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Robert Noyce Teacher Scholarship Program

Robert Noyce Teacher Scholarship Program. Proposal Writing Webinar February, 2012. Robert Noyce Teacher Scholarship Program. Initiated by Act of Congress in 2002 Reauthorized in 2007 (America COMPETES Act) and in 2010 under America COMPETES Reauthorization of Act of 2010

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Robert Noyce Teacher Scholarship Program

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  1. Robert Noyce Teacher Scholarship Program Proposal Writing Webinar February, 2012

  2. Robert Noyce Teacher Scholarship Program • Initiated by Act of Congress in 2002 • Reauthorized in 2007 (America COMPETES Act) and in 2010 under America COMPETES Reauthorization of Act of 2010 • To encourage talented mathematics, science, and engineering undergraduates to pursue teaching careers • To encourage STEM professionals to become teachers • To prepare Master Teachers

  3. 2012 Noyce Scholarship Program (NSF 12-525) Robert Noyce Teacher Scholarship Track • Scholarships for undergraduate STEM majors preparing to become K12 Teachers • Internships for freshmen and sophomores • Stipends for STEM professionals seeking to become K12 teachers NSF Teaching Fellowships & Master Teaching Fellowships (TF/MTF) Track • Fellowships for STEM professionals receiving teacher certification through a master’s degree program • Fellowships for science and math teachers preparing to become Master Teachers

  4. 2012 Noyce Scholarship Program Capacity Building Track To establish the infrastructure and partnerships for implementing a future Noyce Teacher Scholarship or NSF Teaching Fellowship (TF/MTF) project • Development of new teacher preparation programs for STEM majors and STEM professionals • Development of new programs for developing Master STEM Teachers

  5. Noyce Scholarship Program Eligibility Proposals may only be submitted by: • U.S. Universities & 2- or 4-year colleges (including community colleges) • Nonprofit entities that have established consortia among such IHEs Principal Investigators: • The PI, or at least one Co-PI, must be a faculty member in a STEM department.

  6. Noyce Scholarship Program:Scholarship Track To recruit undergraduate STEM majors and STEM career changers who might otherwise not have considered a career in K-12 teaching: • Summer internships for freshmen and sophomores to interest students in STEM teaching • Undergraduate Scholarships of at least $10,000 per year for up to three years beginning in junior year • Undergraduate students graduate with a degree in a STEM discipline and teacher certification and/or licensing. • One-year stipends of at least $10,000 for STEM professionals (career-changers) and post-baccalaureate students to obtain teacher certification

  7. Noyce Scholarship ProgramScholarship Track • Scholarship and stipend capped by cost of attendance • Recipients commit to teaching in a high need school district for 2 years for each year of scholarship/stipend support. • Recipients failing to meet service requirement must repay scholarship

  8. Noyce Scholarship Track Phase I: For new awardees or new project with different focus Phase II: For previously funded awardees - • Scholarships & Stipends: To expand and extend evaluation efforts begun under previous award and support additional cohorts of scholarship and stipend recipients • Monitoring and evaluation: To expand and extend evaluation efforts of previous project without support for additional cohorts.

  9. Noyce Scholarship Program Projects include: • STEM faculty collaborating with Education faculty • Strong partnership with school district • Recruitment and selection strategies • Exemplary teacher preparation programs leading to certification and/or professional development programs for Master Teaching Fellows) • Support for new teachers • Mechanism for monitoring recipients • Institutional support • Evaluation

  10. Noyce Scholarship Track Phase I • Scholarships, Stipends, Internships • Award size up to $1,200,000 • Additional $250,000 for collaboration with two-year colleges • Duration up to 5 years • Administrative/programmatic costs may not exceed 25% of total direct costs • 75% of total direct costs must directly support participants • No cost sharing

  11. Noyce Scholarship Program Scholarship Track Phase II • Scholarships and Stipendsplus longitudinal evaluation studies of previously supported cohorts of students • Award size up to $800,000; up to 5 yrs. • Up to 25% of budget for admin./programmatic costs) • 75% of budget for direct support to participants • No cost sharing • Monitoring and Evaluation • Award size up to $200,000; up to 3 yrs. • No cost sharing

