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Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare [email protected] Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC Writing Consultant

Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare [email protected] Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

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Page 1: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences

November 13, 2007

Libby O’[email protected]

Ph.D. Candidate, NeuroscienceUCLA GWC Writing Consultant

Page 2: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

PART 2 Outline

1.) Part 1 Review: -NRSA format-Literature reviews

2.) Writing the Experimental Design & Methods Section:-tips and strategies for the methods section

3.) Bringing it all together-four sections that will set your proposal apart

4.) Common Reviewer Complaints-things to keep in mind

Page 3: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

Part 1 Review

NRSA components

The Background & Significance Section (Literature Reviews)

Page 4: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

NRSA Grant Proposals

Have specific and standard format:

(1) Specific Aims and Hypotheses(2) Background and Significance(3) Methods and Experimental Design(4) Conclusions and Interpretations

We will add components to this format slightly to make your proposal even more compelling and hopefully more successful

Page 5: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

(1) Broad Summary Statement of Project

• 1-2 paragraphs

• Place the overall research question in perspective

• Attention grabbing

• Use lay language and avoid references when possible

Page 6: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

(2) Specific Aims and Hypotheses

• Usually 2-5 specific aims are listed

• Identify the project goals and main hypotheses to be tested

• Should list aims using numbers and simple, specific sentences

• Helpful to use different formatting tools (boldface, italics) to identify specific aims and hypotheses

Page 7: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

(3) Background and Significance

• Review of the current literature relevant to the proposed project

• Putting the research question into perspective

• Explicit explanation of the potential scientific impact of the project

• How does your research question address a hole in the literature (how is your question novel)?

• What progression of experiments that led to your project?

• Clear and well organized--use subheadings where possible

Page 8: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

(4) Preliminary Data• If applicable and available

• If included, should be brief

• Use images, graphs, tables

• Main goal is to demonstrate that you can perform the technique/analysis/procedure you are proposing

• Secondary goal is to indicate that your initial data is coming out as expected

Page 9: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

(5) Methods and Experimental Design

• Description of research design

• Include information on:-Materials-Subjects-Instruments-data collection procedures-data analysis methods

• How will you address possible experimental confounds in your design?

• Look at previous grant proposals from your lab to get a sense of the scope and details needed

Page 10: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

(6) Expected Results and Possible Caveats

• What are your expected results?

• Given these results, what is your interpretation?

• How does this interpretation fit with the concepts you have developed in the background and significance section?

• What are potential confounds or caveats in your experimental design?

• Discuss alternative approaches that may be used to address this confounds and caveats

Page 11: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

(7) Broad Conclusions and Implications

• 1-2 paragraphs

• Place the overall research question in perspective

• Spell out exactly how the proposed research will advance the field

• Use lay language and avoid references when possible

Page 12: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

(8) Timeline or Work Plan

• Chart format is helpful

• Include information on the duration of experiments, activities that will be conducted

• Optional for NRSA grants, but extremely helpful to have for yourself

Page 13: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

Functions of Literature Reviews

• Placing the current study within the wider disciplinary conversation

• Illustrates the novelty and importance of the project

• Explains how your research questions and/or research approach is different from those previously published

• Justifies your methodology

• Demonstrates your familiarity with the topic and your ability to study it successfully

Page 14: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

Tips and Strategies

• Categorize your sources into topic clusters

• Look for trends and themes and synthesize related information:• Develop the positions that are relevant for your project• Build on conclusions that have led to your project• Identify holes due to flawed assumptions or improper methods

• Include a certain amount of simple reporting of previous results, but remember • You are writing discursive prose• Your primary goal is to critique

Page 15: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

Tips and Strategies (Cont.)

• You can’t include every single study that has ever been published on your topic!

• Avoid polemics, praise, and blame• Focus on justifying your research questions and

methodology

Page 16: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

Exercise: Literature Review Checklist(getting ready to write)

Page 17: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

Writing the Background & Significance Section

Critical Questions

1.) why does the proposed research need to be conducted?

2.) how is it different from other studies?

3.) where does the proposed research fit within the current knowledge?

4.) what will the proposed research contribute to the field?

Page 18: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

Part 2

The Methods & Experimental Design Section

Page 19: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

Writing the Methods and Experimental Design Section

• Definitions

• Functions

• Types/Styles

• Tips and Strategies

Page 20: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

(5) Methods and Experimental Design

• Description of research design

• Include information on:• Materials• Subjects• Instruments• data collection procedures• data analysis methods

• How will you address possible experimental confounds in your design?

