Sentences with phrase «nih grant writing»

See resources written by Christopher Dant, PhD, at Norris Cotton Cancer Center and the Department of Immunology / Microbiology at Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth for tips on NIH Grant Writing and creating Peer - Reviewed Biomedical Manuscripts.

Not exact matches

Her first break was a grant from NIH, which she wrote in collaboration with a professor at another university.
The «guidance» provided in this announcement in fact «reflects what many NRSA training programs, particularly our most successful ones, are already doing with respect to providing career guidance, training in grant writing, and tracking of trainees,» NIH's Office of Extramural Research told Next Wave through spokesperson Ralbovsky.
► «Armed with new data showing black applicants suffer a 35 % lower chance of having a grant proposal funded than their white counterparts, NIH officials are gearing up to test whether reviewers in its study sections give lower scores to proposals from African - American applicants,» Jeffrey Mervis wrote on Thursday.
Kasim Ortiz says the biggest challenge minority students face in graduate school is finding a mentor to walk them through the NIH grant - writing process.
«Sally is right that it would take a sea change in policy at the NIH» to gradually shift money «from R01s to training grants,» Tilghman writes in an e-mail that emphasizes the importance of making the shift gradual.
Paula Stephan, an economist at Georgia State University in Atlanta and a member of the current report's modeling subcommittee (Stephan was also a member of that 1998 NRC committee), writes to Science Careers in an e-mail that it's «disappointing to see that NIH did not figure out a way to shift more funds into training grants and fellowships and away from research assistantship stipends» or «implement any requirement for limiting the amount of salary that can be written off of grants — something that could dampen the demand for graduate students.»
When you're writing an NIH grant proposal, you can actually get to know your audience pretty well.
Here's a guide — with links — to some of the best NIH - grant - proposal - writing resources available (besides this one).
As one scientist — one of a growing number of soft - money principal investigators working in the United States — wrote to me in a e-mail recently, «NIH is bombarded by grant - proposals not to advance the cause of science but to keep families housed and fed.»
Here's a guide — with links — to some of the best NIH - grant - writing resources available (besides this one).
Many NIH institutes provide on their Web sites detailed information to help new investigators understand the grant review process and improve their grant writing skills.
In particular, «We will take special steps to identify meritorious applicants who are only one grant away from losing all funding,» writes Michael Lauer, NIH deputy director for extramural research, on his Open Mike blog.
«I had no old hands to give me pointers on how to write an NIH grant» to fund his research back in the States, he remembers.
Bob Godt, a professor at the Medical College of Georgia in Augusta who also sits on NIH review panels, describes his grant - writing experience while doing research in Sweden.
A team of «seasoned» scientific reviewers and scientists provide grant - writing tips based on the PHS 398 application, the application form used for most NIH grants, including R01 research grants, fellowships, and career training grants.
The first time around, Bonnie Firestein, a postdoctoral grant - writing wizard who received three grants during her 4 - year postdoctoral stint in the physiology department at UC San Francisco, says she was not aware that her NIH proposal needed to go through her department's administrative offices.
His aim was to allow them to learn the NIH peer - review system and improve their grant - writing skills.
Career Seminar: «Writing Your First NIH Grant» An all - day seminar titled «Writing Your First NIH Grant» will be held for students and postdoctoral fellows of The Scripps Research Institute on Friday, December 12.
UNLV has been the proud host of several CTR - IN - sponsored grant - writing workshops, which teach faculty throughout the MW region how to write grants for NIH and other federal funding agencies.
The CTR - IN also facilitates an «Advance to Funding» (ATF) program, which is a mock study section providing specific expertise and written feedback on how to improve NIH and other federal grant applications prior to submission.
Writing NIH grants and biomedical manuscripts remains a major challenge for many researchers and clinicians world - wide, and many reputations and careers rest on the ability of scientists to communicate clearly and forcefully.
The NIH grant process is already more a writing and sales contest than a science contest (IMHO).
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