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Title |
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Agency |
Next Deadline |
Details |
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Pew Scholars Program in the Biomedical Sciences |
N/A |
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Pew Charitable Trust (Pew Trust) |
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Historically, applicants must be in the first three years of their assistant professor position to apply.
• Due to COVID-19-related research disruptions, we are adding an additional year of eligibility so that individuals in the first four years of their assistant professor position are eligible to apply.
For the upcoming 2023 grant cycle, the application opens on June 13, 2022, and individuals must not have been appointed as an assistant professor at any institution prior to June 13, 2018, whether or not such an appointment was on a tenure track. Exceptions are outlined on our program website.
Eligibility adjustments will apply to three award cycles (2022, 2023, 2024).
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Notice of Intent Deadline of Mar 25, 2022 Has Passed — [All slots are filled]
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Title
Pew Scholars Program in the Biomedical Sciences
Agencies
Pew Charitable Trust (Pew Trust)
Description
The Pew scholars program supports assistant professors of outstanding promise in science relevant to the advancement of human health. The award provides $300,000 in flexible support—$75,000 per year for a four-year period. Eligibility criteria include:
• Candidates must have been awarded a doctorate in biomedical sciences or medicine.
• As of Sept. 10, 2020, nominees must hold full-time appointments at the rank of assistant professor or the equivalent.
• Appointments such as research assistant professor, adjunct assistant professor, assistant professor research track, visiting professor, or instructor are not eligible.
• On June 15, 2020, candidates must have been in such an appointment for less than three years (not appointed before June 15, 2017). Time spent in clinical internships, residencies, or on parental leave does not count as part of this three-year limit. If a nominee qualifies for an eligibility extension, please contact the program office so we are aware of the circumstances.
• Candidates apply two times in total.
• If applicant’s university has more than one eligible nominating institution or campus, that applicant may apply from only one institution; the applicant may not reapply in a subsequent year from a different one.
More Information
https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/projects/pew-biomedical-scholars/program-details?utm_campaign=2022-01-25+Biomed+scholars+update&utm_medium=email&utm_source=Pew&subscriberkey=0030P00002Ch9DHQAZ
Submission Limits
1 nominee only
Deadlines
Internal Notice of Intent |
Mar 25, 2022 |
Notification of Internal Competition |
Mar 26, 2022 |
Internal Pre-proposal |
Apr 15, 2022 |
Results of Internal Competition |
May 13, 2022 |
Agency Notice of Intent/Pre-proposal |
N/A |
Agency Proposal |
May 18, 2022
(invitation only!) |
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Team-Based Design in Biomedical Engineering Education (R25) |
PAR-22-000 |
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National Institutes of Health (NIH) |
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Notice of Intent Deadline of Mar 25, 2022 Has Passed — [All slots are filled]
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Title
Team-Based Design in Biomedical Engineering Education (R25)
Agencies
National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Description
The NIH Research Education Program (R25) supports research education activities in the mission areas of the NIH. The overarching goal of this R25 program is to support educational activities that complement and/or enhance the training of a workforce to meet the nation’s biomedical, behavioral and clinical research needs.
To accomplish the stated over-arching goal, this FOA will support creative educational activities with a primary focus on:
Courses for Skills Development
This FOA seeks to support programs that include innovative approaches to enhance biomedical engineering (BME) design education to ensure a future workforce that can meet the nation’s needs in biomedical research and healthcare technologies.
Applications are encouraged from institutions that propose to establish new or to enhance existing team-based design courses or programs in undergraduate biomedical engineering departments or other degree-granting programs with biomedical engineering tracks/minors. This FOA targets the education of undergraduate biomedical engineering/bioengineering students in a team-based environment. Health equity and universal design topics must be integrated throughout the educational activities. While current best practices such as multidisciplinary/interdisciplinary education, introduction to the regulatory pathway and other issues related to the commercialization of medical devices, and clinical immersion remain encouraged components of a strong BME program, this FOA also challenges institutions to propose other novel, innovative and/or ground-breaking activities that can form the basis of the next generation of biomedical engineering design education.
