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Research Funding Opportunities for Early Career Researchers in KLS

Research Funding Opportunities for Early Career Researchers in KLS. Phil Ward Research Funding Manager. Funding Opportunities. Planning a Research Bid Writing a Research Bid Managing your Bids Help from Research Services. Planning a Research Bid. Think. Think. ...about the Specifics.

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Research Funding Opportunities for Early Career Researchers in KLS

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  1. Research Funding Opportunities for Early Career Researchers in KLS Phil Ward Research Funding Manager

  2. Funding Opportunities • Planning a Research Bid • Writing a Research Bid • Managing your Bids • Help from Research Services

  3. Planning a Research Bid

  4. Think

  5. Think

  6. ...about the Specifics • What will you do? (objectives, plan, timescale) • Why now? • Why you? (expertise, track record, contacts) • What impact? (beneficiaries, dissemination) • What kind of resources do you need? (reasonable, accurate, eligible)

  7. ...about the Funder • 2 types of funding: • Managed • Responsive Mode • 5 types of funder: • Research Councils • Charities • Learned Societies and Representative Bodies • Government • Industry

  8. Considerations Remit Subject Aims of scheme ‘Politics’ Timetable Deadline Duration Success Rate Is it worth it? Back up plan • Eligibility • Employment status and residency • Career stage • Costs • Will it cover all your costs? • Overheads • Internal Pressures • School budget • Teaching needs

  9. Research Councils • Engineering & Physical Sciences Research Council (26% - £795m) • Science & Technology Facilities Council (20% - £624m) • Medical Research Council (19% - £606m) • Biotechnology & Biological Sciences Research Council (14% - £427m) • Natural Environment Research Council (13% - £392m) • Economic & Social Research Council (5% - 165m) • Arts & Humanities Research Council (3% - £103m)

  10. RCUK First Grant Schemes

  11. AHRC • Research Grants • Emphasis on supporting ‘teams’ of researchers • 4 ‘routes’ to applying incl Early Career (<5 yrs, £20k - £200k): • Research Fellowships • Incl. Early Career route (<9 mths, <£120k) • Eligibility and deadlines • <8yrs of PhD, or <6yrs 1st appt • Rolling deadline, but ‘blackout’ in Feb

  12. ESRC • Future Leaders Scheme • Replaces Postdoc Fellowships & First Grants Schemes • Details TBC, but: • Up to 2 years • 3 priority areas • < 6 yrs from PhD • 50-80 new grants per year

  13. Delivery Plans: Themes • AHRC • ‘Connected Communities’ • ‘strategic need’: modern languages, design and heritage • AHRC’s own multidisciplinary themes: Care for the Future; Translating Cultures; Digital Transformations; Science and Culture • ESRC • Economic performance and sustainable growth • Influencing behaviour and informing interventions • Vibrant and fair society

  14. Cross-Council Themes • Global Uncertainties • Living with Environmental Change • Ageing: Lifelong Health and Wellbeing • Digital Economy • Energy • Global Food Security

  15. Research Councils • Benefits of applying to RCs: • Prestige • fEC – generous funding • What to watch out for: • Cuts – and ‘politics’ • Themes, demand management, ‘longer, larger, fewer’ • ‘Clique’? eg BBSRC: 3 HEIs get 25% of funding • JeS form • Impact

  16. Charities • General • Leverhulme Trust • Wellcome Trust • Nuffield Foundation • Specialist • Joseph Rowntree Foundation • Often medical – e.g. Cancer Research UK • AMRC (www.amrc.org.uk) • Represents 111 health-related charities, with a combined expenditure on medical research of £630m per annum.

  17. Leverhulme (£40m) • Funds all fields, except social policy and welfare, medicine and education • Supports original, risk-taking research that often transcends traditional discipline boundaries • Rough split: • Sciences: 40% • Soc. Sciences: 40% • Humanities: 20%

  18. Leverhulme • Fellowships • Up to £45k • 3-24 mths • Call Sept, deadline Nov • Study Abroad Fellowship • Up to £22k • Up to 12 mths • Same deadline as above • Employed FT >5 yrs • Grants • Up to £500k • Up to 5 yrs • 2 part process • Success Rates • Fellowship: 10-15% • SA Fellowship: 30% • Grants: 15-20%

  19. Leverhulme • Benefits of applying to Leverhulme • Not ‘restricted’ by demands of distributing public money • no ‘political agenda’ • reporting not as onerous • What to watch out for: • Research has to appeal to broad general audience • Trustees all ex-Unilever employees • Depend for advice on: • ‘Advisory Committee’ (for smaller grants): 9 professors • ‘Advisory Panel’ (for larger grants): 32 academics • Interdisciplinary – but not ‘last resort’ • Risk taking • Individual ‘vision’

  20. Wellcome (£520m) • ‘To foster and promote research with the aim of improving human and animal health’ • Supports • Biomedical research • Technology transfer • Medical Humanities: • History of Medicine & Biomedical Ethics • Public engagement with science • Does not support • Clinical trials • Generally, cancer research

  21. Wellcome • Benefits of applying to Wellcome • Wide range of funding • More useful feedback following rejection • Supportive once you have received funding • What to watch out for • Focusing on longer, larger grants to individuals: • May 2011 launch of the Senior/New Investigator schemes in the Medical History and Humanities strand, with a Sept 2nd 2011 first round deadline.

