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Grant Writing Workshop Specific Aims

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1 Grant Writing Workshop Specific Aims
Emelia J. Benjamin, MD, ScM The NHLBI’s Framingham Heart Study Boston University School of Medicine No industry relationships to disclose Associate Editor, Circulation 2R01HL092577 1R01HL102214 N01-HC 25195 1P50 HL12016 1 1

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3 Resources FDD Page Isabel Dominguez created on grant writing tips researchers/grant-writing/ Russell & Morrison’s Grant Writers’ Seminars & Workshops The Grant Application Writer’s Workbook

4 BUMC Grant Writing Resources
Associate Provost for Research Carter Cornwall’s Proposal Training Clinical Research Resources Office Clinical and Translational Science Institute Corporate and Foundation Relations Expertise and Instrumentation Search Office of Medical Education Office of Sponsored Programs Vice Chair for Research (DOM)

5 How do Reviewers Work? Hard
For virtually all grant reviewers, the study section work takes place after their day job Your job is to make their job easy

6 Getting Started How do you Pick a Topic?
What excites you and experts in your field? Is it important?  Significance Is it novel?  Innovation Will it build an identity distinct from your mentor? Read the everything you can find on the topic NIH Reporter what is already funded on your topic Will it build to subsequent funding/RO1s?

7 Getting Started? The Blank Page
Ask to see colleagues’ successful grants Ask to see colleagues’ critiques Have you blocked out time to write your grant???

8 How important are the Specific Aims?

9 How important are the Specific Aims?
Fundamental to the Application’s Success

10 Why are the Specific Aims Important?
Reviewers often determine a grant’s merit merely after reading the S.A. Study section silent reading period. S.A. is only section most study section members will read Roadmap to the entire grant

11 Specific Aims Chapter 7 - Grant Application Writer’s Workbook Outline Grant – Paragraph 1
Significance Clinical Current knowledge Gap in knowledge/unmet need

12 Specific Aims Outline Grant – Paragraph 2
Long term goal Big picture of research program Objective of application Central hypothesis and rationale Links back to first paragraph

13 Specific Aims Outline Grant – Paragraph 3
Specific Aims – for each aim Approach Specific question Sample Design Specific hypothesis tested

14 Specific Aims Outline Grant – Paragraph 4
‘Payoff’ Expected outcomes Why group & environment perfectly suited What impact on patients and field

15 What dew Raveiwrs KNOT want to sea?
Details details details A sloppy grant NO typos / grammar problems  Correct references Clear subject headingsLogical flow Leads to concerns about ability to conduct careful research, publish high impact papers A well-laid out grant makes it easier for the Reviewer to see the science Slick presentation cannoT RESCUE HO HUM contentA sloppy grant NO typos / grammar problems  Correct referencesClear subject headings Logical flowLeads to concerns about ability to conduct careful research, publish high impact papers A well-laid out grant makes it easier for the Reviewer to see the scienceSlick presentation cannot rescue ho hum content A sloppy grant NO typos / grammar problems  Correct references Clear subject headingsLogical flow Leads to concerns about ability to conduct careful research, publish high impact papers A well-laid out manuscript makes it easier for the Reviewer to see the science Slick presentation cannot rescue ho hum contentA sloppy grant NO typos / grammar problems  Correct references Clear subject headings Logical flow Leads to concerns about ability to conduct careful research, publish high impact papers A well-laid out grant makes it easier for the Reviewer to see the scienceSlick presentation cannot rescue ho hum content

16 What do Reviewers NOT want to see?
Slick presentation cannot rescue ho hum content A sloppy grant  Instead aim No typos No grammar problems Avoid long paragraphs Correct references Subject headings Avoid tiny font Logical flow Avoid TNTC abbreviations Sloppiness encourages concerns about ability to conduct careful research, publish high impact papers Lucid writing, organized, well-laid out grant makes it easier for the Reviewer to see the science Can scientist not in the field understand the grant?

17 What Are Common Pitfalls? Significance
Not of major public health import Technical tour de force, but so what Lack of a conceptual model Lack of stated hypothesis seeking to test ‘fishing expedition’ Lack of generalizability novelty, significance, conceptual model, overly ambitious scope, overdependence of project completion on success of one aim; participant selection, generalizability, power, multiple testing, confounding, questionable project feasibility, key expertise lacking, problematic quality control data, organization, questionable institutional support, inadequate mentoring plan,

18 What Are Common Pitfalls? Innovation
Incremental novelty, significance, conceptual model, overly ambitious scope, overdependence of project completion on success of one aim; participant selection, generalizability, power, multiple testing, confounding, questionable project feasibility, key expertise lacking, problematic quality control data, organization, questionable institutional support, inadequate mentoring plan,

19 When should an early career investigator start working on a grant?
When should ALL investigators start working on a grant? When should an early career investigator start working on a grant? You cannot start too early 2 submission rule: 1st submission must be strong Grants not discussed higher chance of ‘double jeopardy’ S.A. formulated at least 3 months in advance First draft 8 weeks Mentors and colleagues have time to review draft at least 1-2 months in advance

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