More Information
https://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/pa-files/PAR-22-000.html#_
Submission Limits
Only one application per institution is allowed, as defined in Section III. 3. Additional Information on Eligibility.
Deadlines
Internal Notice of Intent |
Mar 25, 2022 |
Notification of Internal Competition |
Mar 26, 2022 |
Internal Pre-proposal |
Apr 8, 2022 |
Results of Internal Competition |
Apr 18, 2022 |
Agency Notice of Intent/Pre-proposal |
Apr 30, 2022 |
Agency Proposal |
May 30, 2022
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Training-based Workforce Development for Advanced Cyberinfrastructure (CyberTraining) |
NSF 22-574 |
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National Science Foundation (NSF) |
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Notice of Intent Deadline of Mar 25, 2022 Has Passed — [All slots are filled]
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Title
Training-based Workforce Development for Advanced Cyberinfrastructure (CyberTraining)
Agencies
National Science Foundation (NSF)
Description
This program seeks to prepare, nurture, and grow the national scientific research workforce for creating, utilizing, and supporting advanced
cyberinfrastructure (CI) to enable and potentially transform fundamental science and engineering (S&E) research and education and
contribute to the Nation's overall economic competitiveness and security. The goals of this solicitation are to (i) ensure broad adoption of CI
tools, methods, and resources by the research community in order to catalyze major research advances and to enhance
researchers' abilities to lead the development of new CI; (ii) integrate core literacy and discipline-appropriate advanced skills in
advanced CI as well as computational and data-driven methods for advancing fundamental research, into the Nation's
undergraduate and graduate educational curriculum/instructional materials; and (iii) build communities of research CI professional
staff to deploy, manage, and collaboratively support the effective use of research CI, as well as establish career paths for those staff
within and across institutions and science and engineering (S&E) disciplines. Proposals responding to the Pilot and Implementation
project classes defined in this solicitation may target one or both of the first two solicitation goals, while proposals responding to the CIP
project class must address the third goal. For the purpose of this solicitation, advanced CI is broadly defined as the set of resources, tools,
methods, and services for advanced computation, large-scale data handling and analytics, and networking and security for large-scale
systems that collectively enable potentially transformative fundamental S&E research and education.
This solicitation calls for innovative, scalable training, education, and curriculum/instructional materials, along with deeper incorporation of CI
professionals into the research enterprise — targeting one or more of the solicitation goals — to address emerging needs and unresolved
bottlenecks in S&E research workforce development, from the postsecondary level to active researchers to CI professionals. The funded
activities, spanning targeted, multidisciplinary communities, should lead to transformative changes in the state of research workforce
preparedness for advanced CI-enabled research in the short- and long-term. This solicitation also seeks to broaden CI access and adoption
by (i) increasing adoption of advanced CI and of computational and data-driven methods to a broader range of S&E disciplines and
institutions; (ii) enhancing the incorporation of CI professionals into the research enterprise – highlighting the value of those professionals in
S&E research; and (iii) effectively utilizing the capabilities of individuals from a diverse set of underrepresented groups. Proposals from, and in
partnership with, the aforementioned communities are especially encouraged.
There are three project classes as defined below:
Pilot Projects: up to $300,000 total budget with durations up to two years;
Implementation Projects: Small (with total budgets of up to $500,000) or Medium (with total budgets of up to $1,000,000) for
durations of up to four years; and
CI Professional (CIP) Projects: up to two full-time equivalents (FTEs) per institution and four FTEs total with durations up to five
years.
Section II. Program Description provides a more complete description of the project classes. Section V.A. Proposal Preparation Instructions
describes the proposal elements required for the various project classes in order to address the suitable set of solicitation-specific review
criteria.
The CyberTraining program is led by the Office of Advanced Cyberinfrastructure (OAC) in the Directorate for Computer and Information
Science and Engineering (CISE) and has participation from other NSF directorates/divisions as described in Section II. Program Description,
Programmatic Areas of Interest. Not all directorates/divisions are participating at the same level and some have specific research and
education priorities. The appropriate contact for the CyberTraining program in any directorate/division is the Cognizant Program Officer (PO)
for the respective directorate/division/office/program listed below.
