Categories
Announcements

A series of workshops on the essentials of conducting research at UGA will be held this fall. Although targeted to new UGA faculty, all are welcome to attend.  RSVP and questions: rcomm@uga.edu.

Download a list of all workshops. 


The eResearch Portal

Tuesday, September 2, 10:00 – 11:00 a.m. or Friday, September 19, 10:00 – 11:00 a.m. Paul D. Coverdell Building, Room 175

This workshop will introduce the OVPR eResearch Portal, an interactive tool integrating proposal development, submission, and approval with award management, modifications, renewals, no-cost extensions, etc. Learn how to make the Portal work for you as a faculty researcher. Use the eResearch Portal to communicate clearly with administrators, organize your proposal and award documents, and see where your project is in its lifecycle.

Hosted by Office for Sponsored Program


Find Funding Made Easy

Friday, September 5, 10:00 – 11:00 a.m. Science Library classroom

A hands-on introduction to finding and using grant funding resources. Workshop will include techniques to effectively use Pivot, a comprehensive funding database, and other grant-finding aids, as well as tips for writing effective NSF data management plans.

Hosted by UGA Libraries


Developing Proposal Budgets

Friday, September 5, 10:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. or Tuesday, September 16, 10:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Paul D. Coverdell Building, Room 175

A detail-packed session covering basic budget development for all types of proposals. Learn about UGA and federal policies and practices regarding a variety of budget items, such as fringe benefits, cost sharing, salary savings, etc. Learn who to call and where on the web to locate information when budget-related questions arise.

Hosted by Office for Sponsored Programs


Research the Right Way

Tuesday, September 9, 2:00 – 3:00 p.m. Paul D. Coverdell Building, Room 175

A workshop for new faculty on the fundamentals of research compliance at UGA, including regulations related to human subjects, animal care and use, biosafety and export control.

Hosted by Office of Research Compliance


Opportunities in Humanities & Arts

Tuesday, September 30, 2:00 – 3:00 p.m. Richard B. Russell Library Auditorium

An overview of Willson Center for Humanities and Arts grant opportunities, as well as strategies for external funding.

Hosted by Willson Center for Humanities and Arts


Developing Complex Project

Wednesday, October 1, 10:00 a.m. -12:00 p.m. Paul D. Coverdell Building, Room 175
The GrantSMART team provides project management for complex, interdisciplinary proposals by UGA research teams. Find out how to identify funding sources, assemble your research team, and manage the process to coordinate a competitive and compliant proposal.

Hosted by GrantSMART Office


IP, Patents & Products

Tuesday, October 14, 10:00 – 11:00 a.m. Paul D. Coverdell Building, Room 175

Made a discovery that might have commercial potential? Want to conduct research with non-UGA partners? Transferring or receiving materials from another institution? Want to form a startup company? Find out about intellectual property, patenting, licensing, material transfer, non-disclosure, collaborative research agreements, and more.

Hosted by Technology Commercialization Office and Georgia BioBusiness Center


Core Crawl

Wednesday, December 10, 5:00 – 7:00 p.m. Tate Student Center Ballroom

Come to UGA’s first annual Core Crawl – a unique event to introduce the services, products, and expertise offered to UGA researchers by UGA core facilities around campus. Come for the information; stay for the free food and door prizes!

Hosted by Coreserve

Categories
Announcements Compliance, Integrity & Safety

The US Department of Agriculture implemented a new regulation in February, 2013 requiring all employees (PIs, Co-PIs, undergraduates, graduate students, postdoctoral researchers, and sub-recipients) on National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) awards to have appropriate training in Responsible Conduct of Research (RCR).  PIs of currently active NIFA awards and all others employed on this award must complete required RCR training.

UGA uses an on-line RCR training program we implemented in 2010 to meet similar National Science Foundation (NSF) regulations pertaining to RCR training for grant employees.  This system, called the Collaborative Institutional Training Initiative (CITI), is also the same online system used by the Human Subjects Office to meet the federal training requirements regarding use of human subjects in research.

