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Funding Opportunities at the Institute of Education Sciences Elizabeth R. Albro, Ph.D. Teaching and Learning Division National Center for Education Research.

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Presentation on theme: "Funding Opportunities at the Institute of Education Sciences Elizabeth R. Albro, Ph.D. Teaching and Learning Division National Center for Education Research."— Presentation transcript:

1 Funding Opportunities at the Institute of Education Sciences Elizabeth R. Albro, Ph.D. Teaching and Learning Division National Center for Education Research

2 Legislative Mission of IES Describe the condition and progress of education in the United States Identify education practices that improve academic achievement and access to education opportunities Evaluate the effectiveness of Federal and other education programs

3 Organizational Structure Office of the Director National Board for Education Sciences National Center for Education Evaluation National Center for Education Statistics National Center for Education Research National Center for Special Ed Research

4 To Identify Funding Opportunities Begin at the IES website (http://ies.ed.gov)http://ies.ed.gov Sign up for the IES Newsletter Review current Requests for Applications Funding Opportunities are announced inThe Federal Register Contact relevant program officers in the two Research Centers

5 http://ies.ed.gov

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7 FY 2012 NCER (305) & NCSER (324) Grant Programs Application Deadline Letter of Intent Due Date Application Posted Start Dates 305A: Ed Research 324A: Sp Ed Research 324B: Sp Ed Postdoc 6/23/114/21/11 3/1/12 to 9/1/12 305A: Ed Research 324A: Sp Ed Research 305B: Postdoc 305C: R & D Centers 324C: Sp Ed R&D Ctrs 305D: Stats/Methods 305E: State/Local 9/22/117/21/11 7/1/12 to 9/1/12

8 Letters of Intent Due Dates Letters of Intent are important, but not required LOIS are submitted electronically using the instructions provided at: https://iesreview.ed.govhttps://iesreview.ed.gov We encourage all researchers to submit Letters of Intent –4/21/11 for June applications –7/21/11 for September applications

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11 How to Identify Appropriate Grant Programs Read the Request for Applications Review the announced topics and methodological requirements Look at the abstracts of projects funded under a research topic –http://ies.ed.gov/ncer/projects/http://ies.ed.gov/ncer/projects/ –http://ies.ed.gov/ncser/projects/http://ies.ed.gov/ncser/projects/

12 Then, Contact a Program Officer Program officers are associated with topics, and their contact information is included at the end of each RFA.

13 Education Research Topics (84.305A) Reading and Writing Mathematics and Science Education Cognition and Student Learning Social and Behavioral Context for Academic Learning Education Technology Effective Teachers & Effective Teaching Improving Education Systems: Policies, Organization, Management, and Leadership Postsecondary and Adult Education Early Learning Programs and Policies English Learners ≈

14 Special Education Research Topics (84.324A) Early Intervention and Early Learning in Special Education Reading, Writing, and Language Development Mathematics and Science Education Social and Behavioral Outcomes to Support Learning Transition Outcomes for Special Education Secondary Students Cognition and Student Learning in Special Education Professional Development for Teachers and Related Service Providers Special Education Policy, Finance, and Systems Autism Spectrum Disorders Technology for Special Education Families with Children with Disabilities

15 FY2012 Research Goals Exploration Development & Innovation Efficacy and Replication Scale-Up Evaluation Measurement

16 Exploration Goal Explore associations between education outcomes and malleable factors. Possible methodological approaches include: –Analyze secondary data –Collect primary data –Complete a meta-analysis

17 Development & Innovation Goal Develop a new intervention (e.g., curriculum, instructional approach, program, or policy) OR further develop an intervention that is in the early stages of development AND collect data on its feasibility and usability in actual education settings AND pilot data on student outcomes.

18 Efficacy & Replication Goal Evaluate whether or not a fully developed intervention is efficacious under limited or ideal conditions. OR Gather follow-up data examining the effects of the intervention.

19 Efficacy & Replication Goal Ask what might be needed to implement intervention under routine practice Reduce appearance of conflict of interest for developer-evaluators Do not require confirmatory mediator analyses but recommend exploratory ones New requirements for single-case efficacy studies

20 Scale-up Evaluation Goal Evaluate whether a fully developed intervention that has evidence of efficacy is effective when implemented under typical conditions through an independent evaluation.