  12. NSF Teaching Fellowships & Master Teaching Fellowships Track (TF/MTF) NSF Teaching Fellows STEM professionals enroll in a master’s degree program leading to teacher certification or licensing • Receive one-year stipend of at least $10,000 while enrolled in the Master’s degree program • Selection of Fellows based on professional achievement, academic merit, and demonstration of advanced content knowledge in STEM • Commit to teach for 4 years in a high need school district • Receive annual salary supplement of at least $10,000 while fulfilling four-year teaching commitment

  13. NSF Teaching Fellowships & Master Teaching Fellowships Track NSF Master Teaching Fellows: • Fellowships for math and science teachers preparing to become Master Teachers • Selection of Fellows based on professional achievement, academic merit, demonstration of advanced content knowledge in STEM, demonstrated success in improving student achievement • Must have Master’s degree • Commit to teach for 5 years in a high need school district • Receive annual salary supplement of at least $10,000 for 5 years plus professional development while fulfilling the teaching commitment

  14. TF/MTF Proposals Must Include: • A department within an IHE that provides an advanced program of study in math and science, • A department or entity within an IHE that provides teacher preparation or a 2-year institution that offers a teacher preparation program or a dual enrollment or an articulation agreement with an IHE that credentials teachers, • At least one high need school district and public school(s) within this district, and • At least one nonprofit organization with the capacity and expertise to support the goals of the project.

  15. NSF Teaching Fellowships & Master Teaching Fellowships Track • Award size up to $3 million over 5-6 years • Additional $250,000 for collaboration with two-year colleges • Matching funds required: • 30% of total budget for request less than $1.5 million, excluding two-year college incentive • 50% of total budget if request is $1.5 million or more, excluding two-year college incentive • At least 50% of cost share must be cash • At least 75% of total direct costs must be for direct support to participants (stipends, salary supplements, professional development)

  16. Noyce Scholarship Program Capacity Building Track Development of new programs, partnerships, infrastructure for future Noyce project • Award size up to $300,000; up to 2 yrs. • May include an additional $50,000 over 2 years for collaborations between two-year and four-year institutions. • No restriction on budget allocation (within standard NSF policies) • No cost sharing

  17. Preparing the Proposal

  18. Project Description: Phase I Scholarship Track • Results from relevant prior NSF support • Describe: • proposed scholarship or stipend program • teacher preparation program • recruitment and marketing activities • selection process • management & administrative structure for administering scholarship or stipend program • plans to monitor & enforce compliance with the required teaching commitment

  19. Project Description: Phase I Scholarship Track • Provide evidence of: • infrastructure to support new teachers, • collaboration between STEM & education faculty, • a functioning partnership between the IHE(s) & school districts, • a commitment to making the program a central institutional focus • Include an objective evaluation plan

  20. Project Description: Phase II S&S Similar to Phase I, with addition of: • Results from prior Noyce scholarship grant • Discussion of how new project builds on & expands activities established under prior support • Plans to sustain activities after end of Phase II funding • Provide evidence of • how the institution has made the program a central institutional focus • impact of Noyce scholarship program on STEM departments • Details of plan to expand & extend evaluation activities

  21. NSF Review Criteria • NSF Merit Review Criteria • Intellectual Merit • Broader Impacts • Additional Considerations • Integration of Research & Education • Integrating Diversity into NSF Programs • Additional Noyce Program specific review criteria, dependent on proposal type

  22. Review Criteria: Phase I Scholarship Proposals • Capacity and ability of institution to effectively conduct the program • Number and quality of students that will be served by the program • Justification for number of students and amount of stipend & scholarship support • Ability of the program to recruit STEM majors who would not otherwise pursue a teaching career • Quality and feasibility of recruitment & marketing strategies • Quality of the preservice educational program

  23. Review Criteria: Phase I Proposals • Extent to which STEM & education faculty are collaborating in developing & implementing the program • Quality of the preservice student support and new teacher support infrastructure • Extent to which the proposed strategies reflect effective practices based on research • Degree to which the proposed programming will enable scholarship or stipend recipients to become successful mathematics & science teachers • Feasibility & completeness of an evaluation plan that will measure the effectiveness of the proposed strategies • Institutional support for the program and the extent to which the institution is committed to making the program a central organizational focus

