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Overview of Funding Opportunities at the National Science Foundation Division of Undergraduate Education: Advanced Technological Education (ATE) Pamela Brown, NSF Program Director Division of Undergraduate Education (DUE) CUR Dialogues 2012 Washington, DC February 24, 2012 1

NSF DUE Mission – Promote excellence in undergraduate STEM education for all students

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Overview of Funding Opportunities at the National Science Foundation Division of Undergraduate Education: Advanced Technological Education (ATE) Pamela Brown, NSF Program Director Division of Undergraduate Education (DUE) CUR Dialogues 2012 Washington, DC February 24, 2012. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: NSF DUE Mission – Promote excellence in undergraduate STEM education for all students

Overview of Funding Opportunities at the National Science Foundation Division of

Undergraduate Education: Advanced Technological Education (ATE)

Pamela Brown, NSF Program DirectorDivision of Undergraduate Education (DUE)

CUR Dialogues 2012Washington, DC

February 24, 2012

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Page 2: NSF DUE Mission – Promote excellence in undergraduate STEM education for all students

NSF DUE Mission – Promote excellence in undergraduate STEM education for all students

Each solicitation has its own objectives.

All proposals are judged on common intellectual merit and broader impacts. Some solicitations have additional criteria.

The success of the NSF’s effort depends on the peer review process.

Page 3: NSF DUE Mission – Promote excellence in undergraduate STEM education for all students

Matching proposal goals and activities with those of the solicitation is important for successful funding

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Page 4: NSF DUE Mission – Promote excellence in undergraduate STEM education for all students

The DUE web page – www.NSF.gov - provides information about solicitation components and awards

Information on past awards is found by clicking on the “Awards” tab at the top of the page

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Page 5: NSF DUE Mission – Promote excellence in undergraduate STEM education for all students

1. Advanced Technological Education (ATE) promotes workforce development in high-technology fields, with leadership coming from community colleges

• The Science and Advanced Technology Act of 1992 (SATA) mandated the creation of ATE, with continuing reauthorizations under the America Competes Act.

• Program focuses on the education of science and engineering technicians for high-technology fields that drive the nation’s economy.

• Grades 7-12, 2yr- and 4-yr institutions can be supported.• Community colleges have leadership roles on all projects.

Page 6: NSF DUE Mission – Promote excellence in undergraduate STEM education for all students

ATE’s objectives can be met through activities to improve education and opportunities.

Partnerships between academic institutions and employers to promote improved technician education.

Curriculum development, college faculty and secondary school teacher professional development, career pathways from secondary schools to two-year colleges and to four-year institutions.

Articulation agreementsEducational research to advance knowledge related to

technician education6

Page 7: NSF DUE Mission – Promote excellence in undergraduate STEM education for all students

The ATE Program has several tracks Projects which focus on:

Program Development, Implementation and Improvement;

Professional Development for Educators; Curriculum and Educational Materials Development; Teacher Preparation; Business and Entrepreneurial skills for students in

technician education programs; Leadership Capacity Building for faculty.

Centers of Excellence – National, Regional, Resource:

Targeted Research on Technician Education

Page 8: NSF DUE Mission – Promote excellence in undergraduate STEM education for all students

Small Grants for Institutions New to the ATE Program provide colleges with a chance to “get their foot in the door.”

Simulate implementation, adaptation, and innovation in all areas supported by ATE.

Broaden the base of participation of community colleges in ATE.

Strengthen the role of community colleges in meeting needs of business and industry

Available only to community college campuses that have not had an ATE award within the last 10 years or never had one.

Limited to $200,000 over 3 years

Funding rate for FY10 was between 70-80% for this area8

Page 9: NSF DUE Mission – Promote excellence in undergraduate STEM education for all students

Collaboration between educational institutions and industry is an important component of ATEPartnershipsInternshipsIndustry input driving curriculum

Hire adjunct faculty from industrySkill standards

Industry Advisory BoardCareer pathwaysEconomic Development/WIB involvement (both state

and local)

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Page 10: NSF DUE Mission – Promote excellence in undergraduate STEM education for all students

The ATE solicitation (11-692) contains links to resources

ATE Centers: http://www.atecenters.org Evalua|t|e Center: http://www.evalu-ate.org ATE Central: http://atecentral.net/ ATE PI Guide: http://govpiguide.org/scenarios www.teachingtechnicians.org (SCATE Center) “Educating Biotechnicians”:

http://www.aacc.nche.edu/Resources/aaccprograms/ate/Documents/biotech_report.pdf

“Preparing Energy Technicians for the 21st Century Workforce”:http://www.ateec.org/store/catalog/Energy-General---Preparing-

