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Agenda. MaterialsAbout the NSFElectronic SystemsNuts and Bolts of Putting Together a ProposalReview CriteriaHints and TipsResources. About the NSF. Independent Federal AgencyUnique: Responsible for overall health of science and engineering across all disciplinesOther Federal agencies support
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1. Preparing and Submitting Proposals to the National Science Foundation (NSF) Nancy Daneau
Kimberly Schulman
NYU Office of Sponsored Programs (OSP)
July 26, 2007
2. Agenda Materials
About the NSF
Electronic Systems
Nuts and Bolts of Putting Together a Proposal
Review Criteria
Hints and Tips
Resources
3. About the NSF Independent Federal Agency
Unique: Responsible for overall health of science and engineering across all disciplines
Other Federal agencies support research focused on specific missions
Awards 25% of all Federal funding going to academic institutions for basic research
2,000+ recipients
4. What NSF is NOT Does not fund
Technical assistance
Research requiring security classification
Development of products for commercial marketing
Market research for inventions
Research with disease-related goals (unless bioengineering which applies engineering principles to problems in biology and medicine)
Development or testing of drugs
Construction of public works
No grants to State and local governments
5. Proposal and Award Statistics NSF receives 40,000 proposals annually
11,000 are funded
Receives several thousand applications for
Graduate fellowships
Postdoctoral fellowships
6. NSF Organizational Structure
7. NSF Organizational Structure (cont’d)… Mechanisms to manage cross-cutting interdisciplinary efforts
Advisors from science & engineering communities
50,000 scientists and engineers each year
Serve on formal and ad hoc committees
Serve as peer reviewers
Grants-funding divisions for each discipline
Program officers
Scientists responsible for proposal review, funding *recommendations*, and programmatic monitoring
**Not authorized to commit NSF funding
Grants and Agreements Officers (DGA)
Responsible for business, financial, administrative aspects, pre-award through close-out
**Only individuals authorized to commit NSF funding
8. Identifying NSF Funding Opportunities Types:
Unsolicited (program descriptions and announcements that describe areas of interest to NSF directorates)
Solicited (program announcement where NSF defines competition and sets a deadline for receipt of applications)
NSF Website
www.nsf.gov
“My NSF”
http://www.nsf.gov/mynsf
Personalized emails that give you information on funding opportunities based on your identified interests, publications, changes in proposal and award management, and upcoming NSF regional grants conferences
Grants.gov
www.grants.gov
Searchable database
9. NSF Proposal & Award Policies & Procedures Guide (PAPPG) One consolidated source for information relative to NSF proposals and awards
Found at: http://www.nsf.gov/pubs/policydocs/papp/nsf07140.pdf
NSF Grants Proposal Guide (GPG) is incorporated into the new PAPPG as Part I
NSF Grant Policy Manual (GPM), now the NSF Award & Administration Guide (AAG) is incorporated into the new PAPPG as Part II
10. Submitting Proposals to NSF All proposals to NSF must be submitted electronically
NSF Fastlane (https://www.fastlane.nsf.gov), OR
Grants.gov (www.grants.gov)
How do you know which one to use?
Funding Opportunity instructions (remember, program announcement instructions always take precedence)
All collaborative proposals submitted as separate submissions from the partnering institutions MUST be submitted via Fastlane
To submit via Fastlane, follow PAPPG
http://www.nsf.gov/pubs/policydocs/papp/nsf07140.pdf
To submit via Grants.gov, follow the NSF Grants.gov Application guide
http://www.nsf.gov/bfa/dias/policy/docs/grantsgovguide.pdf
11. NSF Fastlane Capabilities Proposal prep and submission
Proposal file updates (can only be done by PI)
Revised budgets
Check the status of proposals in the review cycle
Proposal Status Inquiry
Submit project reports
Post-award admin functions
Notifications and Requests
Change in PI
No-cost extensions
12. How does one get an account through NSF Fastlane?OSP will help you, just go to: http://www.nyu.edu/osp/res/ for web-based registration in Fastlane and other systems
13. Grants.gov Single government-wide portal for finding and applying for Federal grants on-line
Unlike Fastlane, Grants.gov serves as a “mailbox” that is limited to receiving and distributing to federal agencies electronic packages
If NSF announcement requires use of grants.gov, follow NSF Grants.gov application guide (http:/www.nsf.gov/bfa/dias/policy/docs/grantsgovguide.pdf)
General instructions
NSF-specific instructions
Grant application package instructions
NSF-specific forms and instructions
Once Grants.gov submitted proposal inserted into NSF Fastlane, no other interaction with Grants.gov required
14. When to submit Target dates
Proposals can be submitted anytime on or before the target date
If submitted after, they will be accepted but may not be reviewed until the next panel meeting
Submission “windows”
Periods of time during which you can submit a proposal
End of submission window converts to “deadline”
15. When to submit (cont’d)… Deadline dates
Firm dates after which proposals will not be accepted or reviewed
If deadline falls on a weekend; automatically extended to the following Monday
Deadlines falling on holidays move to the following business day
Deadlines are by COB local time (5 p.m.)