  24. Review Criteria: Phase II S&S • Evidence that previously funded project was consistent with the Phase I criteria • Evidence of institution and school district support for continuing the project • Demonstrated success of the previously funded project in terms of recruitment of STEM majors and/or STEM professionals into K-12 teaching & preparation to become effective teachers • Evidence that the project has recruited STEM majors who would not otherwise pursue a career in teaching • Evidence that a high quality new teacher structure is in place

  25. Review Criteria: Phase II S&S • Plans for advancing the work beyond the original project • Plans for conducting a longitudinal evaluation study of previous cohorts of Noyce Scholarship and/or stipend recipients as well as evaluation and monitoring of new cohorts to address teacher and student outcome • Evaluation plans that build on & strengthen the previous evaluation effort • Plans for disseminating results of the evaluation studies • Plans for sustainability

  26. Review Criteria: Phase II M&E • Evidence that the previously funded project was consistent with the Phase I criteria • Plans for conducting a longitudinal evaluation study of previous cohorts of Noyce Scholarship and/or stipend recipients focusing on their effectiveness as teachers, their completion of the teaching requirement, and their retention in the teaching profession. • Evaluation plans that build on and strengthen the previous evaluation effort • Plans for disseminating results of the evaluation studies

  27. Project Description: TF/MTF Proposals • Results from Prior NSF Support • Description of proposed Fellowship program: • For NSF Teaching Fellows • Description of the Master’s degree program • Evidence of an infrastructure that is supportive of new teachers • For NSF Master Teaching Fellows • Description of the professional development program • Evidence of an infrastructure that will support and facilitate the Fellows’ work as Master Teachers

  28. Project Description: TF/MTF Proposals • Describe: • Recruitment activities • Selection process • Management and administrative structure • Cost sharing, including source and amount; enter amount on Budget form Line M

  29. Project Description: TF/MTF Proposals • Describe: • Plans to monitor and enforce compliance with the required teaching commitment • Plans for sustaining activities beyond NSF funding period • Evaluation plan • Provide evidence of: • Collaboration between STEM faculty and education faculty • Functioning partnerships between IHEs, school districts, and non-profit organizations • Commitment to make the program a central institutional focus

  30. Review Criteria: TF/MTF Proposals • Capacity & ability of institution to effectively conduct the program • Number & quality of Fellows that will be served by the program • Justification for number of Fellows served & amount of stipend & salary supplements • Quality & feasibility of recruitment & marketing strategies

  31. Review Criteria: TF/MTF Proposals • Extent to which the proposed strategies reflect effective practices based on research • Extent to which STEM & education faculty are collaborating in developing & implementing a program with curriculum based on the specialized pedagogy needed to enable teachers to effectively teach math & science & to assume leadership roles in their schools. • Degree to which the proposed programming will enable the participants to become successful mathematics and science teachers or Master Teachers

  32. Review Criteria: TF/MTF Proposals • Feasibility & completeness of an objective evaluation plan that will measure the effectiveness of the proposed strategies • Institutional support for the program & the extent to which the institution is committed to making the program a central organizational focus • Evidence of cost sharing commitments • Plans for sustainability beyond the period of NSF funding

  33. Review Criteria: TF/MTF Proposals NSF Teaching Fellows only: • Ability of the program to recruit individuals who would not otherwise pursue a career in teaching & to recruit underrepresented groups • Quality of the Master’s degree program leading to teacher certification • Quality of the preservice student support and new teacher support infrastructure NSF Master Teaching Fellows only: • Quality of the professional development that will be provided

  34. Project Description: Capacity Building Projects • Results from Prior NSF Support: Address prior support relevant to the proposed project • A description of the activities planned, timeline, and outcomes expected to result from the proposal. • Plans for evaluating progress and outcomes of the project.

  35. Review Criteria: Capacity Building Proposals • Clarity of proposed plans and activities that will lead to a well-designed program consistent with the requirements of the Noyce Scholarship Program. • Clear statement of objectives to be completed and expected outcomes of the project. • Evaluation plans that will measure stated objectives and outcomes.

