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STEM-C Partnerships: MSP NSF 14-522 Research and Development Effort

This webinar explores the details of the STEM-C Partnerships: MSP Solicitation 14-522 to assist in writing competitive proposals for improving K-12 STEM education. The program aims to enhance teaching and learning in STEM disciplines through innovative partnerships and research and development efforts.

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STEM-C Partnerships: MSP NSF 14-522 Research and Development Effort

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  1. Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics, including Computing, Partnerships (STEM-C Partnerships) A Research and Development Effort STEM-C Partnerships: MSP NSF 14-522 Partnerships Advancing K-12 STEM Education

  2. PERMISSION TO RECORD This webinar is being recorded. By participating in this webinar, you are giving permission that your comments may be recorded and shared.

  3. Webinar Goal To examine the details of the STEM-C Partnerships: MSP Solicitation 14-522 in order to assist you in writing a competitive proposal for submission on or before March 18, 2014 in the track for Targeted Partnership Proposals In one of 5 focal areas

  4. STEM-C Partnerships Program CE21 + Math Science Partnerships (MSP) =Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics, and Computing Partnerships (STEM-CP) • Supports innovative partnerships, to improve teaching and learning in STEM disciplines, between K-12 school districts and an institution that brings disciplinary expertise in the natural sciences, mathematics, engineering and/or computer science and is actively engaged in the production of STEM teachers • Is a research and development effort • Seeks innovations in policies, pedagogies, programs and/or in STEM disciplinary courses that support pre-service STEM teachers, as well as in-service teachers • Elevates the inclusion of computer science in K-12 education

  5. STEM-C PartnershipsDeadlines and Brief Info • 2 solicitations, NSF 14-522 and NSF 14-523: • STEM-CP: MSP & STEM-CP: CE21 • Full proposals due: March 18, 2014 STEM-C Partnerships: MSP (NSF 14-522) A. Targeted Partnerships (Implementation: $7.5m over 5 years; Prototype: $1.5m over 3 years) Focal Areas • Community Enterprise for STEM Teaching & Learning • Current Issues Related to STEM Content • Teaching & Learning In Computer Science • Identifying and Cultivating Exceptional Talent • K-12 STEM Teacher Preparation B. Computer Science Education Expansion ** ($500K supplements)

  6. Community Enterprise for STEM Teaching and Learning • Expand the partnerships beyond school districts and higher education in order to provide and integrate necessary supports for students so they can learn challenging mathematics, science, engineering, and/or computer science. • These projects involve K-12 school districts with other partners to provide multifaceted resources that • broaden teaching and learning by incorporating additional STEM assets of the community, such as institutions of higher education, museums/zoos/parks/aquariums, science centers, business & industry, or national/state-funded science/engineering/technology laboratories and centers, and/or • address the social situations of students by engaging necessary and important community entities, such as social services, family/parent organizations, before/after school providers, or civic organizations. • The research agenda should be linked to the community aspect of the work. Documenting learning across formal and informal educational settings is encouraged

  7. Current Issues Related to STEM Content • The focus is on innovative solutions related to current key issues in STEM education, such as, but not limited to, Common Core State Standards, Next Generation Science Standards, engineering in the K-12 curriculum (both stand-alone and in interdisciplinary contexts), or as identified in a recent National Research Council report on successful K-12 STEM education Proposals should: • be narrowly focused on one or a few related foundational concepts of the STEM disciplines • advance the capacity of the STEM education system to provide students with deep knowledge and facility related to these concepts These projects can also consider the continuity of college and career ready standards in specific content domains, especially between high school and early postsecondary education.

