely on, who understands what you are going
through and can you teach you and lead you.
When it comes to becoming a MSCA fellow, the first step would be finding and contacting your
preferred lab (or project) you want to be part of and the look for the appropriate financial support
based on that - the MSCA Individual Fellowship is an excellent choice for funding.
Dr Jin Bao shared many important tips on how write a good MSCA application:
Start with a good story that involves some meaningful work and a good idea.
Proceeding with creating a realistic work plan. It is useful to include some preliminary data about
your research.
Click here to see video [in Chinese]
Do not give up even if the first attempt is not successful; sometimes multiple trials are needed for
a successful MSCA application as Jin Bao learned from personal experience.
Go and explore Europe - seeing things away from your home country has its own value. The added
benefit of MSCA Individual Fellowship is to experience Europe’s multitude of different cultures and
people.
MSCA Individual Fellowship opens every year. The 2016 call for both
European and Global Fellowship will close on 10 September. Find out more
about application on EURAXESS. We also regularly publish calls directly from
organisations interested in hosting a fellow on our website.
Stay tuned to boost your research career with EURAXESS!
Key points – Chinese MSCA Fellow in Europe
Early career development tips: Learn from your team and directors, have a vision of where this
is leading you, look beyond your home for opportunities and seek mentors.
Find the lab or intuition you want to work for, then try to find appropriate financial support.
When applying, try to create a good story with meaningful work and good ideas, present
preliminary data about your research and remember you might have to try several times.
Exploring the world is extremely healthy for anybody - Europe has plenty of interesting places
and cultures to experience.