Research, Scholarship, and Creative Endeavors: Information for researchers in the College of Design at Iowa State University
Friday, October 5, 2012
NSF Workshop, Oct. 16-17
Science: Becoming the Messenger—An NSF Workshop, Oct. 16-17, Gateway Hotel, Ames, IA
Part of Iowa EPSCoR’s commitment to science in the public interest. An NSF workshop for faculty, principal investigators, early career researchers, postdocs, graduate students, undergraduates, and communications professionals in Iowa who would like to learn to communicate science effectively to a broad audience. Led by three accomplished communicators and trainers—Emmy-award-winning television producer Joe Schreiber, former PBS executive Dan Agan, and bestselling science author Chris Mooney. The workshop is free but registration is required. Registration closes on October 5 or earlier if the workshop fills up sooner. Click the above URL for more information or to register.
VPRED listening session
Quisenberry to hold another listening session
Vice president for research and economic development Sharron Quisenberry will hold another listening session this fall with research faculty and staff as part of her review of the services provided by her office. Quisenberry and associate vice president for business and finance Pam Cain will convene the listening session Friday, Oct. 12 (10 a.m.-noon, MU Gallery). They'd like to hear what shortfalls exist and what is needed to build an infrastructure that can manage Iowa State's growing research enterprise. Quisenberry held two such sessions last fall and said the input was helpful.
Call for Entries: Next Generation Design Competition
This
year Metropolis challenges
you to develop solutions that empower, advance, and include groups often
overlooked in the design process (including but not limited to, our rapidly
increasing aging population and citizens with disabilities). The
annual Next Generation® Design Competition is open for
entries. Consider the 1.13 billion people with unique needs worldwide.
ISU Industry Team Announcement
View document
This memo is to announce the transfer of the OSPA-Industry team to the Office of Intellectual Property and Technology Transfer, effective October 1, 2012.
This memo is to announce the transfer of the OSPA-Industry team to the Office of Intellectual Property and Technology Transfer, effective October 1, 2012.
Thursday, October 4, 2012
RFA: Basic social and behavioral research on culture, health, and wellbeing (R24)
This Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA), issued on behalf of the NIH Basic Behavioral and Social Sciences Opportunity Network (OppNet), will provide grants for infrastructure support to develop, strengthen, and evaluate transdisciplinary approaches and methods for basic behavioral and/or social research on the relationships among cultural practices/beliefs, health, and wellbeing.
Posted Date
|
September 11, 2012
|
Letter of Intent Due Date
|
November 16, 2012
|
Application Due Date(s)
|
December 17, 2012
|
AIDS Application Due Date(s)
|
February 13, 2013
|
Scientific Merit Review
|
May/June 2013
|
Advisory Council Review
|
August 2013
|
Earliest Start Date(s)
|
September 2013
|
Expiration Date
|
December 18, 2012
|
Due Dates for E.O. 12372
|
Not Applicable
|
Wednesday, October 3, 2012
Publication Subvention Grants Program - Due 10/5/12
Publication Subvention Grants Program
http://www.vpresearch.iastate.edu/en/funding/publication_subvention_grants_program/
Request for Proposals
Deadline: October 5, 2012
Deadline: October 5, 2012
http://www.vpresearch.iastate.edu/en/funding/publication_subvention_grants_program/
Tuesday, October 2, 2012
New funding initiative intended to spur big thinking in research
New funding initiative intended to spur big thinking in research
from Inside Iowa State
By Anne Krapfl
September 27, 2012
First mentioned Sept. 14 in his installation address, president Steven Leath released this week the details of a funding initiative to support new multidisciplinary research programs that will have a "transformational impact" on the university, the state and the country.
The "pursuit" funds -- dollars that don't support the research itself but rather the preparation of larger-scale research funding proposals -- will be awarded by March to up to three teams. Each team could receive $500,000 annually for three years.
"This initiative is intended to create a new culture of interdisciplinary and collaborative research at Iowa State, a culture that encourages 'thinking big,'" Leath said in his installation address.
He said the program will identify research areas that are core to the university and "move them to the next level" to address topics of state and national importance. Successfully competing for large external grants and contracts will help build the university's reputation for innovation, he said.
"I encourage all Iowa State faculty to . . . consider creating teams to take advantage of this new initiative to promote innovation and grow the research enterprise at Iowa State," Leath wrote in a letter to all faculty.