Exceptions to deadlines
Natural disasters (contact your program officer via phone, email, etc.)
Generally, deadlines will be extended five business days in these cases
16. Nuts and Bolts of Preparing a Proposal to NSF First and foremost
Involve OSP and your Project Officer
Share draft budgets for review early and often
Prepare the Application for Approval for Research and Training Proposal Submission (synopsis)
Internal routing and approval form
Requires Chair and Dean’s signatures
Proposal will be submitted without approvals to meet deadline, but withdrawn if synopsis with approvals does not follow
Complete Researcher’s disclosure statement (conflict of interest) with every proposal and Agreement to Disclose (inventions and patents) with your first application to a federal sponsor
17. Nuts and Bolts of Preparing a Proposal to NSF (cont’d)… Format
If proposal doesn’t conform to GPG or solicitation-specific instructions, proposal may be returned without review
Deviations authorized must be documented
Check proposal against the Proposal Preparation checklist
Exhibit II-1
18. Nuts and Bolts of Preparing a Proposal to NSF (cont’d)… Page numbering
Fastlane does not paginate automatically so be sure to do so before uploading files
Particular files (project description, budget justification, etc.)
Formatting Requirements
Fonts allowed (must be 10 point or larger and black)
Windows: Arial, Helvetica, Palatino Linotype, or Georgia Typeface
Macs: Arial, Helvetica, Palatino, or Georgia
TeX: Computer Modern
19. Nuts and Bolts of Preparing a Proposal to NSF (cont’d)… Spacing
Characters must not exceed 15 characters per inch
No more than 6 lines of text within a vertical inch
Margins: at least 1 inch
Use single column format for text; columns are hard to read electronically
20. Components of an NSF proposal Cover Sheet
Awardee and performing org (pre-filled upon log-on to Fastlane)
Program announcement/solicitation number
If none, select “grant proposal guide”
If no deadline, select “no closing date”
Title of proposed project
Budget (pre-fills) and duration (enter start date 6 months out and # of months needed to complete project)
PI Information (pre-populated once PI logs in)
Previous NSF award
Awardee Organization Information (pre-populated)
Performing/Research Organization (if different)
Other (e.g. beginning investigator, disclosure of lobbying, proprietary/privileged info., vertebrate animals, human subjects, high resolution graphics)
21. Components of an NSF proposal (cont’d)… Project Summary
Abstract, suitable for publication
Written in third person and include statement of objectives and methods
Limited to one page
Summary must specifically address
the Intellectual Merit of the proposed activity
the Broader Impacts of the proposed activity
If separate statements addressing these review criteria not included, proposal will be returned without review
22. Components of an NSF proposal (cont’d)… Table of Contents
Automatically generated by Fastlane
Project Description
Limited to 15 pages
Includes results from prior NSF support (no more than 5 pages)
NSF award number, amount and period of support
Title of the project
Summary of results
List of resulting publications
Description of available data
If renewal request, description of tie-in for the current proposal to completed work
Must be a clear statement of work that addresses the two review criteria
Intellectual merit
Broader impacts
If *unfunded* collaborations proposed, describe and include letter from collaborator in supplementary documentation section
Use of website URL’s not recommended unless a reference citation
23. Components of an NSF proposal (cont’d)… References cited
Must use standard, acceptable style
No page limitation
Include website for those available electronically
Biographical Sketches
Include only for senior/key personnel
Defined as individual(s) responsible for scientific or technical direction of project
Limited to two pages per individual
24. Components of an NSF proposal (cont’d)… Biosketches to include:
Professional preparation (undergrad, grad, and post-doc education and training)
Appointments (in chronological order, most recent first)
Publications (up to 5 most relevant to proposed project and up to 5 other significant)
Synergistic activities
Up to 5 examples, e.g. innovations in teaching and training, development of research tools, role in increasing participation of groups underrepresented
Collaborators and other affiliations
Co-authors during 48 months preceding proposal submission
Co-editors during 24 months preceding proposal submission
Graduate advisors, thesis advisor, post-doc sponsors within past 5 years
If none, state as such
Used to ensure no conflicts of interest arise during selection of reviewers)
Do NOT include any personal information
25. Components of an NSF proposal (cont’d)… Budget
Each year must have a budget (cumulative generated automatically in Fastlane)
Costs must be allowable, allocable, and reasonable
A-21, Cost Principles for Educational Institutions
NYU policies
Direct Costs
Facilities and Administrative (Indirect) Costs
26. Budget Categories Salaries and Wages (lines A&B)
$’s requested for faculty and other key personnel must be in proportion to the effort devoted to the project
For key personnel, entering $0 dollars and no effort is unacceptable
Must be NYU employees
External collaborators should be listed on the budget page as either consultants (G.3) or subawards (G.5.)
