4 - Evaluation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2013
Summary
“If someone were to criticize us, we would not feel discouraged. If someone would praise us, we also would not feel proud.”
Mother Teresa Nobel Peace Prize winner (1979)Introduction
The funding agency recruits panel members and external reviewers to help them rank the proposals and applicants. This chapter gives insight into the types of instruction that panel members and reviewers may be given by the funding agency. And it lifts the veil covering the evaluation procedure, with all its struggles, caveats, and sometimes difficult decisions. Use all this inside information to your advantage.
Reviewers. Are the external reviewers given clear instructions by the funding agency? What are the reviewers actually looking for when reading and scoring your proposal? For example, missing or insufficient details would reduce your score and might even make them kill your proposal. Check the lists!
Rebuttal. The external reviewers may have raised concerns about your leadership, your clever research idea, or the details in your work plan. How should you deal with these when you are asked to write a rebuttal?
Panel. The panel chair and members are human beings who will, of course, influence each other at the panel meetings. It’s not a bad thing to realize that this human dimension might influence your score either way. How can you get the panel on your side and keep them there?
Interview. The funding agency may ask you to give a presentation in person and hold a debate with the review panel, to obtain further information on your proposal and to check on your leadership skills. How should you prepare and act? What factors make for a successful presentation?
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- Information
- Funding your Career in ScienceFrom Research Idea to Personal Grant, pp. 132 - 169Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2013