Grants & Awards

Cottrell College Science Awards

Multi-Investigator

Introduction

The MI-CCSA program is a new initiative aimed at helping start sustainable, collaborative programs of research by cross-disciplinary teams of faculty from science departments in primarily undergraduate institutions (PUIs). The program is focused on early career faculty. The research project should be one that could not be effectively attacked by an individual researcher or a group of researchers within the same discipline. Rather it is aimed at projects that, by their complexity and interdisciplinary nature, require a cross-disciplinary team approach to achieve significant progress and sustainability.

The program, which began in 2009, is being run as a pilot project for the first three years with the intention of determining its potential to facilitate cooperation across disciplinary boundaries in PUIs, build sustainable programs of cross-disciplinary research and facilitate an academic culture for teaching and research in the sciences that transcends traditional disciplinary boundaries.

Objectives

a. Fund highly significant research projects that transcend traditional disciplinary boundaries, produce peer-reviewed publications and subsequently attract competitive funding for continuation.

b. Fund projects that will build teams of students and faculty that cross traditional department boundaries.

c. Help early career faculty to establish long-term, sustainable and productive research programs.

d. Advance undergraduates to careers in science.

e. Facilitate the development of an academic culture that supports and encourages cross-disciplinary and collaborative research and teaching.

Eligibility

a. Institutional Eligibility

Institutional eligibility during the three-year pilot project is limited to colleges and universities in the U.S. that have achieved a significant level of success in the Single Investigator Cottrell College Science Award (SI-CCSA) program during the past 10 years. A list of eligible institutions for the Fall 2011 application cycle is available here.

Only one application will be accepted from a single institution in a given year, and once an institution receives a MI-CCSA award it will not be eligible to apply again during the three-year pilot period (2009-2011).

b. Team Eligibility

An eligible team will consist of at least two, and no more than three, faculty from at least two distinct science departments, all from within the same institution. One of the team members must be from a department of chemistry, physics or astronomy. Only team members from non-Ph.D.- granting departments are eligible. While up to one team member may be a tenured faculty, the remaining team members must be tenure-track faculty within six years of their first faculty appointment at the time of an award. Team members may have previously held a SI-CCSA, but cannot have an active award at the time of application for a MI-CCSA, nor can a team member have both an SI-CCSA and MI-CCSA application pending at the same time. Applications containing members from a Department or School of Engineering or Medicine will not be accepted.

Award Size and Matching Requirements:

The award amount is $75,000 for a two-investigator team and $100,000 for a three-investigator team. The award duration is two years with a single, one-year, no-cost extension available on request. An institutional match of $25,000 is required on all applications. Allowed budget categories include faculty summer stipends, student summer stipends, equipment, supplies and funds for travel needed to conduct the research.

In general the same budget guidelines and restrictions apply as currently in force for the SI-CCSA, but pro-rated to the number of faculty on the team. For example, for a team consisting of three co-PI's, the budget could include no more than six faculty summer stipends of $7,500 for the two-year budget from RCSA funds (i.e., no more than two summer stipends per faculty member over the duration of the award). No indirect costs are allowed from the award and the only fringe benefit allowed is FICA of 7.65 percent. Institutional matching must consist of a cash contribution to the above categories and cannot include building renovation, academic year release time, facility charges, overhead or fringe benefits beyond FICA.

CENTENNIAL TIMELINE OF SCIENCE PROGRESS

Timeline

Cottrell

SUPPORT
SCIENCE
AND YOUNG
SCIENTISTS

Give now.

FOLLOW
US ON:

Facebook
Twitter

© 2011 RESEARCH CORPORATION FOR SCIENCE ADVANCEMENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. | CONTACT