nih grant writing workshop

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NIH Grant Writing Workshop Susan McHale Professor of Human Development; Director, SSRI Douglas M. Teti Professor of Human Development, Psychology, and Pediatrics; Associate Director, SSRI Rhonda BeLue Associate Professor of Health Policy and Administration Kristin Buss Professor of Psychology, College of the Liberal Arts Michelle Frisco Associate Professor of Sociology and Demography, College of the Liberal Arts

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NIH Grant Writing Workshop. Susan McHale Professor of Human Development; Director, SSRI Douglas M. Teti Professor of Human Development, Psychology, and Pediatrics; Associate Director, SSRI Rhonda BeLue Associate Professor of Health Policy and Administration Kristin Buss - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

NIHGrant Writing Workshop

Susan McHaleProfessor of Human Development; Director, SSRI

Douglas M. TetiProfessor of Human Development, Psychology, and

Pediatrics; Associate Director, SSRIRhonda BeLue

Associate Professor of Health Policy and AdministrationKristin Buss

Professor of Psychology, College of the Liberal Arts

Michelle Frisco Associate Professor of Sociology and Demography,

College of the Liberal Arts

Page 2: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

NIH Organization NIH Funding Mechanisms The Grant Writing Process

Focus on the R01 The NIH Review Process

Overview of Review Meeting The Scoring Process A Penn State example

Workshop Evaluation

Workshop Outline

Page 3: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Thanks to: Lori Francis, Associate Professor of

Biobehavioral Health and Center for Family Research in Diverse Contexts, PSU

Donna Panasiti, Social Science Research Institute

Page 4: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

I. The NIH Department of Health and Human

Services National Institutes of Health

25 Awarding Institutes/Centers aka ICs (e.g., NICHD, NIMH, NIDA, NIA)

Center for Scientific Review Office of the Director

Page 5: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

The NIH Extramural Team

A. Program

B. Grants Management

C. Review

Page 6: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

A. The Program/Institute Staff

Program Administrator

Maintains knowledge of scientific area Attends study section meetings Makes funding recommendations Monitors scientific progress Identifies scientific area of importance Reports to senior staff Development of programs and initiatives

Page 7: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

B. Grants Management

Interprets Federal regulations and policies

Assures compliance with Federal regulations and policies

Monitors financial aspects of projects Interprets regulations and policy

Page 8: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

C. Review:Scientific Review Group (1st

Level)

Center for Scientific Review (CSR) or NIH Institute & Center (IC)

Scientific Review Group (SRG) Non-federal scientists with relevant

expertise Led by a Scientific Review Officer (SRO) http://www.csr.nih.gov/Roster_proto/

sectionI.asp

Page 9: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

C. Review:Advisory Council or Board (2nd

Level)

The potential awarding IC performs the second level of review.

Comprised of scientists from the extramural community and public representatives.

NIH program staff examine applications for impact (formerly “priority”) scores, percentile rankings, & summary statements against the IC’s needs.

Program staff provide grant funding plan to Advisory Council or Board.

Advisory Council or Board advises the IC director.

Director makes final decision.

Page 10: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

NIH Grant Application Cycle

Allocates Funds

Investigator NIHInstitution

Submits Application

Peer Review

Council Review

Funding Decision

Initiates Research

Conducts Research

Page 11: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Grant Application: It’s a process, not an event

1. Communicate with Program Officer Introducing ideas, getting feedback, pre-review

2. Get your proposal to the right review committee

Review the rosters and talk to colleagues Effectively wording the abstract Make a written request

3. Seek feedback from colleagues and consultants on drafts of the grant (prepare ahead!)

4. Consider who is likely to review your grant (review the rosters) and make sure to know and cite their work when relevant

5. Recognize that funding on first submission is rare

Page 12: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Ks: NIH Career Development Awards (K01, K02, K05, K07, K08, K22)

P01: Research Program Project Grant P30: Center Core Grants R01: NIH Research Project Grant Program R03: NIH Small Grant Program R13: NIH Support for Conferences and

Scientific Meetings (R13, U13) R15: NIH Academic Research Enhancement

Award (AREA)

II. NIH Grant Mechanisms

Page 13: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

R21: NIH Exploratory/Developmental Research Grant Award

R34: NIH Clinical Trial Planning Grant T series: NRSA Training Grants (T32, T34, T35,

T90, etc.) U series: Research Project Cooperative

Agreement Diversity Supplements: Research

Supplements to Promote Diversity in Health-related Research

Roadmap: NIH Roadmap Initiatives (Director’s Pioneer Award; Director’s New Innovative Program

NIH Grant Mechanisms (continued)

Page 14: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Pre-doctoral and Post-doctoral Training Awards (F-series) Focuses on the training environment,

research training plan, and the candidate’s strengths

Research strategy is 6 pages F31 covers doctoral study tuition and

living stipend (levels set by NIH). Up to 60 months of support.

