Grant Writing Skill
Translate research vision into funded reality.
Core Principle
A grant proposal is a persuasion document. You're convincing reviewers that your research is important, your approach is sound, and you're the right person to do it.
The Three Questions Every Reviewer Asks
- •Why does this matter? (Significance)
- •Will this approach work? (Feasibility)
- •Can this team do it? (Expertise)
Answer all three. Clearly. Early.
Proposal Structure (General)
1. Specific Aims (1 page)
The most important page. Reviewers decide here.
Structure:
- •Hook: Why this problem matters NOW
- •Gap: What's missing in current knowledge
- •Hypothesis: Your central claim
- •Aims: 2-4 specific, achievable objectives
- •Impact: What changes if you succeed
Template:
[Problem statement establishing significance]. Despite [current state of knowledge], [the gap] remains unaddressed. We hypothesize that [your central hypothesis]. To test this, we will: Aim 1: [specific objective]. Aim 2: [specific objective]. This work will [impact statement].
2. Significance & Innovation
- •Why the problem matters (societal, scientific, economic)
- •What's new about your approach
- •How it advances the field
3. Approach / Research Plan
- •Detailed methodology for each aim
- •Preliminary data (shows feasibility)
- •Timeline and milestones
- •Potential pitfalls and alternatives
4. Investigator Qualifications
- •Why you're the right person/team
- •Relevant expertise and publications
- •Collaborations and resources
5. Budget & Justification
- •Personnel, equipment, supplies, travel
- •Clear justification for each item
- •Matches scope of work
Agency-Specific Guidance
NSF (National Science Foundation)
- •Broader Impacts required (education, diversity, public benefit)
- •Intellectual Merit equally weighted
- •Project descriptions limited to 15 pages
- •Annual reports and data management plan required
NIH (National Institutes of Health)
- •Significance, Innovation, Approach, Investigators, Environment (5 criteria)
- •R01 is the standard research grant
- •K awards for career development
- •Page limits vary by mechanism
- •Biosketch format is strict
Private Foundations
- •Often shorter applications
- •More flexibility in format
- •Relationship building matters
- •May prefer specific populations or approaches
Writing Strategies
The Inverted Pyramid
Start with the most important information:
- •Significance (why care?)
- •Innovation (what's new?)
- •Approach (how?)
- •Details (specifics)
Active Voice, Concrete Claims
| Weak | Strong |
|---|---|
| "It is believed that..." | "We will test whether..." |
| "Studies will be performed" | "We will conduct experiments" |
| "This may lead to..." | "This will demonstrate..." |
Preliminary Data Strategy
- •Show you CAN do the work
- •Demonstrate feasibility, not completion
- •Just enough to prove concept
- •Save some results for the funded project
Addressing Weaknesses
- •Acknowledge risks upfront
- •Provide alternatives for each
- •Shows you've thought it through
- •Reviewers find problems anyway—beat them to it
Common Mistakes
| Mistake | Fix |
|---|---|
| Burying the significance | Lead with impact |
| Too much jargon | Write for educated non-expert |
| Vague aims | Make aims specific and measurable |
| No preliminary data | Pilot studies, even small ones |
| Ignoring page limits | Ruthless editing |
| No alternatives | "If X fails, we will Y" |
| Weak budget justification | Every dollar explained |
| Missing required sections | Use the checklist |
Review Criteria Alignment
Map your writing to review criteria:
| Criterion | Where to Address |
|---|---|
| Significance | Specific Aims, Significance section |
| Innovation | Specific Aims, Innovation section |
| Approach | Research Plan, each aim |
| Investigator | Biosketch, Team section |
| Environment | Resources, Letters of support |
The Review Process (Know Your Audience)
- •Assignment: Program officer assigns to study section
- •Primary reviewers: 2-3 read in detail, score each criterion
- •Panel discussion: Top 50% discussed
- •Scoring: 1 (best) to 9 (worst) for each criterion
- •Funding line: Percentile determines funding
Key insight: Reviewers are tired, busy experts. Make it EASY to find your strengths.
Timeline for Submission
| Weeks Before | Task |
|---|---|
| 12+ | Start Specific Aims draft |
| 10 | Circulate Aims for feedback |
| 8 | First draft of full proposal |
| 6 | Internal review |
| 4 | Major revisions complete |
| 2 | Final polish, budget finalized |
| 1 | Institutional review |
| 0 | Submit (never day-of!) |
Resubmission Strategy
Most grants don't fund on first try. Resubmissions:
- •Address EVERY reviewer concern
- •Show what changed (clearly marked)
- •Don't argue with reviewers—adapt
- •Include new preliminary data
- •Resubmit to same study section if possible
Budget Tips
- •Modular budgets ($250K/year blocks) for NIH R01
- •Match effort to work (if you're doing half the work, request half time)
- •Justify everything (why this equipment? why this travel?)
- •Include indirect costs (check your institution's rate)
- •Don't under-budget (reviewers wonder what you're hiding)
Synapses
See synapses.json for connections.