Leath noted that preparing successful grant proposals at that scale is an especially time-consuming venture. According to his letter, emailed to faculty on Tuesday, appropriate uses of pursuit funding would be:
from Inside Iowa State
By Anne Krapfl
September 27, 2012
First mentioned Sept. 14 in his installation address, president Steven Leath released this week the details of a funding initiative to support new multidisciplinary research programs that will have a "transformational impact" on the university, the state and the country.
The "pursuit" funds -- dollars that don't support the research itself but rather the preparation of larger-scale research funding proposals -- will be awarded by March to up to three teams. Each team could receive $500,000 annually for three years.
"This initiative is intended to create a new culture of interdisciplinary and collaborative research at Iowa State, a culture that encourages 'thinking big,'" Leath said in his installation address.
He said the program will identify research areas that are core to the university and "move them to the next level" to address topics of state and national importance. Successfully competing for large external grants and contracts will help build the university's reputation for innovation, he said.
"I encourage all Iowa State faculty to . . . consider creating teams to take advantage of this new initiative to promote innovation and grow the research enterprise at Iowa State," Leath wrote in a letter to all faculty.
Big effort
The scale of the Presidential Initiative for Interdisciplinary Research -- and not only the funding level -- sets it apart from other pursuit funding opportunities at Iowa State. In addition to a core group of five to 10 faculty and staff members from multiple academic units, research teams must include partners or collaborators from universities, industry, national laboratories, foundations and other organizations. Over the three years of the program, teams are expected to submit multiple proposals for external large-scale research grants and secure funding that far exceeds their ISU pursuit support. And the proposed research question itself must be "of a scope and complexity" that it demands broad collaboration and appeals to more than one funding agency.Leath noted that preparing successful grant proposals at that scale is an especially time-consuming venture. According to his letter, emailed to faculty on Tuesday, appropriate uses of pursuit funding would be:
- Teaching release during the academic year
- Hiring consultants to add value to the team
- Holding workshops to develop and strengthen the connections among ISU and non-ISU partners
- Faculty summer salaries
- Graduate students
- Preliminary investigations
- Research-related supplies and equipment
Companion program
The initiative also includes a smaller companion program, directed at research areas that are still emerging, more limited in scope or have a higher risk. Pursuit funding grants in the range of $50,000 to $100,000 could be awarded to help such teams also secure collaborative research grants.Timeline
Research teams striving for pursuit funding will submit a three-page white paper by Dec. 1. It will include long-term research goals, an outline of research planned and budget, plans for partnership and collaboration with other organizations, and a list of team members and their respective roles. From the white paper submissions, some teams will be invited to prepare full proposals by Feb. 1, 2013. The final awards will be announced by March 1. Leading the review process will be the President's Committee for Institutional Excellence, with assistance from subject experts in industry, higher education and government laboratories.More information
Two campus forums will be held this fall to provide more information about the initiative and respond to questions from teams interested in submitting white papers. Forum details will be shared soon. Questions also may be directed to Tahira Hira, senior policy adviser to the president, 294-7239.E-News for Researchers, October 2, 2012
E-News for Researchers, October 2, 2012
Office of the Vice President for Research and Economic Development
Office of the Vice President for Research and Economic Development
NEH-NIH Webinar Links [10/4/12]
Dear College of Design Faculty and Staff,
Sandra Norvell
The Grants Office (VPR/ED)
The Center for Excellence in the Arts and Humanities (CEAH)
171 Carver Hall
Iowa State University
The National Endowment for the Arts and the National
Institutes of Health will co-host a free webinar from 2 to 3 p.m. this
Thursday, Oct. 4, to present a new funding opportunity on culture and health.
The Request for Applications (RFA) will support research projects that bring
together teams of social and behavioral researchers and arts and cultural
experts to gain new insights into the relationships between culture and health.
Some of you have experienced difficulty with the NEH/NIH
webinar links provided in Monday's "This Week in the College of
Design" e-update. To join the webinar on Thursday, go to https://artsgov.adobeconnect.com/_a1100909356/artsdev5
and check the "Enter as a Guest" radio button. Type in your name and
click "Enter Room" to participate. You may listen using your
computer's speakers or dial in to (877) 685-5350 and use participant code
739587.
An archive of the webinar will be posted at http://www.arts.gov/research/convenings
on Monday, Oct. 8. It will also be posted on the ISU Center for Excellence in
the Arts and Humanities website when it becomes available. For more
information, see http://www.nea.gov/news/news12/NEA-NIH-webinar.html.
Sincerely,
The Grants Office (VPR/ED)
The Center for Excellence in the Arts and Humanities (CEAH)
171 Carver Hall
Iowa State University
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