  22. Nuffield (£10m) • Aims • ‘To advance social well being…by supporting work which will bring about improvements in society.’ • Themes: • Children & Families, Education, Law & Society • Also ‘open door’ • Project Grants • Small SS Grants: up to £15k

  23. Nuffield • Benefits of applying to Nuffield • 2 part process: initial application very simple, and can apply any time • What to watch out for: • Look at previously successful grants • Strong social policy element • Small scale funding • Importance of ‘methodology’

  24. Rowntree (£5m) • 3 aims: • Poverty: to examine the root causes of poverty and disadvantage and identify solutions. • Empowerment: to find ways in which people and communities can have control of their own lives. • Place: to contribute to the building and development of strong, cohesive and sustainable communities. • Benefits of applying to JRF: • Prestigious • What to watch out for: • Very prescriptive calls for proposals • Relatively small amounts of funding

  25. Learned Societies • Generally provide some small scale support for visits, conferences, fellowships or smaller research projects • Professional Bodies • Represent people working in a specific area • e.g. The Law Society, Socio-Legal Studies Association • Learned Societies • Represent, and act as a forum for, a particular subject or discipline • Royal Society, British Academy

  26. British Academy • Funds research in Humanities & Social Sciences • Small Grants and Conference Support will be cut from March • No longer provide specific support for ECRs • New Fellowships scheme <15 yrs postdoc • Will be strong competition (35 grants pa)

  27. Government • National • Government Departments • County Councils • Other Government-funded organisations • British Council – collaborative grants • NESTA • Lottery • International • Europe • Framework Programme • USA • Federal Grants

  28. European Funding • Framework Programme: • EU’s main method for funding research and innovation • Budget €50bn over 7 years • Organised into 4 pillars:

  29. Cooperation Ideas People Capacities JRC FP7 Values in € Millions €1 751 €4 217 €4 728 €7 460 €32 365

  30. FP7: European Research Council • Responsive Mode • No requirement for collaborative groups • ‘Starting Independent Researcher Grant’ • 200 to be made annually, each lasting up to 5 yrs • Up to €400k per year • Applicants <10 yrs from PhD • Very competitive but success rates rising • Deadline: Nov

  31. Industry • Does fund research • In-house R&D • Contracts for research services • Grants or award programmes • …but tends to be more restrictive • If specifically seeking industry support, talk to Kent Innovation & Enterprise (KIE) • Brian Lingley (b.lingley@kent.ac.uk)

  32. Writing a Research Grant

  33. Perspective • Put yourself in the funder’s position • Can you understand what is proposed? • Is it worth spending money on? • Are the objectives important? • Are they achievable? • Is the timeframe realistic? • Does it offer value for money? • Can the applicant deliver? • Do you have the necessary track record? • Can you manage a project?

  34. Panellists • Not specialist in your area • Time poor • Eminent • Having to filter 100+ applications at a time

  35. Make It Easy for Them • Make it simple • Avoid jargon • ‘intelligent 14 yr old’ • Simple structure/ format/language • Make it urgent • Why should we care? • Back it up with evidence • Make it realistic • Programme and costs • Concentrate on methodology • Write defensively • Repeat key messages • ‘we need to know...’ • ‘this will tell us...’

  36. Craft it • Give yourself time • At least a month to write • Show it to others • Academics working in same discipline • Academics working in other disciplines • Research Services

  37. Good vs Bad Bad Application Unclear, esoteric question Pages of densely packed jargon Emphasis on background and literature Incomplete description of research process Ignores funder guidance Good Application • An important question • Realistic promise of an answer • Ability and track record of research team • Well designed and fully described project • Properly resourced and value for money • Well written and presented application • Fits funder priorities

  38. Managing Your Bids • One won’t be enough • Typical success rate: 10-20% • ‘lottery’ • Reuse & Recycle • Bids are time consuming • Rejection is crushing • Don’t wait for it • Multiple applications give hope • ‘Portfolio’ • Economies of Scale • Complementary bids • Other funders • Break up project • Don’t flog a dead horse

  39. Help from Research Services

  40. Cradle to Grave Identify funders Help with the proposal and application process Costing Funding Institutional ‘sign off’ ‘Accept’ award and negotiate contract Manage Award Contracts Financial claims End of Award reports Finance Page 43

  41. Help in Developing Applications • Information • Funding opportunities • Regular, ad hoc, strategic • Background news & insights • newsletter, website, blog • Funder visits • Grants Factory • Aiding collaboration • bringing those in similar disciplines together (eg Lunchtime Seminars) • Preparing your application • Copy editing, proof reading and advice on the text • Successful application bank • Staff costings and calculating overheads • Advice on eligible costs • Research governance

  42. Grants Factory • Help and advice from other academics • Workshops • Tools for writing killer applications • Masterclasses • What the guidance doesn’t tell you • Mock panels • Test drive your proposal

  43. Internal Approval Form • Ensures the University endorses and takes responsibility for your project. • Internal Approval Form • Check list – risks/issues • Need to attach a ‘Full Economic Costing’ • Sign off by: • PI and any Co-Is • HoS (or representative) • Research Services

  44. Sources of Information • Research Funding Officers • Social Sciences: • Phil Ward (p.ward@kent.ac.uk, xtn 7748) • Rachel Donald (Mon & Tues: r.l.donald@kent.ac.uk, xtn4575) • Humanities: Lynne Bennett (l.bennett-282@kent.ac.uk, xtn4799) • Sciences: Carolyn Barker (c.m.barker-47@kent.ac.uk, xtn7957) • Medway: Karen Allart (k.a.allart@kent.ac.uk, xtn8967) • Websites • Funding opportunities: www.researchprofessional.com • European Funding: www.ukro.ac.uk • Research Services: www.kent.ac.uk/res • Research Fundermentals Blog: http://fundermental.blogspot.com/

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