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Grant proposals and grant opportuni/es…
Dr. Gréta Björk Kristjánsdó4r,
Research Director -‐ School of Engineering and Natural Sciences
Arkímedes talk – 10th Dec 2015
My background
• BSc and MSc in geology from the University of Iceland
• PhD in geology from the University of Colorado at Boulder
• Postdoc in Cambridge, UK – Paleoclimate, paleoceanography, Holocene, North Atlantic
The process of getting a research grant
The process of getting a research grant
• Funders publish a call for proposals – May be very specific or totally bottom up
• You write a proposal to answer the call – Minimum time for large cooperative proposal writing is 3 months
of full time work! • Proposal is evaluated • If successful then it goes into a negotiation phase • Project starts and ends • Final report sent in – final payment sent
3 m 3 m
2-3 m
2-6 m
Overview
• Part 1 – Planning and writing a proposal
• Part 2 – Grants you can apply for
Before we start…
• How many have written RANNÍS grant proposals
• How many have written other Icelandic grant proposals?
• How about FP7/H2020 grant proposals? • USA grant proposals? • Any other grant proposals?
When writing a proposal • Rule number 1: read the instructions
When writing a proposal • Rule number 1: read the instructions
• Rule number 2: write for the evaluators – help them understand your proposal – give them visual aids – give them catchy acronyms – evaluators are not always experts in your field – evaluators are always short on time
• Rule number 3: give yourself enough time – Plan the proposal (do a one page proposal, discuss it with peers) – Write the proposal – Edit the proposal (let your family read it)
The one-page-proposal* How to prepare
Number Official number (if available)
Funding scheme/topic e.g.H2020 SFS-‐14b-‐2015 1
Title Title (slogan) ACRONYM (brand name)
Objec/ve What you are planning to do
Background Why do this (see 5 key ques7ons)
Impact (expected results) Who wants the results (see impact ques7ons) 2
Phases of work How will it be done (science)
Consor/um Who will do the work
Cost/dura/on
*from Sean McCarthy
Questions to assess impact*
*from Sean McCarthy
i. What will come out of your project? ´Expected results´
ii. Who wants these results? Lead users/ lead stakeholders
iii. Why do they want the results?
iv. How do you plan to tell them about the results? DisseminaPon plan
v. What further development (steps) will be needed?
The one-page-proposal* How to prepare
Number Official number (if available)
Funding scheme/topic e.g.H2020 SFS-‐14b-‐2015 1
Title Title (slogan) ACRONYM (brand name)
Objec/ve What you are planning to do
Background Why do this (see 5 key ques7ons) 3
Impact (expected results) Who wants the results (see impact ques7ons) 2
Phases of work How will it be done (science)
Consor/um Who will do the work
Cost/dura/on
*from Sean McCarthy
Sean´s 5 key questions
*from Seán McCarthy
Applied research
Why bother? What problem are you trying to solve?
Is it a EU priority? Or can it be solved naPonally?
Is the soluPon already available? Product, service, transfer…
Why now? What would happen if we do not do this now?
Why you? Are you the best consorPum to do this?
Basic research
Why bother? What problem are you trying to solve?
Will this establish EU as an InternaPonal leader? Will the US use this?
Is the knowledge already available? State-‐of-‐the-‐art
Why now? Why has this not been done before?
Why you? Are you the best consorPum/person to do this?
The one-page-proposal* How to prepare
Number Official number (if available)
Funding scheme/topic e.g.H2020 SFS-‐14b-‐2015 1
Title Title (slogan) ACRONYM (brand name) 4
Objec/ve What you are planning to do 5
Background Why do this (see 5 key ques7ons) 3
Impact (expected results) Who wants the results (see impact ques7ons) 2
Phases of work How will it be done (science) 6
Consor/um Who will do the work 7
Cost/dura/on 8
*from Sean McCarthy
The one-page-proposal* How to prepare
Number Official number (if available)
Funding scheme/topic e.g.H2020 SFS-‐14b-‐2015 1
Title Title (slogan) ACRONYM (brand name) 4
Objec/ve What you are planning to do 5
Background Why do this (see 5 key ques7ons) 3
Impact (expected results) Who wants the results (see impact ques7ons) 2
Phases of work How will it be done (science) 6
Consor/um Who will do the work 7
Cost/dura/on 8
*from Sean McCarthy
General structure of a small project • Supervisors/supervisory board • Student/post-doc • Lab-assistants? • Work packages (use Gantt charts)
– Work package tasks • Deliverables (use Gantt charts)
– A deliverable is a distinct output of the project, meaningful in terms of the project’s overall objectives and constituted by a report, a document, a technical diagram, a software, training, conference, etc. These should be divided into scientific deliverables and management, training, recruitment and dissemination deliverables.
• Milestones (use Gantt charts) – Milestones are control points in the project that help to chart progress. Milestones may correspond to the
completion of a key deliverable, allowing the next phase of the work to begin. They may also be needed at intermediary points so that, if problems have arisen, corrective measures can be taken. A milestone may be a critical decision point in the project where, for example, the consortium must decide which of several technologies to adopt for further development.
• Budget
Two examples of a Gantt chart:
General structure of large collaborative research projects
• Coordinator • International advisory board • Work packages (ca 10) • Work package leaders • Work package tasks
– Milestones and deliverables • Participants – staff and students (3-30 institutes, 50-100 people) • Budget per institute
Ready to start writing
• Review the rules again, use the correct template
• Common chapters in a grant proposal: – Abstract (write it last) – Excellence
• State of the art, innovation – Impact
• Scientific impact, technological impact • Societal impact • Long term/short term impact
– Implementation • Work plan • Break down into task, deliverables, milestones • Budget
– CV
• Write to fulfill the evaluation criteria – write for the evaluators!
