GC funding Archive

Professional Development: Brief Recap of the “How to Win Grants and Fellowships” Discussion

On Monday, December 3rd, Professor Timothy Alborn, Professor Dagmar Herzog, and Professor Michael Rawson shared their experiences and insights as both grant applicants and evaluators for a History Program professional development event entitled “How to Win Grants and Fellowships.”  I’ve written a brief recap of the discussion for those who were unable to attend, or for students who wish to supplement their notes from the event.

 

Recap

Professors Alborn and Rawson encouraged doctoral students and new faculty members to apply early and often for funding because rejection is common.  Professor Rawson mentioned that only 8% of projects receive funding, which makes coping skills and persistence particularly important for grant-seekers.

Professor Rawson also discussed the need to look at the proposal more as a marketing document with history included (rather than a history document with marketing included), although scholars sometimes feel uncomfortable with the idea of marketing or selling.  To communicate the goals and implications of your project to the members of the evaluation committee, it is useful to think about how to “sell” the project to non-specialists in particular.  Since the evaluation committee members are not likely to be specialists in your particular field, Professor Alborn recommended citing major works with which scholars are familiar, even if those books do not inform your project as directly as lesser-known articles and monographs.  Positioning your project and arguments vis-à-vis a well-known book can help the non-specialists on the evaluation committee understand what makes your work special and groundbreaking.

To increase your chances of receiving funding, Professor Herzog suggested finding and using models of successful grant or fellowship proposals from several different fields to see how others structured their documents, and especially their abstracts.  Colleagues, one’s future Dean and college grant office, and the funding agency itself serve as good sources of feedback for proposal drafts prior to submission according to Professor Alborn.  Following rejection, agencies can often provide detailed feedback on the assessment of the proposal, which can help with revisions to your standard proposal.

The panel agreed that articulating the “So what?” question of why the research is important serves as the most critical component of the proposal.  Since funding committees tend to be composed of scholars from a variety of disciplines, Professor Alborn recommended that historians should not base the value of the project on simply using a new or interesting archive; the non-historians who serve on the committee will want to know how one intends to use the archive and read the sources.  Nor does filling a gap in the scholarly literature automatically make the project competitive.

Professor Herzog said that the argument in favor of the project should be passionate and should discuss how the proposed research will change our thinking about big issues.  One way to demonstrate your project’s importance is to link your work to questions and conflicts that interest people more generally such as how power works, what justice is, why human beings do what they do, and how change happens.  Problems or puzzles can serve as good ways to open your proposal and get readers thinking along with you about how your project will answer important questions.  Not only should your proposal address larger issues, but each chapter should also have a surprise, puzzle, or argument that can help make it interesting to the committee, recommended Professor Herzog.

Professor Alborn talked about the proposal as a document demonstrating how your mind works, and not a research prison sentence.  The proposal shows how you approach problems and texts, your methodological influences, and how you solve problems—grant committees expect that if you can write a convincing grant proposal, the scholarship they fund based on the proposal will be interesting and well-done, even if the finished project does not match the proposal precisely.  In fact, the committee agreed that elements of one’s work should change over the course of research due to immersion in the sources and further thinking about the topic.

Accuracy and professionalism are critical for successful proposals.  Professor Rawson emphasized that attention to detail and adhering to the rules of grammar are considered marks of professionalism that strongly influence the decisions of the committee.  Professor Alborn highlighted the bibliography as an element of the proposal that committees use to assess the carefulness of the applicant, which is thought to suggest the carefulness and quality of the scholar’s overall work.

 

Many Thanks!

We would like to thank Professor Timothy Alborn, Professor Dagmar Herzog, and Professor Michael Rawson for their participation and thoughtful advice.

For more information about how to win grants and fellowships, please see the career advice heading under the professional development menu at the top of this page.

Extended Deadline: CLAGS Fellowships and Awards: December 15th 2012

The Center for Lesbian and Gay Studies (CLAGS)

www.CLAGS.org

 Extended Deadline: Fellowships and Awards: December 15th 2012

The following fellowships and awards are due on or before NOVEMBER 15th 2012. Please review the award guidelines to see if you qualify and for further application instructions.

