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By Barbara Gastel, 03 February 2012
By Ravi Murugesan, 01 February 2012
This is the announcement for the first set of small grants in 2012. Read More…
By Bernard Appiah, 31 January 2012
By Barbara Gastel, 29 January 2012
By Barbara Gastel, 27 January 2012
By Barbara Gastel | 13 February 2010
Greetings again. As I prepare this blog post, AuthorAID users from China and some other Asian countries are celebrating the beginning of the Year of the Tiger. Happy lunar new year to you all!
This week I showed some students a grant proposal that seems as powerful as a tiger. Let me tell you the story:
Recently 2 graduate students who had taken my science-editing course said they wanted to learn more about editing grant proposals. Therefore I’m giving these students a little course on the subject.
In this course, we recently looked at an excellent resource from the US National Institutes of Health (NIH). This resource is a grant application (grant proposal) with notes written on it. The notes identify some strengths of the grant application.
Among these strengths are the following:
NIH recently revised its instructions for grant application. Thus, for example, NIH grant applications now are shorter.
However, the principles of writing good proposals remain the same, both for NIH and for other sources of funding. And so this annotated grant proposal remains a valuable resource.
Wishing everyone a good Year of the Tiger! —Barbara
Grant proposal
Posted by Sudha Risal at 14 February 2010 10:28 AM
I have just enroll as researh scholor at Banaras Hindu Univesity, Varanasi, India. I know now that how a students want to apply for a grant, and eager to get it.