F32 covers living stipend and funds for research/professional development

Page 15: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Career Awards (K-series) Nine different Career Development (K)

Awards Body of application is 12 pages for most Support individuals after they have

completed clinical training and have accepted a faculty position

Provide for release time for research and monies for research/faculty development

Page 16: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Small research grant Research strategy is 6 pages Can be used to collect pilot data,

conduct feasibility studies Often analysis of an existing dataset May be used to develop new research

technology $50K per year for 2 years

R03

Page 17: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

R21 Exploratory or Developmental

Grant Research strategy is 6 pages Often little or no pilot data Feasibility study 2 years of funding (Total of $275K) Not necessarily the first step for

new investigators

Page 18: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Supports the development of Phase III clinical trials

Establishment of the research team Development data management tools Definition of recruitment strategies Finalization of the protocol

Research strategy is 6 pages The planning grant is designed to lead to

an application for support of a full-scale trial

R34

Page 19: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

R15 Area Award Used to stimulate research in educational

institutions that have not been major recipients of NIH support

Research strategy is 12 pages Opportunity to conduct research; strengthen

the research environment of the institution; and benefit the student through exposure to and participation in research

Limited to up to three years of funding for total of $150,000

Preliminary data generally not required

Page 20: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

R01 (primary focus today) Used to support a discrete, specified,

circumscribed research project NIH’s most commonly used grant

program Research Strategy is 12 pages Advance permission required for

$500,000 or more (direct costs) in any year

Generally awarded for 3 to 5 years

Page 21: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Research Center Grants (P-series)

Established by ICs to meet special needs May support research and/or core

facilities Usually initiated by the IC

Request for Applications (RFA) P30, P50, P60, U54 P01 Center grants are investigator-

initiated, linked R01s with an additional core of funding

Page 22: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Administrative supplement to R01 grants and many other types

Need to have at least 2 years of funding left on the grant

Contact project officer for permission to submit

Can be used for students, doctoral students, junior investigators

Research Supplements to Promote Diversity in Health-Related Research

Page 23: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

New and Early Stage Investigators:A Competitive Edge New Investigator has not

previously served as a PI for an R01; may have been an investigator or received other smaller, developmental or research training awards

Early Stage Investigator (ESI) is within 10 years of completing his/her terminal research degree, or is within 10 years of completing medical residency

Page 24: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Grant writing is: A skill like any other… But not the same skill as article writing Instead, more of a problem-based

writing activity (theory and practice problem)

III. The Grant Writing Process

Page 25: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Start early, make a timeline and STICK TO IT Should allow time for serious pre-submission

review & subsequent revision Develop a relationship with project

officers It is not possible to overdo clarity Let your passion come through in your

proposal Take advantage of early stage and new

investigator opportunities

A few preliminary tips

Page 26: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Know what has been done Know what has been funded

NIH website Decide on the problem

Important enough to get funded but simple enough to explain as clean design in 12 pp (for the R01; less for other mechanisms)

Mediators and moderators, mechanisms of change

Assemble team--CAREFULLY

Preliminary research (R01)

Getting ready to write

Page 27: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Communicate with program officer Establish a relationship and trust

(funding decision) Acquire information on mechanism

and priorities Obtain input on aims/proposal

Getting ready to write

Page 28: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Face Page Table of Contents Performance Sites Other information

Project Summary/Abstract (Description)

Public Health Relevance Statement Facilities & Resources

Main Sections of the NIH Application(see Francis et al. for example)

Page 29: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Key Personnel Biosketches --with personal

statements Budgets (for each study year)

Budget Justification Clinical Trial and Human Embryonic

Stem Cell (HESC) List of Research Plan Attachments

More Sections

Page 30: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

[Introduction – revisions only] Specific Aims: The basis for the proposal’s

organization Research Strategy

Significance and Innovation Approach

Preliminary studies Design Sample/recruitment/power analyses Procedures & measures Analyses

