Post doc research proposal

3about usabout stration & ment ies & in the ch & 2for faculty & stafffaculty & staff home ic personnel ory of 1for studentsstudents’ home ory of te and postdoctoral outgraduate studentspostdocsfaculty & / graduate and postdoctoral studies / graduate students / research ration and degree ch trackingwriting research te research te policies and tips for writing your research proposal. Break down your proposal into point form before writing your first on the total length of the proposal, decide whether you will have headings/subheadings and what they will be (e. Use clear, plain language and avoid sure your proposal is free of typographic and grammatical er that, at every level, adjudication committees are multi-disciplinary and will include researchers in fields other than your ore, follow the kis principle – keep it simple!

Make it easy for them to understand (and thus fund) your how your research is innovative and valuable. Your proposal so that it is tight, well-integrated, and makes a point, focused on a central question (e. On the discipline, a tight proposal is often best achieved by having a clear hypothesis or research objective and by structuring the research proposal in terms of an important problem to be solved or fascinating question to be answered.

Show that your research is trate that you are competent to conduct the research and have chosen the best research or scholarly environment in which to achieve your goals. Clearly indicate how your research or scholarship will make a “contribution to knowledge” or address an important question in your field. The more diverse opinion and criticism you receive on your proposal the better suited it will be for a multi-disciplinary audience.

Remember that nothing is set in research proposal is not a binding document; it is a proposal. It is well understood by all concerned that the research you end up pursuing may be different from that in your d of treating your proposal as a final, binding document, think of it as a flexible way to plan an exciting (but feasible) project that you would like to ment and university te and postdoctoral administration building. Research might not feel like it at times but every phd student knows that the thesis will one day be finished and that means planning for post-phd life.

Although universities are increasingly providing phd students with training in order to better prepare them for a career in academia, many early career researchers remain unsure of what opportunities are out there, how to navigate the academic job market, or how to put together a successful research in this mind, we asked the university of exeter’s dr david thackeray, an ahrc fellow, professor richard toye, the department of history’s director of research, and dr gareth curless, an esrc future research leader, for their advice on how to write a successful post-doctoral research d, drawing on a similar post from his blog, provides an overview of how to write a research proposal, while david and gareth offer some advice on how to tackle the challenges presented by a research council application. If you have any suggestions of your own, please post them in the comments below! Research councils are placing an increasing emphasis on encouraging academics to organise public ‘impact’ activities with organisations outside the academic sector.

The core message of the day was to focus on creative, inter-disciplinary and experimental forms of research and public engagement, rather than worrying too much about the ref. Many schemes have long and unwieldy applications and the last thing you want to be doing while in the middle of teaching or finishing your thesis is rushing to make a research council deadline. My current ahrc fellowship is loosely based on a post-doctoral application i submitted to the british academy in 2009 and is all the better for the long period i had revise my initial plans.

Your proposal should be reviewed by colleagues within your department or university before it’s submitted. Internal reviewers can also help you to refine your research questions and methodology, as well as offering helpful suggestions with regard to outputs, project partners and impact activities. Research councils are looking for research projects with potential ‘impact’ beyond the academic sector but in the rush to demonstrate the value of your research don’t promise more than you can deliver.

Find out if and how they could use your research and what type of activities would be most appropriate for disseminating your research. Research applications – particularly those completed through j-es – are often long, confusing, and seemingly without logic. When you’re trying to juggle writing for publication, teaching, administration, and writing a proposal, it can often be the proposal that gets sacrificed.

Even if i hadn’t been successful it would have worth the effort because not only would i have a proposal that i could use again but the peer review feedback would have helped me to improve the application. Simply state what you’re going to do, how you’re going to do it, why it’s important or beneficial to your project partners or the wider thought on “a beginner’s guide to writing a post-doc. Research in the indian : empire and humanitarianism, 13 and 14 june 2016, the university of g the international institute of social al research in new delhi, india: sources & commentscfp: empire and humanitarianism, 13 and 14 june 2016, university of exeter | humanitarianism & human rights on cfp: empire and humanitarianism, 13 and 14 june 2016, the university of exetermichelle aung thin on accessing archives in myanmar (burma)is global history suitable for undergraduates?

The benefits of global history coursesresearching colonial burma on the internet | jonathan saha on accessing archives in myanmar (burma)this week’s top picks in imperial & global history | imperial & global forum on a beginner’s guide to writing a post-doc.