All projects are expected to clearly articulate how they address important community needs, will provide resources that will be widely available
to and usable by the research community, and will broaden participation from underrepresented groups. Prospective principal investigators
(PIs) are strongly encouraged to contact the Cognizant Program Officers in CISE/OAC and in the participating directorate/division
relevant to the proposal to ascertain whether the focus and budget of their proposed activities are appropriate for this solicitation.
Such consultations should be completed at least one month in advance of the submission deadline. PIs should include the names of the
Cognizant Program Officers consulted in a Single Copy Document as described in Section V.A. Proposal Preparation Instructions. The intent
of the CyberTraining program is to encourage collaboration between CI and S&E domain disciplines. (For this purpose, units of CISE other
than OAC are considered domain disciplines.) To ensure relevance to community needs and to facilitate adoption, those proposals of interest
to one or more domain divisions must include at least one PI/co-PI with expertise relevant to the targeted research discipline. All proposals
shall include at least one PI/co-PI with expertise relevant to OAC.
Prospective PIs contemplating submissions that primarily target communities relevant to directorates/divisions that are not participating in this
solicitation are directed to instead explore the education and workforce development programs of the respective directorates/divisions.
More Information
https://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2022/nsf22574/nsf22574.pdf
Submission Limits
Institutions are limited to one CIP proposal per CyberTraining program
competition. I
Deadlines
Internal Notice of Intent |
Mar 25, 2022 |
Notification of Internal Competition |
Mar 26, 2022 |
Internal Pre-proposal |
Apr 8, 2022 |
Results of Internal Competition |
Apr 15, 2022 |
Agency Notice of Intent/Pre-proposal |
N/A |
Agency Proposal |
May 16, 2022
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Team-Based Design in Biomedical Engineering Education (R25) |
PAR-22-000 |
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National Institutes of Health (NIH) |
All deadlines have passed
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This program has been withdrawn as a Limited Submission program.
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Title
Team-Based Design in Biomedical Engineering Education (R25)
Agencies
National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Description
The NIH Research Education Program (R25) supports research education activities in the mission areas of the NIH. The overarching goal of this R25 program is to support educational activities that complement and/or enhance the training of a workforce to meet the nation’s biomedical, behavioral and clinical research needs.
To accomplish the stated over-arching goal, this FOA will support creative educational activities with a primary focus on:
Courses for Skills Development
This FOA seeks to support programs that include innovative approaches to enhance biomedical engineering (BME) design education to ensure a future workforce that can meet the nation’s needs in biomedical research and healthcare technologies.
Applications are encouraged from institutions that propose to establish new or to enhance existing team-based design courses or programs in undergraduate biomedical engineering departments or other degree-granting programs with biomedical engineering tracks/minors. This FOA targets the education of undergraduate biomedical engineering/bioengineering students in a team-based environment. Health equity and universal design topics must be integrated throughout the educational activities. While current best practices such as multidisciplinary/interdisciplinary education, introduction to the regulatory pathway and other issues related to the commercialization of medical devices, and clinical immersion remain encouraged components of a strong BME program, this FOA also challenges institutions to propose other novel, innovative and/or ground-breaking activities that can form the basis of the next generation of biomedical engineering design education.
More Information
https://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/pa-files/PAR-22-000.html#_
Submission Limits
Only one application per institution is allowed, as defined in Section III. 3. Additional Information on Eligibility.
