FACULTY RESEARCH COMMITTEE STUDENT RESEARCH PROGRAM Competitions to be held in 2012-13 for summer 2013 or the 2013-14 Academic Year The purpose of the Student Research Program is to enable faculty to provide supervised research opportunities for undergraduates. DEADLINE: The Faculty Research Committee will review proposals for the Student Research program under two deadlines in 2012-2013. The FRC requires that all proposals be submitted online, as a document attached to an e-mail no later than 4:00 p.m. on either deadline. Send the completed application form to Kristin Magendantz, Director of Faculty Grants (Kristin.Magendantz@trincoll.edu). Late applications will not be considered. Applications Due/Notification of Results Fall competition: deadline is, October 23, 2012 Notification, mid-December Spring competition: deadline is, February 19, 2013 Notification, mid-March ELIGIBILITY: All Trinity College faculty members on continuing full-time appointments are eligible to supervise student research. DURATION OF GRANTS: May 1, 2013, to June 30, 2014. SIZE OF GRANTS: Faculty may apply for up to $3500 to provide stipends for student researchers. A stipend of $3500 implies 10 weeks of full-time work (or the equivalent). These stipends may be paid at any time during the grant period. On-campus housing will be made available as needed for a period of ten weeks for student researchers who are employed during the summer recess. The principal criterion by which proposals will be judged is the educational benefit to the student. Applicants should clearly and concisely explain the aims and goals of the proposed research, delineate the specific tasks appointed for the student researcher, and describe the anticipated educational benefits to the student. In evaluating requests for Student Research Grants, the committee considers whether the anticipated educational benefits to the student are commensurate with the specific tasks appointed for the student. Although the Faculty Research Committee includes faculty from each of the four curricular groupings of the College (Humanities, Social Sciences, Natural Sciences and Mathematics, and the Arts), each proposal is read and voted on by all members of the Committee (six faculty members and the Associate Academic Dean). It is, therefore, imperative that proposals be written in language that can be readily understood by a college-wide faculty committee, the members of which are not specialists in the applicant’s field. Particular care should be taken to avoid jargon; if technical language must be employed, it should be accompanied by a clear explanation. Care should also be taken to ensure that the proposal is free of grammatical and spelling errors. (The Committee reserves the right to enlist expertise from faculty in particular areas in evaluating the technical aspects of proposals.) Decisions will be based solely on the written applications submitted to the Committee, which should not exceed two pages (exclusive of the budget and references). Because the Committee expects to receive more applications than it can fund, applicants are generally limited to one student researcher. If a faculty member wishes to apply for more than one grant, a separate application form must be completed for each position requested. Preference is given to applicants who have not recently had a research student funded through this program. In exceptional cases, faculty members may request that a recently graduated student be funded as a student researcher. SUMMARY REPORT: It is the responsibility of faculty members awarded research grants to ensure that each student researcher submit a summary of work to the Associate Academic Dean at the completion of the student’s contribution to the project. The summary should describe the academic gains the student made as a result of work with the faculty member. In addition, each student researcher will be expected to present the results of his/her work either at the College’s Fall Research Symposium (held in September), if the research was done during the summer recess, or at the appropriate Spring Symposium (held in April), if the research was done during the academic year. The Application Form is available as a Word document from the FRC website. Complete the application according to the instructions provided and submits it as a PDF document by the deadline. If you cannot produce a PDF document on your computer, you may use one of the scanners available on campus that convert a hard-copy document to PDF. Applicants are responsible for ensuring that converted documents are complete and conform to the guidelines. If you need further information, contact Mitch Polin, Chair, Faculty Research Committee, or Kristin Magendantz, Director of Faculty Grants. Updated Summer 2012