  8. Teaching and Learning in Computer Science Proposals should: • Contribute evidence-based findings to the body of knowledge on teaching and learning of computer science within diverse teacher and student populations • Expand computer science opportunities for K-12 students in school and/or outside of school while increasing their knowledge of computing and/or computational skills, and computational thinking competencies Proposals may: • Conduct basic research on the effects of teaching and learning of computational competencies in face-to-face or online settings, including games and other virtual environments • Design, develop, test, validate, and refine materials, measurement tools, and methods for teaching in specific learning contexts • Implement promising small-scale interventions to study the efficacy of interventions with particular groups

  9. Identifying and Cultivating Exceptional Talent • The focus is on innovative mechanisms for both identifying and nurturing"all types of talents" in "all demographics of students" with creative ways of thinking and applying conceptual understandings in the STEM disciplines • Provide students with "coordinated, proactive, sustained formal and informal interventions to develop their abilities...at a pace, depth, and breadth commensurate with their talents and interests and in a fashion that elicits engagement, intellectual curiosity, and creative problem solving" and • Address the implementation of policies that foster a culture that "nurtures...innovative thinking." (NSB, 2010)

  10. K-12 STEM Teacher Preparation • The focus is on innovations (beyond common place) in pre-service education and inductionof K-12 teachers of science, mathematics, engineering, and/or computer science • Designing and studying the effectiveness of new teachers in terms of results on student learning is encouraged as is attention to the needs of the next generation of teachers to meet the demands of diverse learners • Supporting STEM teachers as professionals in practicing the art of teaching, from pre-service through induction years, is implicit in these projects • The STEM-C Partnerships program is particularly interested in innovations in the STEM preparation and induction of elementary teachers

  11. Targeted Partnerships: Prototype (up to $1.5 mil over 3 years) • Explore potentially innovative educational approaches and strategies • Challenge conventional thinking while building on existing educational research • Examine relationship between malleable factors (such as student behavior, teacher practices, school programs, education policies) and education outcomes • Should present a well-explicated theory of action • Design framework should produce findings suitable for future broader implementation • Should include a compelling rationale • Specifies the practical problem the project is intended to address • Justifies the importance of this problem • Shows how the proposed research will inform the development of proposed approach and its potential for wider adoption • Uses Common Guidelines for Education Research and Development, particularly related to Early Stage/Exploratory Research or preliminary Design and Development Research • Strong theoretical and empirical rationale grounded in the STEM education literature

  12. Targeted Partnerships: Implementation(up to $7.5 mil over 5 years) • Develop and put into practice innovative education approaches and strategies based on educational research The Proposal should provide: • A description of the approaches to be implemented and the theory of action, including the relationship between key components • A compelling rationale that— • Specifies the practical problem the project is intended to address • Justifies the importance of this problem • Describes how the proposed approach is different from existing practices • Explains why the proposed approach/strategies have the potential to improve education outcomes or gain efficiencies for education systems beyond what current practices achieve. • Uses the Common Guidelines for Education Research and Development, particularly related to Design and Development research or Efficacy or Effectiveness Research • States a strong theoretical and empirical rationale based on STEM education literature

  13. STEM-C: CE21 and STEM-C: MSP STEM-CP: MSP solicitation • addsemphasis on computer science education but persists in prior MSP efforts to improve K-12 education in any of the natural sciences, engineering, mathematics, or computer science, as well as interdisciplinary approaches. • New track: Computer Science Education Expansion – open to previously funded MSP Partnerships (at HS level). • Targeted Partnerships: focal areas • Community Enterprise for STEM Teaching and Learning • Current Issues Related to STEM Content • Teaching and Learning in Computer Science • Identifying and Cultivating Exceptional Talent • K-12 STEM Teacher Preparation

  14. Questions?

  15. Important Factors to Keep in Mind • Improving K-12 STEM Education • Teaching and Learning • Student Outcomes • Institutional Partnership • Substantive Engagement of • Mathematicians - Scientists • Engineers - Computer Scientists • Implementing + Knowledge Building (research) • Resulting in • Improved Student Outcomes • Evidence-based Outcomes • Identifiable Institutional Change for Each Core Partner

  16. Project Attributes • Centers on improving STEM learning by K-12 students • Contributes to the literature on STEM teaching and learning, with an explicit research agenda • Involves at least one K-12 school district and at least one institution/organization that is actively engaged in teacher education (pre-service and/or in-service) and which brings STEM disciplinary expertise • Utilizes expertise of STEM disciplinary experts, educational researchers, and K-12 teachers and administrators, with individuals from the learning sciences • Partnership Driven—mutually beneficial • National Priorities—the project should address both identified local needs and issues of national import