Deadlines
Internal Notice of Intent |
Mar 25, 2022 |
Notification of Internal Competition |
Mar 26, 2022 |
Internal Pre-proposal |
Apr 8, 2022 |
Results of Internal Competition |
Apr 15, 2022 |
Agency Notice of Intent/Pre-proposal |
Apr 30, 2022 |
Agency Proposal |
May 30, 2022
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Collaborative Program Grant for Multidisciplinary Teams (RM1) |
PAR-20-103 |
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National Institutes of Health (NIH) |
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Notice of Intent Deadline of Mar 11, 2022 Has Passed
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Title
Collaborative Program Grant for Multidisciplinary Teams (RM1)
Agencies
National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Description
Many research questions in biomedical science can be pursued by single investigators and their close collaborators, and are adequately supported by individual and multiple PD/PI research grants. However, the scope of some scientific problems is beyond the capabilities of a small group of investigators. Such complex and challenging research questions benefit from the integrated efforts of teams of research laboratories employing complementary approaches and having multiple areas of intellectual and technical expertise, and the necessary resources to accomplish a unified scientific goal. Such team-based efforts can produce convergent, lasting scientific benefits with high impact, such as the creation of new disciplines of study, resolution of long standing or intractable problems, or definition of new areas that challenge current paradigms.
This funding opportunity announcement (FOA) encourages Collaborative Program Grant applications from institutions/organizations that propose to conduct research to address complex and challenging biomedical problems, important for the mission of NIGMS, through deeply integrated, multidisciplinary research teams. The Collaborative Program Grant is designed to support research in which funding a team of interdependent investigators offers significant advantages over support of individual research project grants. Applications should address critical issues and be sufficiently challenging, ambitious, and innovative that objectives could not be achieved by individual investigators.
More Information
https://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/pa-files/PAR-20-103.html
Submission Limits
Only one application per institution (normally identified by having a unique DUNS number or NIH IPF number) is allowed per review round. The same or a similar topic may be submitted for subsequent review rounds involving the same or a similar team, but must be presented as a New application, not a Resubmission.
Applications that are not considered in the NIGMS mission will not be reviewed. Given that only one application is permitted per institution per review cycle, it may be important to contact NIGMS staff before committing to any particular team and its topic area.
Deadlines
Internal Notice of Intent |
Mar 11, 2022 |
Notification of Internal Competition |
Mar 12, 2022 |
Internal Pre-proposal |
Mar 25, 2022 |
Results of Internal Competition |
Apr 8, 2022 |
Agency Notice of Intent/Pre-proposal |
Apr 27, 2022 |
Agency Proposal |
May 27, 2022
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U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO), the University Nuclear Leadership Program (formerly the Integrated University Program), Research and Development Grant, Fiscal Year (FY) 2022. |
31310022K0001 |
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Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) |
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Notice of Intent Deadline of Mar 1, 2022 Has Passed — [All slots are filled]
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Title
U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO), the University Nuclear Leadership Program (formerly the Integrated University Program), Research and Development Grant, Fiscal Year (FY) 2022.
Agencies
Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC)
Description
The program provides funding to support research and development (R&D) for nuclear science,
engineering, technology, and related disciplines to develop a workforce capable of supporting the
design, construction, operation, and regulation of nuclear facilities and the safe handling of
nuclear materials. University R&D activities provide an opportunity complement current, ongoing
NRC-led research. A summary of NRC planned research activities can be found at
https://www.nrc.gov/about-nrc/regulatory/research/activities.html.
More specifically, the program shall be used to provide financial assistance for R&D projects
relevant to the programmatic mission of the NRC referenced above, with an emphasis on
providing financial assistance with respect to research, development, demonstration, and
commercial application activities relevant to civilian advanced nuclear reactors, including but
not limited to, relevant fuel cycle technologies, advanced construction, manufacturing, and
fabrication methods.
The NRC invites R&D projects that complement its current research portfolio and that help the NRC
prepare for upcoming challenges. The NRC seeks projects that provide a variety of direct and indirect,
near- and longer-term benefits. These benefits include:
• Identification and closure of potentially important technical gaps ahead of regulatory needs,
• Heightened awareness and knowledge of key advanced technology developments being
pursued outside of NRC, and
• Improved foundational knowledge on key topics of future regulatory interest.
