This article is prompted by a couple of Twitter conversations around a聽糖心Vlog article聽that quotes聽, founding editor of聽, who argues for open publication at every stage of聽the research process, including (successful and unsuccessful) grant applications. The article acknowledges that this is likely to be controversial, but it got a few of us thinking about the value of reading other people鈥檚 grant applications to improve one鈥檚 own.
I鈥檓 asked about this a lot by prospective grant applicants 鈥 鈥渄o you have any examples of successful applications that you can share?鈥 鈥 and while generally I will supply them if I have access to them, I also add substantial caveats and health warnings about their use.
The first and perhaps most obvious worry is that most schemes change and evolve over time, and what works for one call might not work in another. Even if the application form hasn鈥檛 changed substantially, funder priorities 鈥 both hard priorities and softer steers 鈥 may have changed. And even if neither has changed, competitive pressures and improved grant writing skills may well be raising the bar, and an application that got funded, say, three or four years ago might not get funding today. Not necessarily because the project is weaker, but because the exposition and argument would now need to be stronger. This is particularly the case for impact 鈥 it鈥檚 hard to imagine that many of the impact sections on Research Councils UK applications written in the early days of impact would pass muster now.
The second and more serious worry is that potential applicants take the successful grant application far too seriously and far too literally. I鈥檝e seen smart, sensible, sophisticated people become obsessed with a successful grant application and try to copy everything about it, whether relevant or not, as if there was some mystical secret encoded into the text, and any subtle deviation would prevent the magic from working. Things such as鈥he exact balance of the application, the tables/diagrams used or not used (鈥渂ut the successful application didn鈥檛 have diagrams!鈥), the referencing system, the font choice, the level of technical detail, the choice and exposition of methods, whether there are critical friends and/or a steering group, the number of professors on the bid, the amount of RA time, the balance between academic and stakeholder impact.
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It鈥檚 a bit like a locksmith borrowing someone else鈥檚 front door key, making as exact a replica as she can, and then expecting it to open her front door too. Or a bit like taking a recipe that you鈥檝e successfully followed and using it to make a completely different dish by changing the ingredients while keeping the cooking processes the same. Is it a bit like聽聽thinking? Attempting to replicate an observed success or desired outcome by copying everything around it as closely as possible, without sufficient reflection on cause and effect? It鈥檚 certainly generalising inappropriately from a very small sample size (often聽n=1). But I think 鈥 subject to caveats and health warnings 鈥 it can be useful to look at previously successful applications from the same scheme. I think it can sometimes even be useful to look at unsuccessful applications. I鈥檝e changed my thinking on this quite a bit in the past few years, when I used to steer people away from them much more strongly. I think they can be useful in the following ways:
- Getting a sense of what鈥檚 required. It鈥檚 one thing seeing a blank application form and list of required annexes and additional documents, it鈥檚 another seeing the full beast. This will help potential applicants get a sense of the time and commitment that鈥檚 required, and make sensible, informed decisions about their workload and priorities and whether to apply or not.
- It also highlights all the required sections, so no requirement of the application should come as a shock. Increasingly with the impact agenda it鈥檚 a case of getting your ducks in a row before you even think about applying, and it鈥檚 good to find that out early.
- It makes success feel real, and possible, especially if the grant winner is someone the applicant knows, or who works at the same institution. Low success rates can be demoralising, but it helps to know not only that someone, somewhere, is successful, but that someone here and close by has been successful.
- It does set a benchmark in terms of the state of readiness, detail, thoroughness and ducks-in-a-row-ness that the attentive potential applicant should aspire to at least equal, if not exceed. Early draft and early stage research applications often have larger or smaller pockets of vaguery and are often held together with a generous helping of fudge. Successful applications should show what鈥檚 needed in terms of clarity and detail, especially around methods.
- Writing skills. Writing grant applications is a very different skill to writing academic papers, which may go some way towards explaining why the聽聽is so common. So it鈥檚 going to be useful to see examples of that skill used successfully鈥ut having said that, I have a few examples in my library of successes that were clearly great ideas but that were pretty mediocre as examples of how to craft a grant application.
- Concrete ideas and inspiration. Perhaps about how to use social media, or ways to engage stakeholders, or about data management, or other kinds of issues, questions and challenges if (and only if) they鈥檙e also relevant for the new proposal.
So on balance, I think reading (funder and scheme) relevant, recent and highly rated (even if not successful) funding applications can help prospective applicants鈥provided that they remember that what they鈥檙e reading and drawing inspiration from is a different application from a different team to do different things for different reasons at a different time.
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And not a mystical, magical, alchemical formula for funding success.
Adam Golberg is the research manager at聽Nottingham University Business School. This post originally appeared on his blog聽.听
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