21 Scale-up Evaluation Goal Maintain past requirements –Implement intervention under routine practice –Evaluators independent of development/distribution –Strong efficacy evidence for intervention Do not expect wide generalizability from 1 study – Expect multiple Scale-up projects to this end –Sample size not a key distinction from Efficacy Do not require confirmatory mediator analyses but encourage exploratory ones Implementation limited to 25% of budget

22 Measurement Goal Develop and evaluate assessments, including: –Item development –Reliability & validity analyses

23 GoalTypical Range per Year (direct + indirect costs) Maximum (direct + indirect) Exploration Secondary data With primary data $100,000 - $300,000 $100,000 - $400,000 2 years, $700,000 4 years, $1,600,000 Development & Innovation $150,000 - $400,0003 years, $1,500,000 Efficacy & Replication Follow-up study $250,000 - $650,000 $150,000 - $300,000 4 years, $3,500,000 3 years, $1,200,000 Scale-up Evaluation Follow-up study $350,000 - $900,000 $250,000 - $400,000 5 years, $5,000,000 3 years, $1,500,000 Measurement$150,000 - $300,0004 years, $1,600,000

24 Additional FY 2012 Research Programs

25 Postdoctoral Research Training Programs in the Education Sciences (84.305B; 84.324B) For institutions to establish postdoctoral training programs to train researchers in the skills necessary to conduct the type of research that the Institute funds Maximum amount of the award is $687,000 No more than 5 years in length Applications are due on September 22, 2011

26 Research & Development Centers (84.305C; 84.324C) Key education issues that face our nation Conduct a focused program of education research in a topic area Conduct supplemental research within a broad topic area Provide national leadership in advancing evidence-based practice and policy within a topic area

27 National Research and Development Centers (84.305C) Topics vary year by year Currently support 16 R&D Centers Two R&D Centers are being competed in FY 2012 –Cognition & Adult Literacy –State & Local Policy

28 National R&D Centers in Special Education (84.324C) Currently support three R&D Centers Four R&D Centers Topics for FY 2012 –School-Based Interventions for Secondary Students with Autism Spectrum Disorders –Reading Instruction for Deaf and Hard of Hearing Students –Interventions for Families of Students with Autism Spectrum Disorders –Interventions for Families of Students with Emotional and Behavioral Disorders

29 Statistical and Research Methodology in Education (84.305D) Research projects intended to expand and improve the methodological and statistical tools available for education researchers These tools will be used to improve the design of research studies, analysis of research data, and interpretation of research findings.

30 Evaluation of State and Local Education Programs and Policies (84.305E) Support for rigorous evaluations of education programs or policies that are paid for and implemented by state or local education agencies

31 ProgramTypical Range per Year (direct + indirect costs) Maximum (direct + indirect) 305B & 324B Postdoc Training Depends on # of Postdocs 5 years, $687,000 305C & 324C R&D Centers $1,000,000 - $2,000,0005 years, $10,000,000 305D Stats/Methods$40,000 - $300,0003 years, $1,000,000 305E State/Local$500,000 - $1,000,0005 years, $5,000,000 Other Grant Programs

32 Application Due Dates Applications are accepted twice a year. We anticipate for FY 2012 –June 23, 2011 –September 22, 2011 We do NOT accept late applications. The authorized representative pushes the final submit button.

33 Finding Application Packages FY 2012 Application Packages will be available on www.grants.govwww.grants.gov

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35 Review Requirements for Each Application  Request for Applications  Currently available at http://ies.ed.gov/fundinghttp://ies.ed.gov/funding  Grants.gov Application Submission Guide  Will be available 4/21/11 for June deadline  Application Package  Will be available on Grants.gov on 4/21/11 for June deadline

36 Resources for Researchers Visit links for faculty and researchers on IES website. Review past webinars, and participate in future webinars for the FY 2012 competitions.

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39 http://ies.ed.gov/resourcesforresearchers.asp

40 Help Us Help You Read the Request for Applications carefully. Call or email IES program officers early in the process. IES program staff can review draft proposals, and provide feedback. Don’t be afraid to contact us!

41 http://ies.ed.gov/funding Elizabeth Albro elizabeth.albro@ed.gov


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