Main Sections of the R01: Specific Research Plan

Page 31: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Page Limit Guide: Plan your proposal with these limits in mind

Section of Application Page Limits

Introduction (for resubmission application only) 1

Specific Aims 1

Research Approach: R03, R13/U13, R21, R36, R41, R43, Fellowships (F), SC2, SC3

6

Research Approach: R01, single project U01, R10, R15, R18, U18, R33, R24, R34, U34, R42, R44, DP3, G08, G11, G13, UH2, UH3, SC1

12

Biographical Sketch 4

Page limits may vary for other funding mechanisms. Check Funding Opportunity Announcement: http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/search_results.htm?scope=pa&year=active

Page 32: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Protection of Human Subjects Women and Minorities Planned Enrollment Table Children

References Cited Letters of Support Resource Sharing Plan Checklist SO START EARLY!

And More Sections

Page 33: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Impact and Significance Practice (2-3 sentences)

Prevalence of problem in population Important social concern

Theory (model) Building, testing, using

Innovation New directions, value added

Importance of Preliminary Research

Keys to R01 Success

Page 34: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Methods are very important Overall -- clarity and detail May include a table that traces aims to

hypotheses to constructs to measures (table/s)

Is the design feasible? Are there gaps in the methods (e.g., fidelity

for interventions) Stats are very, very important

(methodologist team member) Include a detailed timeline

Keys to Success - Methods

Page 35: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Community-based participatory research -- very strict about how this is done.

Lab versus field Focus groups, interviews, analyses

More Methods - Issues

Page 36: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Preference for representative samples Students only if relevant to

age/situation (e.g., college drinking) Generalizability from a single

entity (university, clinic, state) Unit of assignment is unit of

analysis

And More Methods: The Sample

Page 37: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Direct Costs Senior Personnel (PI, co-Is, project director)

(PSU fringe at 36.5%) Other Personnel (full time staff, RAs, part time

wages) (PSU fringe 36.5% for full time staff, 13.2% for Grad Assts AY; 7.9% for part time wages and summer)

Equipment Travel Participant/Trainee Support Costs

Budgets

Page 38: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Other Materials and supplies Publication costs Consultant services

Subawards/Consortium/Contractual Fees Other

Indirect Costs (> 45% at PSU, but does not include all expenses)

Budget justification

Budgets.2

Page 39: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Receiving the Summary Statements: The Hardest Part! 1. Reviews critical, even harsh2. Reviewers usually find grant’s

weaknesses, while recognizing strengths

3. Summary statements spend much more time on critique than praise

4. Many investigators experience a mixture of rage and depression when they read their summary statements and easily lose perspective

5. Take a day or two (or more!) and then read again with a cooler head

Page 40: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Receiving the Summary Statements: Bouncing Back!

1. Ask experienced colleagues to read reviews

2. Don’t interpret criticism as hopeless3. Program Officer may be helpful in

clarifying critique4. If “discussed” (rather than triaged), you

have a chance of funding in next round5. The lower the initial score, the fewer

problems and more likely to be successful after revision

Page 41: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

1. Persistence pays off in the grant process!!

2. Second submission must respond to the critiques through revision or clearly defending reasoning

3. Same reviewers may or may not review resubmission, but will see critique

Resubmission:Resilience and Flexibility!

Page 42: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Most Common Reasons for a Poor Score (in priority order)

Lack of impact or significance Lack of new or original ideas – show your passion! Hypotheses ill-defined, superficial, lacking, unfocused, or

unsupported by preliminary data Methods unsuitable, not feasible, not rigorous or not likely

to yield results; methods don’t clearly link to aims Design not logical, inappropriate instrumentation, poor

timing or conditions; doesn’t link well to aims Data management and analysis vague, not rigorous;

analyses don’t clearly link to aims Inadequate expertise or knowledge of field for PI; too little

time to devote to the work Poor resources or facilities; limited access to appropriate

population

Page 43: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

When to Revise Basic idea was significant and

innovative or these can be bolstered

Design/measurement/analysis problems can be clarified (more information) or fixed

