Call for Proposals: Society of Pediatric Psychology Targeted Research Grants (2014)
The Society of Pediatric Psychology (SPP) is pleased to announce the availability of a Targeted Research Grant program. This annual program was established to fund research projects that will contribute to priority and emerging areas in the field of pediatric psychology and that will allow investigators to collect pilot data to aid in securing additional major grant funding.
For the 2014 award cycle, the priority areas identified are:
1. Technology (eHealth interventions and information and communication technologies)
2. Health care cost-offset research
3. Primary care-focused practice or interventions
4. Studies of novel measurement/assessment strategies (e.g., validation of new questionnaires
focused on patient-reported outcomes)
5. Diversity and/or healthcare disparities
6. Another novel or emerging research area in the field of pediatric psychology. Applicant must
demonstrate or document why this area is novel or emerging.
SPP will award up to two grants in the amount of $20,000 each to cover one year of funding to those research proposals demonstrating the greatest merit and potential for success. Although priority will be given to young investigators (within 7 years of PhD), investigators at any stage of career are encouraged to apply for this funding. For example, a mid-career researcher who is moving into a new emerging research area would be eligible to apply. In this case, the researcher will need to document clearly how this research area would constitute a new focus for their program of research. Only sole Principal Investigator applications will be accepted.
Proposals will be evaluated based on:
1. Scientific merit and impact
2. Degree of fit with at least one of the priority research areas listed above
3. The applicant’s demonstrated competence and capability to execute the proposed work
Requirements for Application:
1. The applicant must hold a doctoral degree and have a current faculty appointment at an
accredited institution at the level of instructor, assistant professor, etc. (or equivalent)
2. The applicant must be a member of SPP
3. A letter of intent (LOI) must be submitted and the Principal Investigator (PI) must subsequently be
invited to submit an application based on approval of the LOI.
4. Applicants are responsible for obtaining and documenting institutional approval for the LOI and
for the full application as per their own institutional policy
Letter of Intent:
1. Submissions of LOI’s should be no longer than 1.5 pages (for “a” and “b” below) and must be
submitted electronically to the Chair of the Committee (Grayson Holmbeck;
gholmbe@luc.edu) as a single .pdf, .doc, or .docx file by June 1, 2014 (single-spaced, 11 or
12 point font, 1 inch margins)
2. Include the following sections:
a. Description of Project. Briefly describe your proposed project (limit = 1 page). Include
Aims, Significance, Innovation, Research Approach, and Fit with Program Priority
Areas. Applicants proposing a novel research area outside of the identified priority
areas should clearly demonstrate why the research area is novel or emerging.
b. Future Plans. Briefly describe your future plans (limit = ½ page), i.e., how the pilot
funding will be used to support future full-scale research.
funding will be used to support future full-scale research.
c. Biosketch of the PI (4 pages, NIH format)
d. Applicants are responsible for obtaining and documenting institutional approval as per
their own institutional policy
Full Application format:
1. Applications must be submitted in English
2. An application cannot be submitted unless an LOI has been submitted and approved by the
Targeted Research Grant Committee.
3. The following items must be submitted electronically to Grayson Holmbeck
(gholmbe@luc.edu) as a single .pdf, .doc, or .docx file by September 15, 2014 (single-
space page limits are noted, 11 or 12 point font, 1 inch margins)
a. Project Summary /Abstract (30 lines), beginning with Project Title, Name of Principal
b. Research Proposal: 7 pages
i. Specific Aims, Hypotheses, and Fit with Program Priority Areas (1 page max)
ii. Significance/Innovation
iii. Preliminary studies
iv. Approach (Design, Methods, and Data Analysis)
c. References (limit to 2 pages)
d. Biosketch (4 pages, NIH format) of the PI
e. One year budget and budget justification (2 pages; indirect and student tuition costs
cannot be covered by the grant), including a list of members of research team
f. Description of research environment (1 page)
g. Letters of support (optional)
4. Do not submit appendices or reprints. Tables and figures must be incorporated within the page
limits noted above.
5. Applicants are responsible for obtaining and documenting institutional approval as per their own
institutional policy
6. Awardees will be expected to submit a mid-year progress report (by July 1, 2015) and a year end final report (by January 31, 2016).
Key Dates:
RFA Released: March 1, 2014.
Letter of Intent deadline: June 1, 2014
Invitations to Submit Applications will be sent by: July 15, 2014
Application deadline: September 15, 2014
Award announcement: December 1, 2014
Award start date: January 1, 2015
Please contact Grayson Holmbeck, PhD (gholmbe@luc.edu) with any questions.
No comments:
Post a Comment