  17. Proposal Requirements speak to • Innovative Strategies—beyond the commonplace • Partnership Driven—leadership involvement of K-12 Core Partners, substantive engagement of disciplinary experts, with clearly defined roles • Teacher Quality, Quantity and Diversity—Designed to increase the capacity of pre-service and/or in-service teachers to enhance student learning in STEM, attending to the diversity of the teacher workforce • Challenging Courses and Curriculum—A description of what the K-12 students will be learning and/or the content and skills the pre-service or in-service teachers will learn • Evidence-based Design and Outcomes—Links to current research and studies including theoretical foundations to inform the project design and the research agenda (See Common Guidelines for Education Research and Development) • Institutional Change—Identifies institutional change that will result from the work for each Core Partner which will contribute to sustainability of project goals (policies, practices, programs)

  18. Eligibility Information The Partnership Leadership Team: • Cross-disciplinary teams including learning scientists, social scientists and education researchers, as well as STEM discipline-specific teachers, faculty, researchers and scientists • The team of PI and co-PIs must include individuals who represent the various fields that are the focus of the study • K-12 Core Partner organizational representative • Individual with an advanced STEM degree from a Core Partner (an engineer, scientist, mathematician, or computer scientist) • The PI must be an individual who can represent the Lead Institution

  19. Eligibility Information cont. Limit on Number of Proposals per PI or Co-PI: An individual may serve as Principal Investigator or co-Principal Investigator on only one Targeted STEM-C Partnership proposal (Prototype or Implementation) per focal area

  20. Full Proposals include… • Cover Sheet • Project Summary • Project Description • References Cited • Biographical Sketch(es) • Budget • Budget Justification • Current and Pending Support • Facilities/Equipment & Other Resources • Special Information and Supplementary Documentation • Appendices (as described later) • Data Management Plan • Postdoctoral Mentoring Plan (if applicable) • Must be in accordance with the Grant Proposal Guidelines NSF 14-1

  21. Cover Sheet • Select the NSF Unit Consideration • Targeted • Check off Human Subjects box • pending or • indicate IRB approval date

  22. Questions?

  23. Proposal Development and Review Criteria The remainder of the slides focus on: • Parts or the Proposal • Review Criteria • Tips for Success

  24. Project Summary (1 page) • Overview • Title of proposed project • Name of the Lead Partner • Name(s) of additional Core Partner(s) • Name(s) of any supporting partner(s) • Brief description of project vision, goals, and work • Numbers of teachers to be directly engaged in the project • Number of new teachers that will be prepared • Number of students (including grade ranges) who will benefit • Intellectual Merit—potential to advance knowledge • Broader Impacts—potential to benefit society

  25. Project Description (15 pages)—Vision, Goals and Outcomes • Project’s vision, goals and anticipated outcomes, linked to the stated theory of action • Project is informed by relevant baseline K-12 student and teacher data (include the data, along with quantitative outcome goals and annual benchmarks in the Supplementary Documentation section) • For K-12 partner(s), include a description of the context, policy endeavors, benefits, and contributions to the work of this Partner • For other Core Partner(s), include a description of context, prior involvement of the STEM experts with K-12 education, relevant institutional policies that reward that involvement, how this work will benefit the Partner, and contributions of the work of this Partner • Include evidence of • An effective partnership • Participation of all key stakeholders in planning, design, and management • Sufficient capacity to support the scale and scope of the project

  26. Project Description (15 pages)—Implementation Framework Describe the activities and strategies that will occur to obtain the Partnership’s intended outcomes • Clear rationale for strategic actions (beyond common approaches), tied to literature in STEM education • What the Partnership intends to do • How the Partnership will do it