• Look at previous grant proposals from your lab to get a sense of the scope and details needed

Page 21: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

Methods and Experimental Design

What is experimental design/methodology?

description of the specific procedures you will use to address your specific aims

Organization and clarity are fundamental!

Page 22: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

Functions of Methods Sections

• Describe the overall methodological approach

• Illustration of how methods will answer your research questions

• Development of rationale or scientific strategy

• Description of specific methods of data collection

• Explanation of data analysis methods/strategies

• Address potential limitations and interpretations

Page 23: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

Suggested FormatSpecific Aim #1

Rationale: • how does this design relate to your overall hypothesis?

Methods: • data collection, data quality control, data management, statistical

analysis

Expected Results: • How will you interpret the expected outcome?• What are some different possible outcomes?• How will these be different outcomes be interpreted and

addressed?

(repeat for each specific aim)

Page 24: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

Exercise 1 (10-15 minutes)Methods and Experimental Design Checklist

• Are the methods I chose feasible and within my competence?

• Have I made sure my experiment can yield statistically significant results?

• Did I address difficulties I may encounter with the proposed approaches, show I can handle them, and propose solutions and alternatives?

• Did I consider how the limitations of the approaches may affect my results and data?

• Did I discuss methods for gathering and interpreting data?

• Did I describe the kinds of results I expect and how they support continuing my project?

• Did I show I am aware of the limits to and value of the kinds of results I expect?

• Have I convinced will be able to interpret my results?

• Did I define the criteria for evaluating the success or failure of each experiment?

• Did I state the conditions under which my experimental data would support or contradict my hypothesis?

Page 25: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

Part 3

Setting Your Proposal Apart

Page 26: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

4 Sections to Set Your Proposal Apart

(A) Opening statement

(B) Summary and integration of background literature and preliminary data (if applicable)

(C) Possible caveats and confounds

(D) Final take-home message

Page 27: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

(A) Broad Summary Statement of Project

• 1-2 paragraphs

• Place the overall research question in perspective

• Attention grabbing

• This section sets up the reader for why your project is unique and deserves funding

Page 28: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

(B) Expected Results and Possible Caveats

• What are your expected results?

• Given these results, what is your interpretation?

• How does this interpretation fit with the concepts you have developed in the background and significance section?

• What are potential confounds or caveats in your experimental design?

• Discuss alternative approaches that may be used to address this confounds and caveats

Page 29: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

(C) Summary and Integration of Background Literature and Preliminary

Studies• 1-2 paragraphs

• Place the overall research question in perspective

• Spell out exactly how the proposed research will advance the field

• You have illustrated how previous research remains insufficient, AND how your preliminary data has positioned you to make the advance that your field needs

Page 30: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

(D) Broad Conclusions and Implications

• 1-2 paragraphs

• Place the overall research question in perspective

• Spell out exactly how the proposed research will advance the field

• Final message to leave reviewer with should be positive and should reinforce why the project is unique and deserves funding

Page 31: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

Part 4

Common Reviewer Complaints

Page 32: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

Common Reviewer Complaints

• Lack of original or novel ideas

• Scientific rationale not valid

• Project lacks focus, studies are not logically related, experiments do not follow from one another

• Proposed studies based on shaky hypotheses

• Alternative hypotheses are not considered

• Proposed experiments are descriptive and do not test specific hypotheses

Page 33: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

• Lack of alternative methodological approaches in case the primary approach does not work out

• Insufficient methodological detail to suggesting applicant doesn’t know what she/he are doing

• No recognition of potential problems and pitfalls

• Proposal lacks critical literature references, reviewers think that applicant does not know the literature

Common Reviewer Complaints(cont.)

Page 34: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

Session 2 Summary

1.) Reviewed and discussed experimental methods and design section

2.) Discussed 4 sections that will set your proposal apart

3.) Reviewed common reviewer complaints and how to avoid them

4.) Reviewed the background and significance section (from Part 1)

Page 35: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

UCLA Grant Writing Resources

Graduate Writing Center (GWC)

Individual Writing Consultation Appointments

http://gsa.asucla.ucla.edu/gsrc/gwc/index.htm

Grad Division’s Extramural Fellowship Proposal Consultants

Dr. Chuck Olmstead (physical and life sciences)

310-835-5094

[email protected]

Page 36: Writing Research Proposals in the Natural and Biomedical Sciences November 13, 2007 Libby O’Hare eohare@ucla.edu Ph.D. Candidate, Neuroscience UCLA GWC

Acknowledgements

UCLA Graduate Writing CenterMarilyn Gray

Christine Wilson

UCLA Academic Technology ServicesChristine Wells