Areas of particular interest include:
• Aging/degradation of nuclear plant systems, structures, and components;
• Cyber security impacts of new/advanced technologies at nuclear facilities;
• Application of wireless communications, drones, robotics, and autonomous control in
operations and maintenance activities;
• Digital engineering/analytics, advanced sensors, and digital instrumentation/controls at
nuclear facilities;
• Advanced materials and manufacturing for nuclear applications;
• Advanced construction techniques for nuclear builds;
• Application of digital twin and other digital engineering techniques in the design;
construction, and operations of nuclear facilities;Advanced non-destructive examination techniques, including the application of artificial
intelligence to nuclear applications;
• Evaluation of technical gaps and major uncertainties in assessing risk for advanced
reactors;
• Human and organizational factors and human reliability analysis for advanced nuclear
applications, including improved models for dependency, consideration of
organizational factors, and dynamic methods;
• Characterization of low frequency, high consequence natural or industrial hazards for
advanced nuclear application;
• Characterization, handling, fabrication, transportation, storage, or disposal of fresh
and spent nuclear fuel for nuclear power plants (including the various advanced
reactor designs that are currently under development);
• Analyses, data, and evaluations that will support an understanding of the safety,
technical gaps and major uncertainties for (1) small modular and advanced reactor
designs with emphasis in the areas, natural circulation, heat transfer, boron
dilution, neutronics,source term analysis, severe accident analysis and (2) fuel
cycle technologies, with emphasis on experimental test and analytical model data
to help validate the NRC’s scientific computer codes and ability to assess
application of these technologies;
• Analysis models and methods for fuel and cladding performance under steady
state, transient, and accident conditions including fuel fragmentation, relocation,
and dispersal;
• Advanced technology approaches (e.g., data and text analytics and artificial
intelligence) and applications (e.g., data mining, risk communication, autonomous
control) in nuclear power-related applications. Some specific areas of focus could
be (1) assessing or developing methods for explainable artificial intelligence, (2)
gaining new insights from existing publicly available agency datasets (e.g.,
ADAMS, Licensee Event Reports), (3) incorporating equipment failure trends, (4)
using AI for autonomous control in complex systems, (5) optimizing maintenance
activities, (6) using machine learning to study physical processes in materials and
fluid mechanics, including advanced non-destructive examination techniques, and
(7) probabilistic risk assessment, and (8) risk-informed decision-making in
licensing, inspection, and other regulatory activities;
• Evaluation of the radiological releases and offsite consequences for fusion reactor
accidents; and
• Analytical approaches that combine probabilistic risk assessment (PRA) risk
quantification methods with reactor systems sensitivity or uncertainty analysis
methods to quantify the risk significance of safety analysis errors or uncertainties.
An example application might be to quantify the risk significance of a given error in
the safety analysis critical heat flux correlation in terms of the likelihood and
extend of fuel rod failures per year.
Although the NOFO identifies many of the NRC’s R&D priorities, the NRC will strive to
award projects that cover multiple project areas specified above. Your application
should emphasize the technical area(s) proposed under this project.
More Information
https://www.grants.gov/web/grants/search-grants.html?keywords=31310022K0001
Submission Limits
An applicant/institution may submit no more than two (2) applications in
response to this announcement.
Deadlines
Internal Notice of Intent |
Mar 1, 2022 |
Notification of Internal Competition |
Mar 1, 2022 |
Internal Pre-proposal |
Mar 7, 2022 |
Results of Internal Competition |
Mar 14, 2022 |
Agency Notice of Intent/Pre-proposal |
N/A |
Agency Proposal |
Apr 5, 2022
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CHEMICAL AND MATERIALS SCIENCES TO ADVANCE CLEAN ENERGY TECHNOLOGIES AND LOW-CARBON MANUFACTURING |
DE-FOA-0002676 |
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Department of Energy (DOE) |
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Notice of Intent Deadline of Feb 23, 2022 Has Passed — [All slots are filled]
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Title
CHEMICAL AND MATERIALS SCIENCES TO ADVANCE CLEAN ENERGY TECHNOLOGIES AND LOW-CARBON MANUFACTURING
Agencies
Department of Energy (DOE)
Description
The DOE SC program in Basic Energy Sciences (BES) announces its interest in receiving new
applications from single principal investigators (PIs) and from small teams to advance basic and
fundamental chemical and materials sciences that underpin clean energy technologies and lowcarbon manufacturing. The goal is creation of foundational knowledge to support the
development of approaches that will minimize climate impacts of energy technologies and
manufacturing. For this FOA, clean energy technologies include approaches to capture, produce,
convert, store, and use energy that reduce or eliminate unwanted emissions such as greenhouse
gases (e.g., carbon dioxide, methane, etc.). These technologies also include approaches such as
direct air capture (DAC) and carbon storage/sequestration to decrease emissions that have been
released into the environment from energy production and use. Low-carbon manufacturing refers
to manufacturing processes that minimize carbon emissions and energy consumption.