Two examples of evaluation criteria:
Keep it by your side when writing and constantly check it for guidance…
Day to day advise for you
• Keep a running file for your CV • Write in it your achievements, when you achieve them • Keep in the file dates of all achievements and duration of
classes, workshops you partake in or teach • Dates of travels, particularly dates when moving between
countries • Grant ID numbers, DOI numbers, Ethical licenses, etc
– this will save you time when doing your proposals
Where can you find assistance? First and foremost from your advisor Gréta Björk Kristjánsdóttir, Research Director of SENS, [email protected]
located in Tæknigarður Sigurður Bogason, MarkMar, [email protected]
located in Tæknigarður (H2020 applications only)
Division of Science and Innovation at UoI Ásta Sif Erlingsdóttir, Úlfar Kristinn Gíslason, Ólöf Vigdís Ragnarsdóttir located in Aðalbygging
RANNÍS International Division, hosts all National Contact Points (NCP) for H2020
located at Borgartún 30 Your peers who have already been involved in projects/written proposals
Where can we help?
• In pre-proposal stage – Reviewing calltext, advice on rules and regulations
• In proposal stage – Group building, structuring proposal, supply standard texts, budgeting, editing,
form-A input etc. Assist you in applying for the RANNÍS EU grant writing fund (Sóknarstyrkir)
• In negotiation stage (mandatory help) – Important to get assistance here. GPFs, Grant Agreements and Consortium
Agreements have to be reviewed before signature of LEAR.
• In post-award stage – Start-up-meetings, Periodic reports and financial reports.
•
GRANTS YOU CAN APPLY FOR Part 2
Grants you can apply for: • UoI doctoral student grants
– January
• UoI Productivity Evaluation Fund (Vinnumat) (only postdocs)
– February
• UoI postdoctoral grants – Has been in April, but has not yet been advertised
• UoI doctoral student travel grants – May
• Erasmus + – January and March
• COST actions (apply with supervisor) – Network grants
• Rannís doctoral student grants – September
• Rannís postdoctoral grants – September
• Axa (postdoc grant) – November
• Marie Curie Individual fellowships (postdoc)
– September
Information on UoI grants • http://sjodir.hi.is/english
• NOTE! The funds are for students already registered at The University of Iceland and personnel already employed by the University. The necessary information , including links to forms and regulations, is accessed by clicking on the name of each fund. Further information is provided by Sverrir Guðmundsson, Division of Science and Research, phone: +354 525 4352, email: [email protected] or [email protected].
Erasmus+ the new EU programme for 2014-2020
• 1.a An opportunity to take one or two
semester at a partner university in Europe (Exchange studies)
• 1.b An opportunity to train in Europe (Traineeship/placement)
• Erasmus+ will provide opportunities
for over 4 million Europeans to study, train, gain work experience and volunteer abroad
Information on Erasmus+ grants at HÍ
• International Office – Háskólatorg, 3rd floor – Tel: 525 4311 – [email protected]
• www.hi.is > nám > þjónusta
• Erasmus+ program http://www.hi.is/adalvefur/erasmus_samstarfsskolar
HAVE YOU HEARD OF ERASMUS+? HAVE YOU PARTICIPATED IN ONE OR KNOW SOMEONE THAT HAS?
Question to you:
Information on COST
• COST is great because it boosts your network • COST action groups often end up submitting a research proposal into H2020 and being successful
at it • COST actions have small grants called STSM for early career researcher to visit institutes or go to
conferences • http://www.cost.eu/
HAVE YOU HEARD OF COST PROJECTS? HAVE YOU PARTICIPATED IN ONE? OR KNOW SOMEONE THAT HAS?
Question to you:
Information on Rannís grants
• http://en.rannis.is/funding/research/icelandic-research-fund/
• https://www.axa-research.org/how-to-obtain-funding
Information on Axa grants
Information on Marie Curie Individual fellowships (postdocs)
• http://ec.europa.eu/research/mariecurieactions/
• Also through the EU Participant Portal • http://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/portal/
desktop/en/home.html
Grants you could take part in but not be sole applicants
• HÍ research fund http://sjodir.hi.is/node/16131
• Rannís research fund http://en.rannis.is/funding/research/icelandic-research-fund/ – Project grants – Grants of excellence
• Arctic studies http://en.rannis.is/funding/research/arctic-studies/
– Icelandic and Norwegian institutions can apply and be partners. Individuals can not apply.
• Large collaborative Nordic funds http://www.nordforsk.org/en – Miscellanous deadlines
• Large collaborative H2020 grants (consortium) http://ec.europa.eu/research/
participants/portal/desktop/en/home.html – Miscellaneous deadlines
Research Professional
Research Professional is an online database of research funding opportunities. UoI is a subscribing institute Create customized searches, get weekly alerts https://www.researchprofessional.com/0/rr/home
Optional homework J
• Make a one page proposal of your PhD work / intended postdoc work
• Look for Erasmus+ opportunities of interest to you
• Go and talk to the staff at the International Office
• Look for COST actions in your field – Ask your advisor to join with you if you find something interesting
• Read up on the Marie Curie grant scheme – To be ready to apply when the Post-doc time comes
Final words
You are the future – learn your way around quickly and start running
before the others catch up! Be brave and enjoy the journey
Thank you for your attention