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| Contracts and GrantsWhite House Initiative on Historically Black Colleges and Universities |
National Endowment for the Humanities2011 HBCU Grantees:
Albany State University, The Albany, Georgia Civil Rights Movement: Gateway to the National Civil Rights Struggle in America, to support a humanities bridge program over two summers for selected high school students on the history, literature, art, and music of the Civil Rights Movement. ($100,458.00)
Claflin University, Reading Classical and Contemporary Literature from South Asia through an Interdisciplinary Literary Lens, to support a two-year series of faculty workshops, course development and public lectures on classical and contemporary literature for South Asia. ($99,220.00)
Lincoln University, Pennsylvania, Lincoln University of Pennsylvania's Global Heritage and Legacy: a Humanities Initiative, to support a two- year program of study framed by two conferences, in which ten faculty would conduct research and developing teaching modules on Lincoln University's diasporic heritage. ($100,000.00)
Winston-Salem State University, Integrating Teaching and Learning about India in the Curriculum through the Humanities and the Liberal Arts, to support a three-year series of faculty study workshops, guest lectures, and seminars providing an overview of India from historical and contemporary perspectives. ($99,285.00)
Awards for Faculty2011 HBCU Grantee
Janice Hawes, South Carolina State University, to support advanced research in the humanities by teachers at Historically Black Colleges and Universities. Project Title, Shaping Proper Citizens of the British Empire: H.E. Marshall's Translation of Beowulf for Children.
($50,400)
The American Educational Research Association (AERA) Grants Program is accepting proposals for its two research initiatives, with a deadline of September 1, 2011.
AERA Dissertation Grants. AERA provides dissertation support for advanced doctoral students to undertake doctoral dissertations using data from the large-scale national or international data sets supported by the NCES, NSF, and other federal agencies. Applications are encouraged from a variety of disciplines, such as but not limited to, education, sociology, economics, psychology, demography, statistics, and psychometrics. The selection process is competitive. The next application deadline is September 1, 2011.
AERA Research Grants. AERA provides small grants for faculty members, postdoctoral researchers, and other doctoral-level scholars to undertake quantitative research using data from the large-scale national or international data sets supported by the NCES, NSF, and other federal agencies. Applications are encouraged from a variety of disciplines, such as but not limited to, education, sociology, economics, psychology, demography, statistics, and psychometrics. The selection process is competitive. The next application deadline is September 1, 2011.
For further information about AERA and the Grants Program, visit the AERA website at www.aera.net and click on “Fellowships and Grants” and then “AERA Grants Program” on the left-hand side. You may also contact Mr. Ming Lowe at grantsprogram@aera.net or (202) 238-3200, ext. 227.
Minority Serving Institutions Program Funding Opportunity Announcement Solicitation Number: SBCR-FN-0511-MSIP02
This Funding Opportunity Announcement is issued by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission Office of Small Business and Civil Rights to fund Minority Serving Institutions' programs and activities, projects, symposiums, and training for the exchange and transfer of knowledge and skills relevant to nuclear safety, security, environmental protection, or any other fields the Commission deems critical to its mission.
To take advantage of this opportunity, applicants have to submit funding applications through http://www.grants.gov by 5:00 p.m. local time (organization/institution's time zone) on the closing date of Monday, August 8, 2011.
National Endowment for the Humanities' Grants for grants for Historically Black Colleges and Universities.
The National Endowment for the Humanities offers grants of up to $100,000 for projects designed to strengthen and enrich humanities education and scholarship at HBCUs. These projects may create opportunities for faculty members to study together while improving their capacity to teach the humanities; help faculty members and administrators develop new humanities programs; help institutions take advantage of humanities resources, especially in the digital humanities; enhance or develop areas of basic need in an institution's core humanities programs; or build ties among faculty at more than one institution. Applications for projects in all humanities disciplines are welcome and will receive equal treatment in review. For more information on Humanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and Universities, please visit http://www.neh.gov/grants/guidelines/HI_HBCU.html.
Federal Government Grants
- The Request for Proposals to select University Transportation Centers has been posted on Grants.gov. The RFP may be viewed at this link:
http://www.grants.gov/search/search.do;jsessionid=FTMHTvnNLFfmTnGYn8PbHFtfSyHNwsnZGp2t2BKgQpfDywqkB6G5!746851664?oppId=108433&mode=VIEW
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