  27. Project Description (15 pages)—Research Framework • Research Questions, including how the project design will allow warranted claims about the contribution of partnership activities to the measured outcomes • Methodology should be determined by the research questions • Individual(s) who will conduct the research should be identified • Must be beyond evaluation to evidence-producing (See Common Guidelines for Education Research and Development) • Include research or evidence base • Identify instruments used to measure outcomes • Explain the logic from design to outcomes • Describe how each partner contributes, especially STEM discipline experts

  28. Project Description (15 pages)—Evaluation Plan • All STEM-C Partnerships projects must be subject to a series of external, critical reviews • This may include third-party evaluators, an external review panel, or advisory board • Should be sufficiently independent and rigorous to influence the project’s activities and improve the quality of its findings • Should include formative and summative components • Summative evaluation should generate evidence of project impact vs. intended outcomes • Successful proposals: • Describe the expertise of the external reviewer(s) • Explain how that expertise relates to the goals and objectives of the proposal • Specify how the PI will report and use results of the project’s external, critical review process

  29. Project Description (15 pages)—Management Plan • Demonstrate that all partners are fully engaged • Describe in detail the specific roles, responsibilities and time commitments of the members of the Partnership Leadership Team • Provide the number of STEM experts who will be engaged in the work and describe their contributions (listed in a Disciplinary Partner table in the Supplementary Documentation) • Project Timeline correlated with proposed action plan, quantitative outcome goals and annual benchmarks (which are described in the Supplementary Documentation section)

  30. Project Description (15 pages)—Institutional Change and Sustainability • Describe how the proposed action plan will result in institutional change within each Core Partner organization • Include plans to redirect resources • Include plans to develop/revise and implement policies and practices critical for the work of the Partnership

  31. Project Description (15 pages)—Results from Prior NSF Support • Limited to 5/15 pages • Must include information on NSF awards received by a PI or co-PI within the last 5 years • If a PI or co-PI has received more than one award, s/he must report on the one award most closely related to the proposal • Describe lessons learned including successes and failures • Indicate how the proposed work differs from, builds on, or is otherwise informed by prior efforts, especially those supported by NSF • Must include 6 items (see GPG NSF 14-1) • NSF award number, amount and period of support • Title of project • Summary of the results of the completed work, including accomplishments, described in two separate sections related to the Intellectual Merit and Broader Impacts • Publications resulting form the NSF award • Evidence of research products and their availability • If the proposal is for renewed support, description of the relation of the completed work to the proposed work

  32. Biographical Sketches • Provide a Biographical Sketch for the • PI • Co-PI(s) • External Project Evaluator • Must not exceed 2 pages per individual • May include a list of up to 5 publications most closely related to the proposed endeavor

  33. Budget and Budget Justification • Must be consistent with the GPG NSF 14-1 and with the scope and complexity of the proposed activities • Senior personnel salary compensation is limited to no more than two months of their regular salary in any one year, including compensation from all NSF-funded grants • However, if any compensation for such personnel in excess of two months is anticipated, it must be disclosed in the proposal budget, justified in the budget justification, and must be specifically approved by NSF in the award

  34. Current and Pending Support • Include Current and Pending Support information for the Principal Investigator and all co-Principal Investigators

  35. Special Information and Supplementary Documentation • Appendices uploaded as a separate PDF file not to exceed 25 pages • Baseline Data for Students and Teachers • Relative to student achievement or teacher capacity • Disaggregated for students • Demographics of teachers • Annual Benchmarks and Outcome Goals • Quantitative (and qualitative) • Linked to project strategies/activities • Partnership Leadership Team • Describe roles and responsibilities and time committed • Disciplinary Partners • Describe roles and responsibilities and time committed • Commitment to Institutional Change • Letters from Senior Administrators in Core Partner institutions/organizations • Other letters of Substantive Commitment

  36. Special Information and Supplementary Documentation • Data Management Plan • no more than 2 pages • See the EHR DMP guidelines for more information: • Postdoctoral Researcher Mentoring Plan • Required ifthereis a funding request for one or more postdoctoral scholars on line B1 of the budget Note: these do not apply to the 25 page supplementary documentation limitation

