Spring 2014: NSF CAREER presentation and panel discussion

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Research Development Quarterly Workshop Series Spring 2014: NSF CAREER presentation and panel discussion General Overview 2:30 3:00 pm Panel Discussion 3:00 4:00 pm May 16, 2014 General Overview presented by: Marianne R. Smith, Ph.D. Research Development Officer Ayala School of Biological Sciences Tel: 949-824-2013 mrsmith1@uci.edu

Overview of NSF The National Science Foundation (NSF) is an independent federal agency created by Congress in 1950, and with an annual budget of about $7.2 billion (FY 2014), funds approximately 24 percent of all federally supported basic research conducted by America's colleges and universities. NSF is the only federal agency whose mission includes support for all fields of fundamental science and engineering, except for medical sciences (but does fund faculty in Bio and Medicine). NSF has two review criteria: Intellectual Merit and Broader Impacts. Intellectual Merit: The Intellectual Merit criterion encompasses the potential to advance knowledge Broader Impacts: The Broader Impacts criterion encompasses the potential to benefit society and contribute to the achievement of specific, desired societal outcomes. 2

Goals of NSF CAREER Program Allow for the career development of outstanding new scientists Build a foundation for a lifetime of integrated contributions to research and education Provide incentives to Universities to value the integration of research and education Increase participation of those traditionally underrepresented in science and engineering Provide stable support for 5 years

Overview of NSF CAREER 5 years of funding at minimum of $400K total ($500K for BIO and PLR) Eligibility: 1) Assistant Prof. or equivalent, 2) tenure track, 3) untenured, 4) Can only apply 3 times 5) Propose to conduct research in an area that NSF funds Integration of Research and Education - All CAREER proposals must have an integrated research and education plan at their core. Must include a Departmental Letter Include letter of collaboration (not endorsement), if applicable Have no co-pis or senior personnel on cover page and budget

NSF Organization Must apply to a particular program within a directorate: Biological Sciences (BIO) Computer and Information Science and Eng (CISE) Education and Human Resources (EHR) Engineering (ENG) Geosciences (GEO) Mathematical and Physical Sciences (MPS) Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences (SBE) Deadlines: July 21 (BIO, CISE, EHR) July 22 (ENG) July 23 (GEO, MPS, SBE) Different NSF divisions and directorates use the CAREER program differently See http://www.nsf.gov/staff/orglist.jsp for description of programs

Proposal Elements Title: Must begin with CAREER: Project Summary (1 page) Three sections: Overview, Intellectual Merit, and Broader Impacts Plans for the integration of education and research activities included in all sections Project Description (15 pages) References Cited Follow NSF guidelines Supplementary Documents Chair Letter Letter(s) of Collaboration (Do not include letters of endorsement or biosketches/c&p supports from collaborators) Biographical Sketch (2 pages) Follow NSF guidelines Current & Pending Support Form Budget talk to program officer about possible funding ranges Budget Justification (3 page limit) Facilities and Equipment Data Management Plan (2 page limit) Postdoc Mentoring Plan (if applicable-1 page limit)

Format and Organization Font: 11pt (up to 12pt) - Times New Roman 1 Margins all around Page #s on center bottom Italicize key words within text for emphasis Grammar, spelling and punctuation correctness Effective use of graphics (referenced in text and captioned with figure/table numbers) and include some simple/non-complex graphics. If possible, not text wrapped

Project Summary (1 page) Three sections Overview, Intellectual Merit, and Broader Impacts (typed directly into FASTLANE) Overview State your goals/objectives/hypothesis My long-term research goal is In pursuit of this goal, the research objective of this CAREER proposal is The research approach is... Intellectual Merit: Potential for your activities to advance knowledge. Include intellectual merit of both research activities and education plan. Broader Impacts: Potential of your activities to benefit society. Include broader impacts of both research activities and education plan. Written in 3rd person 4600 characters max

Project Description (15 pages) Directly answer their reviewer questions for both intellectual merit and broader impacts: 1. What is the potential for the proposed activity to: a. Advance knowledge and understanding within its own field or across different fields b. Benefit society or advance desired societal outcomes 2. To what extent do the proposed activities suggest and explore creative, original, or potentially transformative concepts? 3. Is the plan for carrying out the proposed activities well-reasoned, wellorganized, and based on a sound rationale? Does the plan incorporate a mechanism to assess success? 4. How well qualified is the individual, team, or organization to conduct the proposed activities? 5. Are there adequate resources available to the PI (either at the home organization or through collaborations) to carry out the proposed activities?

