NIH RFA-NS-24-014: 2023 Blueprint and BRAIN Initiative Program for Enhancing Neuroscience Diversity through Undergraduate Research Education Experiences (BP BRAIN-ENDURE) (R25 Clinical Trial Not Allowed)

No Applicants // Limit: 1 // Tickets Available: 1 

 

The overarching goal of this R25 program is to support educational activities that encourage individuals from diverse backgrounds, including those from groups underrepresented in the biomedical and behavioral sciences, to pursue further studies or careers in research.

External Deadline
02/15/2024
Internal Deadline
Oct. 1, 2023

HRSA HRSA-24-039 & HRSA-24-040: 2023 Maternal and Child (MCH) Health – Improving Oral Health Integration

No applicants  // Limit: 1 // Tickets Available: 1 

 

The program’s purpose is to integrate preventive oral health care into primary care services accessible to MCH populations living in communities underserved by oral health care. The MCH-IOHI Program consists of two types of projects:

External Deadline
01/22/2024
Internal Deadline
Oct. 11, 2023

NIH 2024 S10 Instrumentation Programs: Shared Instrumentation Grant Program (SIG) & High-End Instrumentation Grant Program (HEI)

Institutionally coordinated

 

ORIP's S10 Instrumentation Grant Programs support purchases of state-of-the-art commercially available instruments to enhance research of NIH-funded investigators. Instruments that are awarded are typically too expensive to be obtained by an individual investigator with a research project grant. Every instrument awarded by an S10 grant is to be used on a shared basis, which makes the programs cost-efficient and beneficial to thousands of investigators in hundreds of institutions nationwide.

External Deadline
06/03/2024
Internal Deadline
Nov. 1, 2023

Andrew Carnegie Fellows Program

The purpose of the Andrew Carnegie Fellows Program is to support high-caliber scholarship in the social sciences and humanities, making it possible for the recipients to devote time to research and writing that addresses pressing issues and cultural transitions affecting us at home and abroad.

There are four broad topic areas that include a wide range of suggested subtopics:
Global connections and global ruptures
Strengthening U.S. democracy and exploring new narratives
Environments, natural and human
Technological and cultural creativity—potential and perils
Research Category
Opportunity ID
eb8e68b5-699f-4bbc-a0d0-d1d75de8f0f3
External Deadline
11/14/2025 (Anticipated)

ROSES 2023: Nancy Grace Roman Technology Fellowships for Early Career Researchers

The goals of the Nancy Grace Roman Technology Fellowship (RTF) program in astrophysics are to provide early-career researchers the opportunity to develop the skills necessary to lead astrophysics flight instrument development projects, including suborbital investigations, in preparation to become Principal Investigators (PIs) of future NASA astrophysics missions; to develop innovative technologies for space astrophysics that have the potential to enable major scientific breakthroughs; and to foster new talents by putting early career instrument builders on a trajectory towards long-term positions. NASA is committed to supporting deserving early career researchers by selecting several Roman Technology Fellows every year. This program is not linked to the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope (formerly WFIRST).

This program consists of two components with two different submission procedures. The first component is the one-page application from an early career individual to be named a Roman Technology Fellow (RTF), see Section 2. The second component is the subsequent submission of a proposal for up to $500K in Fellowship Funds by a previously selected RTF once that individual obtains a permanent or permanent-track position, in order to start a laboratory or develop a research group at the Fellow’s institution (see Section 3). Please see Section 2.1 for the definition of an early career position, and Section 4.1 for the definition of a permanent or permanent track position.
Opportunity ID
0194cacb-52a4-4a8b-bc22-d1d75de8f0f3
External Deadline
12/14/2025(Anticipated)

RARE Grant Program (Research Accelerating RUNX1 Exploration) Early Career Investigator Grant and Exploration Grant

The purpose of the RUNX1 Early Career Investigator Grant is to promote the establishment of a new generation of translational and clinical researchers interested in tackling inherited hematologic malignancy predisposition disorders with a focus on RUNX1-familial platelet disorder. We believe that providing capital to early career investigators not only injects funding into where it is needed most, but also cultivates a new cohort of investigators who will be invested in an area of research that historically has had limited attention.
Opportunity ID
5edd8ba9-5d10-4c4d-979b-d1d75de8f0f3
External Deadline
12/03/2025 ( Anticipated)