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Grant Writing Colloquia 2011 ll Biol. Final Paper in the form of a grant proposa ALL BMS 1st Years Part 1 Workshop: Overview Presentation Wednesday, September 14, 2011 Have Faculty mentor, outline of aims & experiments Thursday, October 14, 2011 Give faculty mentor first draft Friday, October 21, 2011 Send Personal Statement draft to Student Mentors Tuesday, October 25, 2011 Part 2 Workshop: Review PS with Student mentors Friday, October 28, 2011 Send entire proposal to assigned faculty reader Tuesday, November 01, 2011 Faculty reader will be asked to return comments by: Friday, November 04, 2011 NSF Due Date Friday, November 18, 2011 NSF/External Postdoctoral Fellowship. These are important !(Your Career and BMS) BMS 260 Cell Bio - Proposal Topic/Mentor Due Friday, October 14, 2011 BMS 260 Cell Bio - Proposal Specific Aims Due Friday, November 04, 2011 BMS 260 Cell Bio - Proposal Due Date Monday, November 21, 2011

Grant Writing Colloquia 2011

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Grant Writing Colloquia 2011. NSF/External Postdoctoral Fellowship. Cell Biol. Final Paper in the form of a grant proposal ALL BMS 1st Years . These are important !(Your Career and BMS). Grant Writing Colloquia. Max: Overview of a grant proposal (or ‘ How to Write a Good One ’ ) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Grant Writing Colloquia 2011

Grant Writing Colloquia 2011

•Cell Biol. Final Paper in the form of a grant proposal•ALL BMS 1st Years

Part 1 Workshop: Overview Presentation Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Have Faculty mentor, outline of aims & experiments Thursday, October 14, 2011Give faculty mentor first draft Friday, October 21, 2011Send Personal Statement draft to Student Mentors Tuesday, October 25, 2011Part 2 Workshop: Review PS with Student mentors Friday, October 28, 2011Send entire proposal to assigned faculty reader Tuesday, November 01, 2011Faculty reader will be asked to return comments by: Friday, November 04, 2011NSF Due Date Friday, November 18, 2011

•NSF/External Postdoctoral Fellowship.

These are important !(Your Career and BMS)

BMS 260 Cell Bio - Proposal Topic/Mentor Due Friday, October 14, 2011BMS 260 Cell Bio - Proposal Specific Aims Due Friday, November 04, 2011BMS 260 Cell Bio - Proposal Due Date Monday, November 21, 2011

Page 2: Grant Writing Colloquia 2011

Grant Writing ColloquiaMax:

Overview of a grant proposal (or ‘How to Write a Good One’)

Graduate Students:•How to Navigate the next two months for NSF/Cell Biol.

•Timeline•Letters of Reference/Transcripts•The Website

•Unique Criterion for NSF (Criterion)•The Essay

•How to choose topics •How to involve a PI or mentor

•About other outside grants

Page 3: Grant Writing Colloquia 2011

Anatomy of a Grant

•Front Pages (Forms)

•Personal Information (form)

•OR•Biosketch (see at right)

•Essays

•Letters of Recommendation

•The proposal (research)

Page 4: Grant Writing Colloquia 2011

How to Write a (Fundable) Grant Proposal

•The Triage Process•Most grants fail on basic ‘triage killers’:

•No Questions being asked (just a series of ideas)•Grossly overambitious•Me too.

•Start with good, interesting, important, addressable, novel QUESTION. Bounce it off colleagues, fellows, PIs. Consider approaches. Find collaborators. Check out web to see if someone is already doing this.

•Write to the instructions/RFA! What does the funding source want?

Following slides adapted from J. Boothroyd

Page 5: Grant Writing Colloquia 2011

•Spell check and proof read

•Keep within borders

•Make spacious and lovely! Leave spaces between paragraphs—cut if

necessary. Add BOLD for key phrases (goal, hypothesis, aim). Avoid

appearances of ‘Blah Blah Blah Blah’.(reviewers mood is more important than your every

thought).

•Don’t be overambitious.

•Have the grant read by someone who knows and someone who doesn’t know the area

•No waffle words (might, could, should). Only “will”, “do”. If conditionals

are tempting, explain “will do if…”

•Avoid semi-waffle words (characterize) in primary goals.

•BIOLOGY, BIOLOGY, BIOLOGY. Why is this interesting?

Avoid being Triaged:

Page 6: Grant Writing Colloquia 2011

The Form of a Proposal—In Brief.•Title (Short and sweet)

•Abstract (Just the basics)

•Specific Aims (QUESTION or GOAL--NOT Hypothesis since answer might be NO after $100K taxpayer money).

•Background (Give ONLY what is needed to appreciate the context)

•(Preliminary Results)—Ideal but not for these grants—It IS doable by ME)

•Experimental Plan (Specific aim verbatim—Use headings to describe each

set of expts. And give sufficient detail so it is clear you know your stuff)

•Budget (not NSF)

Page 7: Grant Writing Colloquia 2011

The Form of a Proposal—The Abstract.

•Abstract (Just the basics)

One paragraph total—address each question in one-two sentences:

What is the problem you are addressing?What is the current state of the art?What approach will you take?Why is this important?

Page 8: Grant Writing Colloquia 2011

The Form of a Proposal—Specific Aims.•QUESTION or GOAL--NOT Proving the Hypothesis since

answer might be NO after $100K taxpayer money.

•Clear Thread through whole grant—ideally ONE medium question and several related subquestions.

•Aims must not be dependent (e.g. Aim 2: Using genes isolated in Aim 1,

we will…) but FLOW between aims is important and helps background

stay concise.

•Give enough details to easily understand what will be done. Aims should embody the WHOLE grant—the rest is fluff.

•Have a guaranteed and useful/interesting outcome.

•Provide back-up strategies/aims where needed

Page 9: Grant Writing Colloquia 2011

The Form of a Proposal—Background.•Give ONLY what is needed to appreciate the context.

•What are the questions that are outstanding?

•Very good to BOLDFACE your HYPOTHESIS. Make it standout in the field of words.

•Cite key literature but citing reviews is fine—use references by name once or twice.

Make it interesting—and remember that brevity is better than boring.

Page 10: Grant Writing Colloquia 2011

The Form of a Proposal—Experimental Plan•Specific aims verbatim—Use headings to describe each set of expts.

•Have a ‘rationale’ or ‘approach’ section that is virtually stand-alone

•Then an experimental detail section for each

•Explain choices—how many will you choose, what criteria will you use.

•Have backup strategies—explain why the one you propose is the best but suggest alternative and when you might resort to this.

•CONCLUSION: Of the form: “In this way we will determine…” or “Through the experiments described above, I expect to determine…” ONE OF THESE PER AIM AT LEAST.

Page 11: Grant Writing Colloquia 2011

Real-Life: The NSF can only be 2 pages

Background

2-3 paragraphs

I hypothesize that engagement of MHC class II on a DC upon initial contact with T cells results in activation of PI3K and induction of Rho family GTPases, leading to actin polymerization toward a T cell, SMAC formation, and T cell activation.

Experimental Plan Aim 1: Determine the effect of Rho-family GTPase deficiency on actin polarization and SMAC formation during DC-T cell interactions.

Details including:What cells will be treated how? What will be assayed?What to expect?If the approach in 1 doesn’t work , what else might we do?

Aim 2: Identify upstream activators of Rho family GTPases upon DC-T cell contact.

Details including:What cells will be treated how? What will be assayed?What to expect?If the approach in 1 doesn’t work , what else might we do?