For summer: total of faculty member’s salary charged across all NSF-funded grants may not exceed two-ninths of academic year salary (2 summer months; may not charge academic year salary)
If confidential (i.e. faculty does not want anyone outside the NSF to see salary rates):
Salary line reflects total for all personnel as a single figure
Person-month may be omitted
Check box on cover sheet titled “proprietary or privileged information”
Detail must be provided on separate paper and marked as confidential, submitted electronically as a single-copy document
NSF will not share with reviewers
27. Budget Categories (cont’d)… Salaries of admin and clerical staff
Generally part of the administrative portion of the F&A/indirect cost pool and therefore not direct-charged
Exceptions:
Major projects or center grants (defined in Exhibit C of OMB Circular A-21, Cost Principles for Educational Institutions) http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/circulars/a021/a21_2004.html
Projects requiring extensive data collection and analyses
Conference grants requiring administrative support for making extensive travel arrangements
28. Budget Categories (cont’d)… Fringe Benefits (line C)
Calculated either as percentage of salary and wages, per federally negotiated F&A rate agreement or by actual cost direct based on individual’s benefit selections
Here at NYU we use our federally negotiated fringe benefit rate (27% as of 9/1/07 with estimated increases of ˝ percent (.5%) per year thereafter)
Equipment (line D)
Items costing $3,000 or above with useful life of at least one year
General purpose items such as personal computers or office furnishings not allowable unless purchased exclusively for use on the research project and deemed integral to the scope of work
29. Budget Categories (cont’d)… Travel (line E)
Itemize by destination and cost
Include airfare, lodging, per diem, mileage, etc.
Airfare must be economy
U.S. carriers must be used whenever possible (Fly America Act)
Domestic
Includes U.S., Puerto Rico, Canada, Mexico
Foreign
Must identify country to be visited and relevance
Dependent travel covered only under specific circumstances
30. Budget Categories (cont’d)… Participant Support Costs (line F)
Transportation, per diem, stipends and other costs of trainees on NSF-funded grants for:
Conferences
Meetings
Symposia
Workshops
Trainees may NOT be employees
Exception: local school districts where teachers are trainees
In this case, stipends may be categorized as participant support as long as school district has accounting mechanism in place to track and report stipends separate from salary
31. Budget Categories (cont’d)… Other Direct Costs (lines G1. to G6.)
Materials and supplies (G1)
Lab supplies such as beakers, chemicals, etc
Animals
Publication costs (G2)
Reprints
Reports
Consultant services (G3)
No cap on rate, but must be reasonable, based on market
Specify affiliation, rate (hourly/daily), number of hours/days required, travel costs if applicable
Computer services (G4)
Generally, only for access to supercomputing centers, data warehouses specifically set up for large data collection
Charge only when institutional policy indicates as such
32. Budget Categories (cont’d)… Subawards (G5)
Transfer of a substantive portion of the programmatic effort
Separate budget for each subrecipient should be included along with SOW (refer to section on collaborative proposals presented later)
If not included in the proposed budget, issuance of subaward requires prior approval by NSF
Other (G6)
Other costs not attributable to major cost categories
E.g. tuition remission (see http://www.nyu.edu/osp/policies/basicinfo.php), human subject payments, etc.
