Funding-Dear Colleague Letter: NSF Graduate Research
Internship Program (GRIP); September 30, 2014
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Dear
Colleague:
The
Division of Graduate Education announces the Graduate Research Internship
Program (GRIP) to provide professional development
to NSF Graduate Research Fellows through
internships developed in partnership with federal agencies (see theGRIP website
for a current list of partner agencies). Through
this initiative, NSF Graduate Fellows will participate in mission-related,
collaborative research under the guidance of host research mentors at federal
facilities and national laboratories. The internship experiences will support
Fellows with developing expertise in critical STEM areas, enhancing
professional skills, developing networks, and preparing for a wide array of
career options. The sponsor agencies will benefit by engaging Fellows in
mission-critical projects, helping to develop a highly skilled U.S. workforce
in areas of national need.
NSF
is pleased to collaborate with other federal agencies to provide internship
opportunities through GRIP. Internship details for each partner agency differ
and are available through links to agency websites. As additional agencies
develop internship partnerships with NSF, updates
will be made to the website.
ELIGIBILITY
Internships
are available to all NSF Graduate Research Fellows. Applicants must be active
NSF Graduate Fellows within the five-year fellowship term, "on
tenure" or "on reserve.1"
Active Fellows must be enrolled and making satisfactory progress toward their degrees, and have fulfilled all GRFP reporting requirements. For some
agencies, Fellows must be U.S. citizens. A Fellow may submit one application
per Partner Agency and may apply to a maximum of two Partner Agencies per
fellowship year.
All
internship applications are subject to: 1)
confirmation by the Fellow's advisor that the Fellow is making satisfactory
progress in her or his graduate degree program and that participation in GRIP
will enhance the Fellow's graduate education; 2) the availability of funds from NSF and appropriate resources from partner agencies; 3) review
of the applications and acceptance by the National Science Foundation and NSF's
partner agency. In some cases, Fellows will be required to pass a background
and/or security clearance check before they may begin an
internship position. Background and/or security clearance checks will be
conducted by the individual agencies. Interested Fellows should check to see if
they meet the clearance criteria for the agency to which they are applying.
NSF
GRFP Fellows will not be employees and will not conduct inherently governmental
functions. Fellows must not act in a manner that would lead anyone to believe
s/he is an employee of, or a representative of, the partner agencies. Please
see the Guiding Principles for
Fellows and partner agencies.
INTERNSHIP
FUNDING
Fellows
will receive an allowance of $5,000 from NSF to cover costs associated
with the internship, including travel, relocation, research and other expenses.
The allowance will be provided through the GRFP institution, as part of the
summer or fall GRFP funding increment. The GRFP PI (Graduate
Dean) and Financial Officer provide administrative and financial oversight of
the internship allowance(s) of NSF Graduate Fellows as part of the GRFP award
to the institution. The internship allowance for each NSF Graduate Fellow is reported once on the GRFP Program Expense Report covering the
time period of the internship. Fellows selected for a GRIP internship who are
on tenure2 during
the internship will continue to receive their NSF stipend through the home U.S.
institution. The NSF stipend remains subject to U.S. tax laws.
The
NSF internship allowance is for use by the Fellow during the
internship experience identified in the application. The institution will
disburse the $5,000 internship allowance to the Fellow. Proposed internship
projects must be a minimum of 10 weeks, and may be up to 12 months. Extensions are subject to the approval of the Fellow's GRFP institution,
NSF, and the sponsoring agency. Internship funds may not be transferred to
another Fellow.
The
support provided by the partner agency differs by agency. For further
information, see the agency's NSF Graduate Fellows website.
Agency support will be provided directly to the Fellow by the agency.
INTERNSHIP
REQUEST SCHEDULE AND CONSIDERATION
GRIP
is a three-year pilot program for NSF and Partner Agencies. Please note that
the information presented is current at the time of publishing. See GRIP website for
any program updates.
Successful applicants may commence
internships according to the selected Agency's timeline.
INSTRUCTIONS
FOR PREPARING GRFP INTERNSHIP APPLICATIONS
- Applications
are submitted as one uploaded PDF file by NSF Graduate Fellows
through the “GRFP Additional Funding Opportunities' link in the GRFP FastLane module.
Use the NSF standard format requirements (e.g. single
spaced pages) to prepare the application. The Authorized Organizational
Representative (AOR) certifies the internship application through use of
the AOR Certification form which
is submitted by the Fellow along with the application. The GRFP
Coordinating Official approves the GRIP application in the GRFP FastLane module.
The GRFP Institution nominates the Fellow and approves the duration,
location, and terms of the internship by approving the application in the
GRFP module. GRFP Coordinating Officials must
approve the applications before an NSF review occurs. Internship
applications that do not comply with the application guidelines will be
returned without review.
- GRIP
applications must include the following elements:
- Name of Graduate Research Fellow, Fellow ID, name of sponsoring
agency, name of host/sponsoring researcher(s) or project, and proposed
dates and duration of the internship.
- Research and Professional
Development Plan. Limit: 2 pages. Fellow will submit a research and professional development plan that includes the expected
outcomes of the internship. This plan must describe how the internship
experience will:
- Integrate the proposed
research activities into the Fellow's graduate degree program and future career goals.
- Provide mentoring and
specialized expertise, equipment, facilities, field sites, data, and/or
other resources.
- Build professional skills
and collaborations that will enhance and contribute to the Fellow's
professional development and network.
- Supplementary Documents:
- Fellow's Résumé or CV.
Limit: 2 pages.
- A letter of endorsement from
the Fellow's faculty research advisor that confirms participation in
GRIP will enhance the Fellow's graduate education. The letter should
also confirm that the Fellow is making
satisfactory progress in her or his graduate degree program. Limit: 2
pages.
- A signed Certification by
the GRFP Institution's Authorized Organizational Representative.
The AOR is required to certify
that the organization (or individual) agrees to accept the obligation to
comply with award terms and conditions.
INTERNSHIP
APPLICATION REVIEW
The following criteria will be used in evaluating the applications:
NSF
and agency partner program officers will review internship applications.
Approval by the NSF and the sponsoring partner agency is required before
internships are announced.
Updated Research and Professional Development Plan. Limit: 2 pages. Due
by the end of the first two weeks of official start of the internship.
REPORTING
REQUIREMENTS
Link to Full Announcement: http://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2014/nsf14084/nsf14084.jsp?WT.mc_id=USNSF_25&WT.mc_ev=click