62 lines
3.2 KiB
Markdown
62 lines
3.2 KiB
Markdown
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# NSF Grant Application Guidance: Budget and Narrative
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---
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## **Budget**
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The NSF requires a detailed budget that justifies your project's costs. Here's how to prepare it:
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### **Key Components of the Budget**
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- **Personnel Costs**: Salaries for project staff, including principal investigators, co-investigators, and research assistants. Specify the time commitment (e.g., percentage of effort or hours worked).
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- **Fringe Benefits**: Include healthcare, retirement, and other employee benefits.
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- **Equipment**: Outline any major equipment necessary for your project, including costs and justifications.
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- **Travel**: Domestic or international travel needed for research, conferences, or fieldwork. Include airfare, lodging, meals, and other expenses.
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- **Materials and Supplies**: Include consumables like lab materials, software, or office supplies.
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- **Indirect Costs**: These are overhead costs like utilities, administration, and facility use (calculated based on your institution's negotiated rate).
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- **Other Direct Costs**: Subcontracts, consulting fees, and participant support costs (e.g., stipends, travel, workshops).
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### **Tips for Success**
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1. **Follow NSF Budget Guidelines**: Use the NSF budget templates (e.g., NSF Form 1030) in Research.gov or FastLane.
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2. **Be Transparent**: Provide clear justifications for each expense in the Budget Justification (up to 5 pages).
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3. **Align Costs with Objectives**: Ensure all costs directly support your project goals.
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4. **Collaborate with Your Institution**: Work closely with your Sponsored Research Office (SRO) for accurate calculations.
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---
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## **Narrative**
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The project narrative is the heart of your application. NSF narratives generally have a 15-page limit and must follow these required sections:
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### **Key Sections of the Narrative**
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1. **Introduction**:
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- Summarize your project’s goals and significance.
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- Clearly state the research question or problem.
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2. **Background and Literature Review**:
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- Highlight previous work in the field.
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- Demonstrate the gap your project fills.
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3. **Objectives and Research Plan**:
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- Describe your specific objectives and the methods to achieve them.
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- Include timelines, milestones, and deliverables.
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4. **Broader Impacts**:
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- Explain how your project benefits society, e.g., by advancing STEM education, promoting diversity, or solving critical problems.
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- Highlight outreach activities, like workshops, curriculum development, or community engagement.
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5. **Results from Prior NSF Support** (if applicable):
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- If you’ve received NSF funding before, include outcomes of that project.
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### **Tips for Success**
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1. **Be Clear and Concise**: Use active voice and avoid jargon to make your proposal accessible to reviewers from diverse backgrounds.
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2. **Address NSF Merit Review Criteria**:
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- **Intellectual Merit**: Explain the potential to advance knowledge.
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- **Broader Impacts**: Describe societal benefits.
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3. **Use Visuals**: Include charts, graphs, or tables to convey complex information effectively.
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4. **Review Submission Guidelines**: Ensure formatting, margins, and font size comply with the NSF Proposal & Award Policies & Procedures Guide (PAPPG).
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---
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Let me know if you need help drafting specific sections, examples, or templates for your NSF application!
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