33. Budget Categories (cont’d)… Total direct costs (Line H)
Sum total of lines A-G
Facilities and Administrative (F&A)/Indirect Costs (line I)
Applied as a percentage of specific categories of cost
Based on negotiated rate agreement with cognizant agency
DHHS agreement dated 7/2/2007
Rate is 53.5% for period 9/1/07-8/31/08 and 54% effective 9/1/08 (see http://www.nyu.edu/osp/policies/basicinfo.php)
Basis for rate is Modified Total Direct Costs (MTDC)
53.5% X total direct costs less equipment, participant support, tuition remission, and that amount exceeding the first $25K on each subaward
34. Budget Categories (cont’d)… Total direct and indirect costs (line J)
Sum total of comprehensive cost estimate
Amount of the request (line L)
Should be the same as line J
Cost Sharing (line M)
NSF does NOT require any cost sharing
mandatory cost sharing requirements by program and institutional 1% aggregate rules rescinded
However, *if* identified either on line M or in budget pages or narrative (e.g. time and effort for which no salary is requested), becomes a condition of the award and must be tracked and reported upon and will be audited
35. Components of an NSF proposal (cont’d)… Justification
Not to exceed three pages
Must provide specifics on how cost estimates were derived and explain why costs are necessary for the accomplishment of the activities described in the SOW
E.g. base rates of pay for salaried positions and the roles/responsibilities of each position, estimates for travel including airfare, lodging, per diem should be specified
Provide reference to federally negotiated rate agreement for F&A/indirect cost and fringe benefit rates
36. Components of an NSF proposal (cont’d)… Current and Pending Support
Disclose support from any and all sources
Include awards even where no salary is being requested (must show time and effort committed to project)
List total award amount (direct + indirect) for entire award period covered
List number of person-months committed for each year (CAL, AY, SUM)
37. Components of an NSF proposal (cont’d)… Facilities, Equipment, and Other Resources
Describe facilities and resources available to conduct the SOW
Special Information and Supplementary Documentation
Takes the place of appendices
Usually, program announcement will specify need for items
May only include the following:
Rational for performance off-site
Letters of commitment documenting collaborators planned participation
Information on environmental impact
Work in foreign countries
Research in Greenland
Antarctic proposals
Research in a registered historic place
Research with genetically engineered organisms
Documentation regarding research with human subjects, hazardous materials
Tech transfer management plans
RUI or REU’s
NO LETTERS OF SUPPORT UNLESS REQUESTED (e.g. training grants)
38. Other considerations Common circumstances
Collaborative proposals
Can be submitted in two ways
Together, with the lead institution completing all requisite portions of the proposal and populating with collaborators scope of work, roles and responsibilities
Results in subaward(s) issued to collaborators by lead institution
At time of submission, NYU OSP needs subrecipient’s SOW, budget, and letter of collaboration reflecting approval by authorized representative
39. Collaborative proposals (cont’d) Separately, by “linking” the proposals
Lead submits first with title “Collaborative Research:….”
Non-lead institution(s) assign a PIN to proposal
Provides PIN and temporary proposal ID number to lead institution before lead submits
Lead institution enters each collaborators PIN and temporary proposal ID into Fastlane by using “link proposal” option in the Form Preparation screen
Collaborators include everything EXCEPT project summary, project description, and references cited
Linked proposals should all be submitted within close proximity to one another
Results in separate awards made by NSF directly to each organization
40. Single Copy Documents Information about PI/PD’s and Co-PI’s (gender, race, ethnicity, etc.)
Authorization to deviate
List of suggested reviewers and those not to include
Proprietary or privileged information (including confidential salary info.)
Proposal certifications (AOR)
Conflict of interest
Drug-free workplace
Debarment and suspension
Lobbying
Nondiscrimination
Flood hazard insurance
41. Review Criteria Questions that must be answered in your proposal
What is the intellectual merit of the proposed activity?
What are the broader impacts of the proposed activity?
Timeframe for review and award
Six months for programmatic review
Often, a revised budget will be requested to match available funding level
Contact OSP; program officials typically contact PI only
Submit revised budget timely or risk losing funding
Typically thirty days for DGA to issue award once program office makes final recommendation
42. Other hints and tips Your copy of the announcement should be highlighted, dog eared….read and re-read
Look for special terms and conditions included
Be sure you know the deadline date (target vs. deadline)
Margin and spacing reqt’s
Be sure to follow, can look different depending on type of computer you are using (Mac vs. PC)
Do not exceed page limitations on sections and use page numbering where possible
Remember, if intellectual merit and broader impacts statements not included, proposal will not be reviewed so make a header for those sections to ensure they stand out
Project Summary should be in the 3rd person, active voice
When you “view/edit/submit” in Fastlane, hit “allow SRO access”
Make sure PI is reachable on deadline day to address any last minute issues
Submit via Fastlane whenever possible; submit via Grants.gov when required
43. NYU and NSF Resources NYU Office of Sponsored Programs/Project Officers
http://www.nyu.edu/osp/about/
NSF: See Frequently Asked Questions on Proposal Preparation
http://www.nsf.gov/pubs/gpg/faqs.pdf
Help with Broader Impact Statement
http://www.nsf.gov/pubs/gpg/broaderimpacts.pdf
Proposal and Award Policies and Procedures Guide (PAPPG)
Replaced Grants Proposal Guide (GPG) and Grants Policy Manual (GPM) for proposals submitted on or after June 1, 2007
http://www.nsf.gov/pubs/policydocs/papp/nsf07140.pdf
Grants.gov and NSF Fastlane
http://www.grants.gov/
https://www.fastlane.nsf.gov/fastlane.jsp
Contact NSF
Policy Office, Division of Institution & Award Support
policy@nsf.gov; (703) 292-8243
Fastlane Help Desk
fastlane@nsf.gov; (703) 292-8142 or (800) 673-6188
NSF offices/directorates
http://www.nsf.gov/staff/orglist.jsp