Energy-Technicians-for-the-21st-Century-Workforce-400.html

Page 11: NSF DUE Mission – Promote excellence in undergraduate STEM education for all students

ATE is NSF DUE’s largest program for community colleges

Page 12: NSF DUE Mission – Promote excellence in undergraduate STEM education for all students

Highlights of The Review Process All proposals must address Intellectual Merit and

Broader Impacts

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Page 13: NSF DUE Mission – Promote excellence in undergraduate STEM education for all students

Reviewing for the NSF is a good way to improve grant writing skills

Reviewers are solicited by program directors. You can volunteer to review for a program; you will need to submit a CV)

~5-6 reviewers/panel

Reviewers receive ~12 proposals electronically 2 to 3 weeks before the panel.

Reviewers electronically prepare reviews and assign individual ratings (E,V, G,F, P) before the review panel meets.

Page 14: NSF DUE Mission – Promote excellence in undergraduate STEM education for all students

Reviewers rate proposals from Fair to Excellent and prepare comments on strengths and weaknesses/concerns

Excellent (5) Very Good (4) Good (3) Fair (2) Poor (1) Reviewer comments should align with the rating Ratings may be changed after the panel discussion

Usually a rating of higher than 3.5 makes the proposal competitive

Program directors make funding recommendations

Page 15: NSF DUE Mission – Promote excellence in undergraduate STEM education for all students

Reviewer written comments include intellectual merit, broader impacts and a summary statement

Intellectual merit (IM) General summary of project (2-3

sentences) Describe Strengths Describe Weaknesses/concerns

Broader impacts (BI) Describe Strengths Describe Weaknesses/concerns

Summary statement---Again Describe…. Overall strengths Overall concerns And a Rationale that justifies your rating

Page 16: NSF DUE Mission – Promote excellence in undergraduate STEM education for all students

Reviewers meet to discuss the proposal and write a panel summary

Held Over Two Days in Washington DC

Panel Chair (picked by program director ahead of time) establishes order of proposal review process

Proposals are discussed individually

A “scribe” is designated to capture all of the points brought up in discussion and produce a summary review – called the “Panel Summary”

The reviews and panel summaries are written to provide guidance for declines and negotiating points for awards

Page 17: NSF DUE Mission – Promote excellence in undergraduate STEM education for all students

Reviews and panel summaries are written for both applicants and NSF program directorsNSF program directors

Informs recommendations relative to fundingGuides pre-award negotiations

Applicants If proposal is funded:

Provides suggestions for improving project If proposal is not funded:

Provides information to guide a revision of the proposal

Page 18: NSF DUE Mission – Promote excellence in undergraduate STEM education for all students

Competitive proposals share common features

Original ideas. Potentially high impact. Succinct, focused project plan. Sufficient detail provided. Realistic amount of work – timeline and responsibility

delineated. Cost effective – budget aligned with activities. Demonstrated knowledge of field (literature survey) and

experience of PIs. Project builds on prior knowledge. Rationale and evidence of potential effectiveness. Likelihood the project will be sustained. Solid evaluation plan including formative and summative

assessment.

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Page 19: NSF DUE Mission – Promote excellence in undergraduate STEM education for all students

Writing a good proposal requires time and commitment

Start EARLYGet acquainted with FASTLANERead the Program Solicitation and follow the guidelines. Read

the Grant Proposal Guide (GPG). Learn about the recent DUE awards using the NSF Award

Search tool Become an NSF reviewer Contact (e-mail is best) a program officer to discuss your idea.

This may cause you to refine your idea and may prevent you from applying to the wrong program

Program Officers in DUE: Check the solicitations for names and contact information. Outreach is part of our job!

Page 20: NSF DUE Mission – Promote excellence in undergraduate STEM education for all students

Understanding the review process should help you to prepare better proposals.

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Page 21: NSF DUE Mission – Promote excellence in undergraduate STEM education for all students

Thank you for your attentionFor more information:

DUE Web Site - http://www.nsf.gov/div/index.jsp?div=DUE

Vet ideas with a program officerVolunteer to review proposals.

Opinions expressed in this presentation are those of the presenter and are not official NSF policy