Investments from this FOA are anticipated to include awards that build foundational knowledge
underpinning the Energy Earthshots Initiative.
Awards under this FOA will support basic and fundamental research. Applied research, which
seeks to exploit fundamental knowledge to solve specific technical challenges, is outside the
scope of this FOA.
More Information
https://science.osti.gov/grants/FOAs/-/media/grants/pdf/foas/2022/DE-FOA-0002676.pdf
Submission Limits
Applicant institutions are limited to a total of no more than 3 pre-applications or applications.
• DOE/NNSA National Laboratories may submit up to 3 pre-applications or applications,
which must be for multi-PI efforts.
• Institutions other than DOE/NNSA National Laboratories may submit up to 2 preapplications or applications for multi-PI efforts and up to 3 pre-applications or applications
for single-PI efforts, for a combined total of no more than 3 pre-applications or applications.
NOTE: The total number of submissions from a single institution must not exceed 3.
Deadlines
Internal Notice of Intent |
Feb 23, 2022 |
Notification of Internal Competition |
Feb 24, 2022 |
Internal Pre-proposal |
Mar 4, 2022 |
Results of Internal Competition |
Mar 9, 2022 |
Agency Notice of Intent/Pre-proposal |
Mar 16, 2022 |
Agency Proposal |
May 17, 2022
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Enhancing Science, Technology, EnginEering, and Math Educational Diversity (ESTEEMED) Research Education Experiences (R25) |
PAR-20-223 |
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National Institutes of Health (NIH) |
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Notice of Intent Deadline of Feb 18, 2022 Has Passed
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Title
Enhancing Science, Technology, EnginEering, and Math Educational Diversity (ESTEEMED) Research Education Experiences (R25)
Agencies
National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Description
The NIH Research Education Program (R25) supports research education activities in the mission areas of the NIH. The overarching goal of this R25 program is to support educational activities that encourage individuals from diverse backgrounds, including those from groups underrepresented in the biomedical and behavioral sciences, to pursue further studies or careers in research
To accomplish the stated over-arching goal, this FOA will support creative educational activities with a primary focus on:
Courses for Skills Development
Research Experiences
for undergraduate freshmen and sophomores from diverse backgrounds, including those from groups underrepresented in bioengineering or STEM fields relevant to bioengineering, such as engineering or the physical/computational sciences, which play key roles in biomedical technologies and innovation. The ESTEEMED program is intended to expose students to bioengineering research early in their college careers and interest them in potentially pursuing advanced studies in bioengineering or a related field. It will prepare students to join, in their junior and senior years, an honors program, supported by federal or institutional funds, that promotes STEM and entrance into a Ph.D. program. The ultimate goal is for the participants to pursue a Ph.D. or M.D./Ph.D. degree and a subsequent research career integrating engineering and the physical sciences with medicine and biology in academia or industry.
More Information
https://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/pa-files/PAR-20-223.html
Submission Limits
Only one application per institution is allowed as defined in See Section III. 3. Additional Information on Eligibility.