Need preliminary data Problem is poor writing

Page 44: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

A. The Review Meeting B. Review Discussion C. The Scoring Process D. A Penn State Example

IV. The NIH Review Process

Page 45: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

A. The Review Meeting: The SRO’s Role Prior to Meeting Point of contact until review group meets

(then project officer) Analyze submissions for completeness and

conflicts Recruit ad hoc reviewers as needed Schedule 1-2 day meeting Assign applications to reviewers (at least 3)

Primary, secondary, discussant Create review order based on preliminary

impact scores from best to worst within categories

Page 46: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Reviewers’ Role Prior to Meeting Familiarize self with criteria, mechanisms, and

scoring Review assigned applications

Assign scores to each criteria and other areas Write bulleted strengths and weaknesses for each

criteria Reviews are advice to institutes for funding

decisions, not advice to PI Post scores and comments on NIH Commons Read other reviews of assigned applications Prepare presentation of reviews Skim/read non-assigned applications

Page 47: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Format of the Review Meeting

SRO opening remarks Chair orientation New investigator R01 grants Other R01 grants Other grant types (R03, R15, R21,

R34) Applications discussed in order of

Impact Score; bottom 50% are not discussed

Page 48: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Confidentiality Review order Proposals below median within

each category may not be discussed

SRO Opening Remarks

Page 49: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Chair Orientation Start with reviewer impact scores

May differ from posted scores Goal of discussion is to clarify not

reach agreement If scores are similar, shorter discussion If scores are dissimilar, longer

discussion Recommended time

Primary – 5 minutes Secondary – 3 minutes Discussant – 2 minutes

Page 50: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

B. Review Discussion Identify proposal Members in conflict leave Reviewers provide preliminary impact scores Reviews

Impact, Significance, Investigators, Innovation, Approach, Environment

Stress main points, do not repeat previous points Non-reviewers typically ask questions to clarify

Human Subjects issues affecting scoring Open discussion to entire committee

Page 51: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Review Discussion (continued) Ask for reviewers impact scores

again Identify the reviewers’

recommended range Ask if anyone wants to score

outside the range Entire committee records impact

score Discuss budget and other issues

Page 52: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

C. The Scoring Process1. Overall Impact Score: likelihood project will

“exert a sustained, powerful influence on the research field(s) involved (1-9 scale)

2. A separate 1-9 score for each of 5 core criteria (Significance, Investigators, Innovation, Approach, Environment)

3. Additional review criteria help determine scientific and technical merit BUT are not scored separately

4. Additional review considerations are addressed by reviewers, but are not scored & are discussed after group scores.

Page 53: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Score Criteria Overall Impact: will project exert a sustained,

powerful influence on the research field(s) as indexed by 5 core review criteria1. Significance: important problem addressed; how will this improve scientific knowledge, technical capability, and/or clinical practice

Page 54: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Impact Addresses: Probability of whether the research will exert a

sustained, powerful influence on the research field

Significance Addresses: Does the project address an important

problem or a critical barrier to progress in the field?

If the aims are achieved, how will scientific knowledge, technical capability, and/or clinical practice be improved?

What is the Difference Between Impact and Significance ?

Page 55: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Score Criteria (continued) 2. Investigators: PI & other researchers well suited to the project; appropriate experience & training; ongoing record of accomplishments; complementary & integrated experience; leadership approach, governance, and organizational structure appropriate for project

3. Innovation: the work challenges and seeks to shift current research or practice paradigms; utilizing novel theory, approaches or methods, instrumentation, or interventions; the work is novel

Page 56: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Score Criteria (continued)4. Approach: strategy, methodology, analyses are well-reasoned and appropriate; potential problems & alternative strategies thought through; benchmarks set; risk is managed

5. Environment: the environment will contribute to the project’s success; institutional support, equipment, & other resources sufficient; unique features of the environment, subject population, collaborative arrangements

Page 57: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Additional Review Criteria (not scored)

Human Subjects:1. Protection of human subjects2. Data safety monitoring plan (clinical trials only)3. Inclusion of women, minorities, children4. Vertebrate animals5. Biohazards

Page 58: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Additional Review Considerations

1. Budget and period of support2. Select agent research (infectious

agents)3. Applications from foreign organizations4. Resource sharing plans5. Additional comments to applicant