  36. The Process • Proposals may be submitted to FastLane or grants.gov (Use FastLane for TF/MTF proposals) • All proposals are peer-reviewed according to standard NSF merit review criteria • Notification of results within six months of receipt • Reviewers’ comments may be accessed through FastLane after final decision is made

  37. All Proposals Must Include: • One page Project Summary (Intellectual Merit and Broader Impact) • Project description (15 pages) • Budget forms and narrative for each year • Biosketches • Current & Pending Forms • Facilities document • References • Mentoring Plan for Postdoctoral Researchers (if in budget) • Data Management Plan (consult NSF Proposal & Award Policies & Procedures Guide (PAPPG), NSF 11-1) • Indicate Human Subjects status on cover sheet (pending, approved, or exempt)

  38. Proposal Project Summary • Indicate the category of proposal, name all institutions (including school districts & nonprofit organizations) • Explicitly address, in separately labeled statements, the NSF merit review criteria of Intellectual Merit & Broader Impacts

  39. Data Management Plan The Proposal & Award Policies & Procedures Guide (PAPPG) contains a clarification of NSF’s long standing data policy. • All proposals must describe plans for data management and sharing of the products of research, or assert the absence of the need for such plans. • FastLane will not permit submission of a proposal that is missing a Data Management Plan. • The Data Management Plan will be reviewed as part of the intellectual merit or broader impacts of the proposal, or both, as appropriate. • More information can be found in the Grant Proposal Guide Chapter II.C.2j (NSF 11-1) and at http://www.nsf.gov/bfa/policy/dmp.jsp.

  40. NSF Proposal Writing Tips

  41. What Makes a Proposal Competitive? • Original ideas • Succinct, focused project plan • Realistic amount of work • Sufficient detail provided • Cost effective • High impact • Knowledge and experience of PIs • Contribution to the field • Rationale and evidence of potential effectiveness • Likelihood the project will be sustained • Solid evaluation plan

  42. Common Weaknesses: Scholarship Track • Proposal does not follow guidelines for Noyce Program • Failure to indicate students will complete STEM major (not change to Science education or Math Education major • Little information about teacher preparation program • Unrealistic projections • Recruitment and selection strategies not well described • Lack of support for new teachers • Lack of involvement of STEM faculty (or education faculty) • Lacks plans for monitoring compliance with teaching requirement • Weak evaluation or lacks objective evaluator • Does not address Prior Results or Lessons Learned • Lacks details

  43. Common Weaknesses of TF/MTF Proposals • Insufficient details for preservice and induction program for Teaching Fellows and professional development program for Master Teaching Fellows • Vague recruitment plans • Selection plans do not follow guidelines • Master Teacher roles and responsibilities not discussed • Matching funds not identified • Role of non-profit organization not clear • School district partnership not strong • Evaluation weak

  44. Tips for Success • Consult the program solicitation and GPG • Test drive FastLane • Alert the Sponsored Research Office • Follow page and font size limits • Be aware of other projects and advances in the field • Cite the literature • Provide details • Discuss prior results • Include evaluation plan with timelines and benchmarks

  45. Tips for Success • Put yourself in the reviewers’ place • Consider reviewers’ comments if resubmitting proposal • Have someone else read the proposal • Spell check; grammar check • Meet deadlines • Follow NSF requirements for proposals involving Human Subjects • Call or email NSF Program Officers

  46. Return Without Review • Submitted after deadline • Fail to separately and explicitly addressintellectual merit and broader impacts in the Project Summary • Fail to follow formatting(e. g. page limitation, font size, and margin limits) requirements FastLane will not accept if: • Fail to describe mentoring activities for postdoctoral researchers if any included in proposed budget • Fail to include data management plan

  47. FY 2012 Noyce Scholarship Program Deadlines • Letters of Intent (optional): February 27, 2012 • Full Proposal Deadline: March 26, 2012

  48. Consider serving as a reviewerSend a letter of interest and a CV to one of the program officers Not ready to submit a proposal this year?

  49. Questions? Contact a Noyce Program Officer: Joan Prival jprival@nsf.gov Jose Herrera jherrera@nsf.gov Mary Lee Ledbetter msledbet@nsf.gov www.nsf.gov www.nsfnoyce.org Other Resources:

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