The Martin Duberman Fellowship

An endowed fellowship named for CLAGS founder and first executive director, Martin Duberman, this fellowship is awarded to a senior scholar (tenured university professor or advanced independent scholar) from any country doing scholarly research on the lesbian/gay/bisexual/transgender/queer (LGBTQ) experience. The winner may be asked to participate in CLAGS’s colloquium series the following academic year to present her/his research project.

Award: $7,500

Joan Heller-Diane Bernard Fellowship in Lesbian and Gay Studies

This fellowship supports research by a junior scholar (graduate student, untenured university professor or independent researcher) and a senior scholar (tenured university professor or advanced independent scholar) into the impact of lesbians and/or gay men on U.S. society and culture. Scholars conducting research on lesbians are especially encouraged to apply. It is open to researchers both inside and outside the academy and is adjudicated by the Joan Heller- Diane Bernard Fellowship committee in conjunction with CLAGS. The winner may be asked to participate in CLAGS’s colloquium series the following academic year to present her/his research project.

Award: Two awards each in the amount of $6,250

The Robert Giard Fellowship

An annual award named for Robert Giard, a portrait, landscape, and figure photographer whose work often focused on LGBTQ lives and issues, this award is presented to an emerging, early or mid-career artist from any country working in photography, photo-based media, video, or moving image, including short-form film or video of no more than 30 minutes in length. This award will support a directed project, one that is new or continuing, that addresses issues of sexuality, gender, or LGBTQ identity.

Award: $7,500

Deadline: December 15, 2012.

For information about applying, go to http://web.gc.cuny.edu/clags/index.php?p=fellowships_awards

ALL Fellowships and Awards inquiries should be addressed to:clagsfellowships@gmail.com

Graduate Center Dissertation Fellowship Deadline: Monday, December 17th

From: Sponzo, Rachel

Dear Level III Students:

This is just a reminder that the deadline for the Graduate Center Dissertation Fellowship Deadline is Monday, December 17, 2012 at 12:00pm.

The Application Guidelines, Cover Sheet, and a list of Frequently Asked Questions can be found on the Provost’s Office Website, under the “important updates” section in the upper right-hand corner,http://www.gc.cuny.edu/About-the-GC/Provosts-Office.  Your GC login and password are needed to access these materials.

Applicants must be Level III no later than the registrar’s February 15, 2013 change of status deadline.  Students who are currently at level II may apply if they expect to be level III by February 15.

If you have questions, please contact Rachel Sponzo at rsponzo@gc.cuny.edu.

Best regards,

Rachel Sponzo

Office of the Associate Provost

212-817-7282

New Media Lab $500 Grant for Digital Projects

New Media Lab Grant Information and Application

History and Public Health Student Grant

Beginning September 2012 the New Media Lab will offer $500 grants to support digital projects by Graduate Center students in the History or Public Health Ph.D. programs, or to support digital projects that relate to history or public health by students in other Graduate Center Ph.D. programs. The grant will require no additional NML work time and the funds may be used in any way the recipient deems appropriate to support his or her research. This grant is provided with the support of an anonymous contribution.

Eligibility:
– Applicants must be Graduate Center doctoral students enrolled in either the History or Public Health programs or be students in other Graduate Center Ph.D. programs whose digital projects relate directly to either of these disciplines.
–Applicants must have worked at the New Media lab on the project for at least three months prior to seeking this grant support. (to apply for a position at the NML go to: http:/ /newmedialab.cuny.edu/get-involved/)
–Students can receive the grant one time only, Application Process:
–Submit application form (below) with an accompanying short description of the digital project (no longer than one page) to NML Managing Director Andrea Ades Vasquez [avasquezl@gc.cuny.edu).
–There will be a rolling deadline with applications accepted from September 2012- May 2013.
–Decisions will be made within four weeks of application submission by Andrea Ades Vasquez and NML codirector Steve Brier.
–A brief project update must be submitted to Ms. Vasquez within six months of receiving the grant.