Page 59: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

CRITERIA SCORING SYSTEMHIGH1. Exceptional: Exceptionally strong with essentially no

weaknesses2. Outstanding: Extremely strong with negligible

weaknesses3. Excellent: Very strong with only some minor weaknessesMEDIUM4. Very Good: Strong but with numerous minor weaknesses5. Good: Strong but with at least one moderate weakness6. Satisfactory: Some strengths but also some moderate

weaknessesLow7. Fair: Some strengths but with at least one major

weakness8. Marginal: A few strengths and a few major weaknesses9. Poor: Very few strengths and numerous major

weaknesses

Page 60: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

CRITERIA SCORING SYSTEM (continued) Minor Weakness: An easily

addressable weakness that does not substantially lessen impact

Moderate Weakness: A weakness that lessens impact

Major Weakness: A weakness that severely limits impact

Page 61: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

CRITERIA SCORING SYSTEM (continued)

Final Overall Impact Score:Mean of all reviewers’ final impact scores X 10Range = 10 (high impact) -- 90 (low impact)

NOTE: New scoring likely to produce more applications with identical scores (“tie” scores). Thus, other factors (e.g., mission relevance, portfolio balance) will be considered when all other things are essentially equal

Page 62: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Research Plan Components Specific Aims

Includes language about the impact of the research Research Strategy

Includes Background & Significance; Preliminary Studies/Progress Report; Research Design & Methods

Facilities and Equipment Reflects the Environment criterion For ESIs describes the institutional investment in the

success of the investigator Biographical Sketch

Requires Personal Statement; no more than 15 pubs based on recency, importance to field, and/or relevance to the application

Key Sections in R01 Proposal Format

Page 63: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

• Does application challenge/seek to shift current research or clinical practice paradigms by utilizing novel theoretical concepts, approaches or methodologies, instrumentation, or interventions?

• Concepts, approaches or methodologies, instrumentation, or interventions novel to one field of research or novel in a broad sense?

• Refinement, improvement, or new application of theoretical concepts, approaches or methodologies, instrumentation, or interventions proposed?

• Not all applications need to be innovative!

Key sections (cont’d) Innovation

Page 64: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Key sections (cont’d) Approach

• Are the overall strategy, methodology, and analyses well-reasoned and appropriate to accomplish the Specific Aims of the project?

• Are potential problems, alternative strategies, and benchmarks for success presented?

• If the project is in the early stages of development, will the strategy establish feasibility and will particularly risky aspects be managed?

Page 65: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

• Personal Statement: • Why their experience and qualifications make them

particularly well-suited for their roles in the project• Publications:

• Recommended: no more than 15---up to five of the best; up to five of the most relevant to the proposed research; up to five of the most recent

• If Early Stage Investigators or New Investigators, do they have appropriate experience and training?

• If Established, have they demonstrated ongoing record of accomplishments that have advanced their field(s)?

Key Sections (cont’d) Investigators

Page 66: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

D. A Penn State Example Rhonda BeLue, Associate Professor of

Health Policy and Administration, College of Health and Human Development

Kristin Buss, Professor of Psychology, College of the Liberal Arts

Michelle Frisco, Associate Professor of Sociology and Demography, College of the Liberal Arts

Page 67: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

Enhancing Peer Review Criteria: http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/notice-files/not-od-09-025.htmlPage Limits: http://grants.nih.gov/grants/forms_page_limits.htmHuman Subjects: http://grants.nih.gov/grants/policy/hs/index.htmSF424 guidelines for submission: http://grants.nih.gov/grants/funding/424/index.htmGlossary: http://grants.nih.gov/grants/glossary.htm

Links of Interest

Page 69: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

NSF Proposal Writinghttp://www.cs.cmu.edu/~sfinger/advice/advice.html

Other Proposal Writing Guides http://www.learnerassociates.net/proposal/

Reasons Proposals Failhttp://chronicle.com/article/How-to-Fail-in-Grant-Writing/125620/--let

More general resources

Page 70: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

New and Early Stage Investigatorshttp://grants.nih.gov/grants/new_investigators/

New and Early Stage Investigator Resources

Page 71: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

http://public.csr.nih.gov/Pages/default.aspx

http://grants.nih.gov/grants/oer.htm (forms, grant search, etc.)

NIH Websites

Page 72: NIH Grant Writing Workshop

SSRI Listserv New subscribers can join the SSRI

listserv by sending mail to: mailto:L-SSRI-subscribe-request@li

sts.psu.edu