This training needs only be taken once.  Anyone currently employed on a NIFA award who might have previously worked on an NSF award since 2010 does not have to re-take RCR training.

The link to enter UGA’s RCR training module is https://paul.ovpr.uga.edu/CITI/ .  More information about this requirement, CITI, and your options for taking this training can be found at https://ovpr.uga.edu/rcr/.  Please contact Maryann Deom (mtd@uga.edu or 2-8808) if you have any questions about your obligations under NIFA regulations.

Categories
Announcements

UGA is taking deliberate steps to enhance its export control compliance program, with the goal of facilitating compliance by the research community.

Export controls are the U.S. laws and regulations that govern the transfer of controlled items or information to foreign nationals, countries, and entities for reasons of national security and foreign policy. Compliance enhancements include the addition of a dedicated export control compliance officer within the Office of the Vice President for Research, user-friendly export procedures, and awareness training. A website, now under construction, identifies export requirements, answers commonly asked questions, and identifies “go-to” individuals on campus.

Export control regulations have a direct impact on the hardware, laboratory equipment, materials, software, technology and technical data that may be exported to other countries or apply to individual citizens of foreign countries working or studying at UGA. While some regulations have a focus on military technologies, others address dual-use items having both civilian and military applications. Regulations may also restrict specific foreign entities and individuals with which UGA can do business.

In recent years, the U.S. Government has strictly enforced these regulations within higher education, resulting in numerous investigations as well as civil and criminal sanctions at the university and individual levels. While UGA is committed to maintaining a teaching and research environment with global reach, we remain equally committed to full compliance with all export regulations.

As with all areas of research compliance, we strongly emphasize taking advantage of these resources. Most importantly, if you have any questions or become aware of a potential export control issue, please contact one of the designated individuals listed on the contacts page as soon as possible.

 

 

Categories
Announcements

The Office of Research Support Services will launch iLab Solutions, a web-based solution, in early August to streamline  equipment scheduling and product ordering, as well as billing and invoicing for UGA core facilities and service centers.

The first core facility to use iLab Solutions for scheduling is CTEGD Flow Cytometry. Subsequently, the online solution will be implemented for the UGA Glass Blowing Shop, Coverdell Stockroom Central Research Stories and Campus Scientific Stores.

The login screen will be available on the webpage for any core facility or service center using iLab.

PIs, lab members and departmental administrators may register for an iLab account. Registration is required only one time to use iLab for all core facilities and service centers for which it is available.

Login to UGA iLab

Click by Click instructions for UGA iLab registration

 

Categories
Announcements

UGA continues to support process improvement initiatives that facilitate the conduct and administration of research and other sponsored projects.

Through a collaborative effort by the Office of the Vice President for Research and the Vice President for Finance and Administration, a work group comprising research faculty and staff was assembled to focus on key operational processes and organizational activities and make recommendations for business process improvements to enhance support for UGA’s research and sponsored project activities.

As a result of the Work Group’s efforts, a report was issued containing 41
recommendations to improve the infrastructure for the administration of
sponsored programs. These recommendations encompass four areas of
emphasis:
1. Customer service and training;
2. Research administrator support and distribution;
3. Communication between central offices and with campus units; and
4. Institutional risk tolerance

To build on the efforts of the Research Administration Work Group, a
group of UGA faculty and administrators will be working with a consultant to
complete an independent review of UGA’s research and sponsored project
administrative infrastructure and the business processes supporting research
and sponsored projects.

The information gleaned from this independent review will inform and guide UGA in creating and implementing a plan for improving sponsored project and research administration infrastructure throughout UGA.

Categories
Announcements

CDC and UGA investigators are invited to submit proposals for seed funding in support of collaborative research infectious diseases. Letters of intent are due August 22, 2014.

Investigators must be either a full-time CDC employee or a tenured / tenure-track UGA faculty and member of the UGA Faculty of Infectious Diseases.