Structure Example A description of the proposed research project, including preliminary supporting data where appropriate, specific objectives, methods and procedures to be used, and expected significance of the results A description of the proposed educational activities, including plans to evaluate their impact A description of how the research and educational activities are integrated with one another Results from prior NSF support, if applicable (must include a separate areas labeled intellectual merit and broader impacts. Pgs 106-108. D. Christensen, 2011

Intellectual Merit Know the expectations of your scientific community Be sufficiently risky (transformative, high potential for payoff) or at least adequately creative Have outlined goals and objectives Have a problem statement in the Introduction Have sufficient detail and a work plan Show novelty and creativity Have preliminary data (less risky) Have a timeline Have evaluation or assessment of methods Give sufficient background of the field (don t overly cite yourself)

Broader Impacts Explained 1. Broader impacts to the scientific field and society as a whole: How did/does your research advance the field? How did/does your research impact society or industry? How did/does your research promote international or interdisciplinary collaborations? Will the results be disseminated broadly to enhance scientific and technological understanding? 2. Integration of Education and Research & Integration of Diversity (e.g. outreach, mentoring): How well does the proposed outreach activity broaden the participation of underrepresented groups (e.g. ethnicity, gender, disability)? How well does the activity advance discovery and understanding while promoting teaching, training and learning? To what extent will it enhance the infrastructure for research and education, such as facilities, instrumentation, networks and partnerships? * Have multiple detailed integration strategies

Integration of Education and Research - Suggestions Participate in the recruitment, training, and/or professional development of K-12 science and math teachers. Develop research-based educational materials or contribute to databases useful in teaching (e.g., K-16 digital library). Establish research and education collaborations with students and/or faculty who are members of underrepresented groups. Include students from underrepresented groups as participants in the proposed research and education activities. Make campus visits and presentations at institutions that serve underrepresented groups. Stimulate and support the development and dissemination of next-generation instrumentation, multiuser facilities, and other shared research and education materials through the integration of opensource platforms and social media. Partner with nature centers, science centers, or after school programs Involve the public or industry, where possible, in research and education activities (volunteer work, service learning, internships, citizen science). Give science and engineering presentations to the broader community (e.g., at museums and libraries, on radio shows, and in other such venues.). Participate in multi- and interdisciplinary conferences, workshops, and research activities. Analyze, interpret, and synthesize research and education results in formats understandable and useful for non-scientists. Provide information for policy formulation by Federal, State or local agencies. Increase science literacy for the general public through awareness campaigns that promote behavioral changes (i.e. recycling, water and energy conservation)

Departmental Letter Support the PIs proposed research and education activities Description of how the PIs career goals and responsibilities mesh with that of the organization and department Commitment to the professional development of the PI with mentoring and whatever else is needed to forward the PIs efforts to integrate research and education Verification that the PI is eligible for the CAREER program

DO s DO start early DO ask for help (have others read it!). Have a reader or mentor DO read the solicitation very carefully and follow directions DO represent the literature in the field and frame the project within the field DO propose novel work. Differentiate your work from that done by others DO have a clear plan with adequate details and stated objectives DO have a clear objective statement in the beginning (not buried in the text) DO include a clear management plan DO include an evaluation plan for the project DO match the budget with objectives DO have a five-year project scope DO show where the research might lead DO use graphical help to help the understanding of complex concepts DO describe applications that could result from the research

DON Ts DON T have too many directions, experiments, aims or methods. DO have a unifying theme DON T have an unbalanced proposal and use excessive technical writing Too much text devoted to complex details DON T fail to establish significance or excitement about your work DON T have misspellings and bad grammar DON T be disorganized. DO have effective and consistent headings DON T bury goals in the proposal DON T be too ambitious for time/money DON T propose tasks in which you have inadequate skills or credentials DON T have collaboration letters written in the same wording DON T forget to include minorities/underrepresented groups

Action Items for Proposal Preparation Talk to NSF Program Officers: http://www.nsf.gov/crssprgm/career/contacts.jsp Best to contact by email to set up a phone call Ask the PO if your project fits within their program (and funding direction). Discuss your readiness to submit Find out if your review will be ad hoc or panel. A panel is likely to have nonexperts in specific research areas. Volunteer to serve on an NSF review panel Review funded proposals Seek mentors on campus Talk to departmental administrators and the Sponsored Research Office Start a Broader Impacts Activity

Review Process Overview 18

Who Gets Funded 19

UC Irvine Research Development

Important Resources CAREER Solicitation: http://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2014/nsf14532/nsf14532.htm Frequently Asked Questions: http://www.nsf.gov/publications/pub_summ.jsp?ods_key=nsf11038 NSF Grant Proposal Guide (new as of Feb. 2014): http://www.nsf.gov/pubs/policydocs/pappguide/nsf14001/gpgprint.pdf Christensen, David M., "Understanding the National Science Foundation's CAREER Award Proposal Genre: A Rhetorical, Ethnographic, and System Perspective" (2011). All Graduate Theses and Dissertations. Paper 923. http://digitalcommons.usu.edu/etd/923 Broader Impacts 2.0 : Frequently Asked Questions (May 2013): http://oso.stanford.edu/files/faculty-resources_17.pdf Postdocs: Writing assistance at the UCI Graduate Resource Center - http://www.grad.uci.edu/services/grc/index.html Faculty: Research Development Professionals in your School http://www.research.uci.edu/research-development/contact-us/index.html Past awardees in your School or Department (searchable in NSF): http://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/advancedsearch.jsp Organization: university of california-irvine Keyword: CAREER (search award title only) Can search current and expired.