Deadlines
Internal Notice of Intent |
Feb 18, 2022 |
Notification of Internal Competition |
Feb 19, 2022 |
Internal Pre-proposal |
Mar 7, 2022 |
Results of Internal Competition |
Mar 21, 2022 |
Agency Notice of Intent/Pre-proposal |
May 24, 2022 |
Agency Proposal |
Jun 24, 2022
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Expanding Capacity in Quantum Information Science and Engineering (ExpandQISE) |
NSF 22-561 |
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National Science Foundation (NSF) |
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Notice of Intent Deadline of Feb 18, 2022 Has Passed
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Title
Expanding Capacity in Quantum Information Science and Engineering (ExpandQISE)
Agencies
National Science Foundation (NSF)
Description
The NSF Expanding Capacity in Quantum Information Science and Engineering (ExpandQISE) program aims to increase research capacity
and broaden participation in Quantum Information Science and Engineering (QISE) and related disciplines through the creation of a diversified
investment portfolio in research and education that will lead to scientific and engineering breakthroughs, while securing a talent pipeline in a
field where workforce needs of industry, government and academia continue to outgrow the available talent. This funding opportunity
applies to Institutions of Higher Education that in the most recent five calendar years before publication of this solicitation received
not more than $5,000,000 total in federal funding for QISE research as described in Focus areas 1, 2, and 3, in Section II "Program
Description" of this solicitation. The ExpandQISE program helps build and maintain a close connection between new efforts and existing
impactful work done at the existing QISE Centers or leading QISE research Institutions, while creating and nurturing necessary critical mass at
Institutions not yet fully involved in QISE. In keeping with the NSF goal of increasing the participation of all members of society in the scientific
enterprise, institutions at which more than 50% of enrolled students come from groups that are currently under-represented in the sciences,
e.g. minority-serving institutions (MSIs), are especially encouraged to apply.
More Information
https://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2022/nsf22561/nsf22561.pdf
Submission Limits
Limit on Number of Proposals per Organization:
Up to two (2) Track 2 proposals per lead institution are allowed. There are no limits on the number of Track 1 proposals.
Limit on Number of Proposals per PI or co-PI: 1
There is a limit of one proposal per PI, independently of the track.
Deadlines
Internal Notice of Intent |
Feb 18, 2022 |
Notification of Internal Competition |
Feb 19, 2022 |
Internal Pre-proposal |
Mar 4, 2022 |
Results of Internal Competition |
Mar 14, 2022 |
Agency Notice of Intent/Pre-proposal |
Apr 1, 2022 |
Agency Proposal |
May 6, 2022
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Roanoke Women's Foundation |
N/A |
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The Roanoke Women's Foundation (Roanoke Women's Foundation) |
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Notice of Intent Deadline of Feb 18, 2022 Has Passed
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Title
Roanoke Women's Foundation
Agencies
The Roanoke Women's Foundation (Roanoke Women's Foundation)
Description
Roanoke Women’s Foundation provides high-impact grants of at least $30,000 in Arts & Culture, Education, Environment, and Health & Human Services.
Grant finalists are determined through a detailed process of proposal reviews, site visits, and ultimately chosen by a vote of the membership in September of each year.
Applying for a grant starts with a Phase I Application.
More Information
https://roanokewomensfoundation.org/
Submission Limits
if an organization is awarded a RWF grant, there is a five-year waiting period to become eligible to apply again. For example, an organization awarded a RWF grant in 2017 would be eligible to submit an application in 2022.
Deadlines
Internal Notice of Intent |
Feb 18, 2022 |
Notification of Internal Competition |
Feb 19, 2022 |
Internal Pre-proposal |
Mar 4, 2022 |
Results of Internal Competition |
Mar 14, 2022 |
Agency Notice of Intent/Pre-proposal |
N/A |
Agency Proposal |
Mar 31, 2022
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Anyone wishing to submit a proposal for one of these programs should click on the appropriate link in the list above. To expedite the process of planning an internal competition, please submit your notice of intent as soon as you know you have an interest in the funding program. You are only required to include the name of the Principal Investigator, any co-PI's, and the subject or title of the proposed project. The deadline for the internal notice of intent is indicated above.