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- BookMichelle L. Kienholz and Jeremy M. Berg.Summary: How the NIH Can Help You Get Funded takes a novel, non-formulaic approach in teaching readers how to "write a grant" -- and much more. The authors draw on their decades of experience working with both investigators and NIH personnel to anticipate their questions and concerns and help establish a comfortable, productive partnership between them. The authors advise readers on developing each component of the grant application in order of the components' influence on the final impact score. Individual funding mechanisms are reviewed along with grantsmanship tips specific to each. Readers learn the importance of reviewer-friendly formatting and organization of the text. The final chapters cover next steps after the application has been submitted-before, during, and after the review and funding decision. Strategies for resubmitting or repurposing applications are provided for those readers whose applications do not receive awards. The authors likewise anticipate the needs of readers who do receive funding but have questions on managing and maintaining their award. Amid ever-increasing competition for government research grants, How the NIH Can Help You Get Funded is an invaluable manual for how to pursue -- and sustain -- NIH funding.
Contents:
National Institutes of Health
Institutes and centers
Center for scientific review and the peer review process
Office of Extramural Research
Federal budget process
NIH funding data and trends
Getting at mechanism
Telling your story well
Presenting your message well
Getting by with a little help from your friends
Before and after your study section meets
Is the check in the mail?
The check is not in the mail
The check is in the mail but.