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1. Know your field – what agencies fund your interests, what
programs do they currently have, what are their typical due
dates.
2.
Know your field – who else is doing what you’re interested in and
how are they doing it (on campus, in the state, and in your
field). Stay current in the literature to ensure you
understand how your work fits into the work that others are
doing in your field.
3.
Contact people in your field (your “competitors”) and ask them
how they got funded.
4.
Find a balance between your interests and what’s currently of
interest to funders: this doesn’t mean shifting from one
interest to the next as the funding winds blow (because programs
as well as careers benefit from continuity, for example), but it
does mean considering how your interests fit into the world of
fundable ideas and making refinements as appropriate.
5.
In conceptualizing the project, consider secondary benefits or
special populations that may be involved in the project that
might attract new funding sources (e.g., science + space +
education + girls).
6.
If you’re a new faculty who has never had project/research
funding before, good options are Career enhancement type grants,
pilot studies, and/or serving as a Co-Investigator on a grant
with an established colleague already funded by an agency you’re
interested in.
7.
Bookmark agencies’ funding programs that fit your interests and
check them monthly. Also, sign up for funding alerts that are
applicable to your field.
8.
Give consideration to ways that an interdisciplinary approach to
your research or other project idea might enhance the concept,
and explore that with potential collaborators from those
disciplines at UNI, in the community, or other institutions.
9.
Don’t wait until the funding announcement for a particular
program comes out to start working on a proposal! Know your
likely due dates and begin the planning process early, including
identifying collaborators and strategizing possible designs.
Most grants are too competitive now to plan everything in a
month.
10.
Contact the Office of Sponsored Programs at 3-3217 to assist you
further in your seeking efforts. Staff can help you identify
programs that match your interests, assist you with search
engines, or sign you up for future funding alerts. |