Successful proposals responsive to the CDC/UGA guidelines for seed award funding will have collaborative, interdisciplinary infectious disease research in at least two of the three following broad priority areas: i. public health (e.g., infectious diseases, biostatistics and modeling, surveillance and epidemiology, diagnostics and clinical/public health laboratory science or practice, and environmental health); ii. veterinary medicine (e.g., wildlife, companion animals, surveillance, risk analysis, disease detection and prevention, and human interface); iii. ecological science (e.g., climate change, entomology, spatial analysis, mathematical and environmental modeling, environmental exposures/conditions, informatics, and infectious disease ecology)

Up to three seed awards will be funded. The maximum award amount is $50,000 per project year ($25,000 for each institution) for one- or two-year durations. Seed proposals should approach existing problems from a new perspective and/or use new avenues of investigation.

It is strongly encouraged that proposals should align where possible with CDC Winnable Battles, which is a CDC initiative addressing public health priorities with large-scale impact on health and with known, effective strategies to address them. Proposals should be based on a rational hypothesis derived from critical review and analysis of the literature and/or logical reasoning and should demonstrate a collaborative relationship between UGA and CDC research scientists.

Letter of Intent: Due August 22, 2014. 

Full proposals: Due September 1, 2014. 

See UGA CDC Call for Proposals 2014 for complete details.

 

Categories
Announcements

The Office of the Vice President for Research will launch a significant redesign of the eResearch Portal for Grantsthe electronic system used to submit proposals and manage awards at UGA, during the first week of July.

A user group comprising UGA faculty researchers provided significant input and guidance to OVPR on addressing system navigation, functionality and usability issues. Changes delivered through the redesign will make the system easier to use. These changes include:

A new welcome screen that provides faculty with:

  • A “to do” list that shows only proposals where an action by the user is required and provides a description of the action needed.  
  • Reminders when required training or disclosures are nearing expiration.
  • A suggestion box where any user can provide direct feedback to OVPR regarding issues or enhancement requests.
  • simpler and more intuitive workspace improvement that makes required actions more obvious and better organizes proposal data.  The workspace also incorporates proposal “progress indicators” so you can quickly see which forms still require completion.
  • Improved search functionality for both proposals and awards.

These improvements and added functionality will address many of the issues that users have had with the system. Additional improvements to the system will be released later this year.

Please submit feedback on the system, including suggestions for additional enhancements, through the suggestion box, or contact Gary Rachel, gcrachel@uga.edu.

Categories
Announcements

The Office of the Vice President for Research recently implemented a new hosting procedure for visiting researchers and scholars. Refined guidelines, procedures and questionnaire are now posted on the OVPR website to make the hosting and onboarding process easier for the visitor, Faculty Sponsor, the hosting unit and OVPR.

Changes include:

  • A more refined definition of the Visiting Researcher/Scholar status so a Faculty Sponsor and unit can more easily determine which visitors should go through the hosting process.
  • A revised VRS questionnaire that will aid in a quicker review.
  • A revised and streamlined hosting procedure initiated by the Faculty Sponsor.

Please always check the VRS webpage for the most up-to-date information.

 

Categories
Announcements
NIH’s Center for Scientific Review (CSR) has launched two America COMPETES Act challenges to help identify new methods to detect bias in peer review and strategies to strengthen fairness and impartiality in peer review.
NIH will award a first place ($10,000) and a second place ($5,000) prize in both competitions. The contests close June 30, 2014, and winners will be announced September 2.  Details on the rules and submission procedures for these two challenges are on the CSR Challenge website.

In addition to the competition, a complementary set of initiatives will allow NIH to look at the problem from multiple angles.

Read more from NIH Office of Extramural Research.

Categories
Announcements

NIH is continuing to pilot a new biosketch format that emphasizes accomplishments instead of just a list of publications. The new Biosketch format being piloted will extend the page limit from four to five pages and it will allow researchers to describe up to five of their most significant contributions to science along with the historical background that framed their research.  NIH expects to roll out the modified biosketch for all grant applications received for FY 2016 funding and beyond.

Read more from the NIH Office of Extramural Research.
Read the Notice.