Author: Zofia Knorek
Greetings, y’all- this is the fifth blog in the six-post #CoastalResearchGrants series, in which we’re walking through the steps of preparing a proposal for a coastal research grant using the North Carolina Coastal Research Fellowship application as a specific case study. If you’re following along chronologically, you will have a version of your research statement articulated on paper, which we discussed drafting last week. This week, we’re discussing a few of the additional components of the application:
- Budget
- Other Sponsored Support to be Received
- Outreach and Dissemination Plan
- Data Management Plan
It’s okay to develop these components in conjunction with the research statement--there’s no singular correct order. Because the research statement is the bulk of the application, we recommend starting it earliest so you have ample time to make edits and polish it. But if you want to switch between working on components that comprise the research statement (i.e., Description, Materials and Methods, Tasks and Timeline) and Budget, or perhaps knock out a low-hanging fruit like the Data Management Plan to keep morale high, that’s a reasonable option, too.
1) Budget
Hiring a research technician is not a requirement, but because the Request For Proposals (RFP) states “research projects that include undergraduate participation are encouraged”, you should consider it. That said, your research may require you to send samples out for analysis at an external lab, which will eat through a modest budget quickly. So you may not have the funds to hire a technician, and that’s okay--not involving an undergraduate won’t count against your proposal, which is why it’s encouraged and not required.
Hint: try to incorporate as many components that are “encouraged” in the RFP as are relevant to your project proposal. Funders are encouraging it for a reason, and that reason is usually that it relates to the overarching mission of their agency, so they’re looking to fund it. That said, don’t slap things onto a proposal even if it isn’t relevant to your project just because you think it’s what the agency wants to hear. Overcommitting to things that aren’t realistic for you to accomplish will only undermine the strength of your application.
Other things to know about the budget for this proposal specifically:
- Overhead charges (also called indirect charges) are not allowed. Read more about indirect charges here. You’ll probably encounter them eventually, so it’s helpful to familiarize yourself with them now.
- You aren’t allowed to pay your advisor with this fellowship money. (Many faculty are salaried on an academic, or nine-month, schedule. They can write the other three months of their salaries into grants, including those that their graduate students may write--but not this one!)
- Your budget doesn’t count toward the page limit.
- Your budget needs to have an institutional signature from someone who works in the business office or office of sponsored research at your institution. If you don’t know whose signature you need, ask your advisor; they should be able to direct you to the correct person. Get to know and develop a working relationship with the people in your organization’s business office--they are likely able to help you navigate what can be a confusing bureaucratic maze.
2) Other Sponsored Support to be Received
3) Outreach & Dissemination Plan
4) Data Management Plan
Closing thoughts:
- Before you write
- Solicit early feedback
- Draft an outline
- Write the research statement
- Prepare a budget and additional materials (this post)
- Assemble and polish the application package; intangibles
Don’t forget the Coastal Research Fellowship is due March 17 at 5 pm!
Questions? Requests for content to cover in future posts? Have a resource you think everyone should know about? Join the discussion with the #CoastalResearchGrants hashtag.
Zofia Knorek (@zofiaknorek, she/her) is a 3rd-year PhD student in ecology at the UNC Institute of Marine Sciences and Coastal Training Program grant writing intern with the North Carolina Coastal Reserve & National Estuarine Research Reserve.