  37. Review Criteria • An outline of the review process is available in the GPG as Exhibit III-1. • NSF Merit Review Criteria: • Intellectual Merit: the potential to advance knowledge • Broader Impacts: the potential to benefit society and contribute to the achievement of specific, desired societal outcomes

  38. Merit Review Criteria: Intellectual Merit and Broader Impacts The following element are considered in the review of both criteria • What is the potential for the proposed activity to • Advance knowledge and understanding within its own field or across different fields (Intellectual Merit); and • Benefit society or advance desired societal outcomes (Broader Impacts)? • To what extent do the proposed activities suggest and explore creative, original, or potentially transformative concepts? • Is the plan for carrying out the proposed activities well-reasoned, well-organized, and based on a sound rationale? Does the plan incorporate a mechanism to assess success? • How well qualified is the individual, team, or organization to conduct the proposed activities? • Are there adequate resources available to the PI (either at the home organization or through collaborations) to carry out the proposed activities?

  39. Merit Review Criteria cont. Broader impacts may be accomplished through the research itself, through the activities that are directly related to specific research projects, or through activities that are supported by, but are complementary to, the project. NSF values the advancement of scientific knowledge and activities that contribute to achievement of societally relevant outcomes. Such outcomes include, but are not limited to: • full participation of women, persons with disabilities, and underrepresented minorities in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM); • improved STEM education and educator development at any level; • increased public scientific literacy and public engagement with science and technology; • improved well-being of individuals in society; • development of a diverse, globally competitive STEM workforce; • increased partnerships between academia, industry, and others; • improved national security; • Increased economic competitiveness of the United States; and enhanced infrastructure for research and education.

  40. STEM-C Partnerships: MSP Specific Review Criteria • Is science, mathematics, computer science, and/or engineering expertise from Core Partners deeply and broadly involved in the proposed work? • Is the potential high for strategic impact on teaching and learning and is the research likely to be of high importance to STEM education? • Does the proposal clearly identify one of the five focal areas and provide an implementation plan explicitly linked to the project’s state theory of action?

  41. What Makes a Proposal Competitive? • Strong Partnership team • Innovative/original ideas • Succinct, focused project plan • Sufficient detail provided • Solid evaluation plan • Rationale and evidence of potential effectiveness • Potential contribution to knowledge • Likelihood of sustainability • Appropriate budget consistent with the scope and complexity of the proposed work

  42. Tips for Success • Read the program solicitation and GPG • Test drive FastLane • Alert the Sponsored Research Office • Follow page and font size limits • Discuss other projects, advances in the field and related literature • Provide detail, detail, detail! • Discuss RESULTS from relevant prior work funded by NSF • Have a strong evaluation plan with timelines and benchmarks

  43. Tips for Success • Have an important research question or questions and a strong research design • Put yourself in the reviewers’ place • 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 (when clarification will assist you)

  44. Return Without Review • Submitted after deadline • Fail to separately and explicitly address both intellectual merit and broader impacts in the project summary • Fail to follow formatting requirements such as page limitation, font size and margin limits • Fail to meet eligibility requirements of the solicitation

  45. Additional Resources • STEM-C Partnerships: MSP Program Page and Solicitation NSF 14-522 • Grant Proposal Guide NSF 14-1 • Common Guidelines for Education Research and Evaluation NSF 13-126 • Education and Human Resources Data Management Plan Guidelines • www.MSPnet.org

  46. STEM-C Partnerships: MSPProgram Officers • Kathleen B. Bergin, telephone: (703) 292-5171, email: kbergin@nsf.gov • Janice Cuny, telephone: (703) 292-8900, email: jcuny@nsf.gov • Arlene M. de Strulle, telephone: (703) 292-8620, email: adestrul@nsf.gov • Valerie Barr, telephone: (703) 292-7855, email: vbarr@nsf.gov • John Haddock, telephone: (703) 292-4643, email: jhaddock@nsf.gov • Christopher Hoadley, telephone: (703) 292-7906, email: choadley@nsf.gov • Michael Jacobson, telephone: (703) 292-4641, email: mjacobso@nsf.gov

  47. Questions?Thank you for your participation

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