divided in tiers M1 (larger programs), M2 (medium programs),
and M3 (smaller programs).
5. Baccalaureate colleges, which includes “institutions where
baccalaureate or higher degrees represent at least 50 percent of all
degrees but where fewer than 50 master’s degrees or 20 doctoral
degrees were awarded during the update year.”
6. Baccalaureate/Associate’s
Colleges, which includes “four-year
colleges . . . that conferred more than 50 percent of degrees at the
associate’s level.”
All of this matters because the category an institution falls into will often
determine the type of grant researchers at that institution can apply for. For
instance, many National Science Foundation (NSF) grants will not accept
applications from institutions outside of the R1 and R2 tiers. Many grants
are available only to researchers at undergraduate teaching institutions or
liberal arts colleges. As a result, researchers at R1 and R2 institutions will
tend to go for large, nationally recognized government-sponsored grants,
whereas researchers at D/PU institutions will
tend to rely more on grants
from foundations since that they are unable to apply for big-ticket
governments grants such as those awarded by the NSF or the National
Institutes of Health (NIH). Likewise, researchers at undergraduate teaching
institutions and liberal arts colleges tend to target a different set of national
grants of lower monetary values, and which usually are not to be used to
purchase equipment or data unless undergraduate research is involved.
Thus, before you put in the hard work of applying for a grant, make sure
researchers at your institution can apply for that grant. If you are not
eligible for a given grant (say, because your institution
is not allowed to
apply for specific grants, or because you do not have the necessary
administrative support), it is often possible for you to apply for it as a sub-
awardee or as a consultant on someone else’s grant who is at an eligible
institution.
Likewise, different fields get grants from different sources. Researchers
in agricultural economics,
development economics, environmental
economics, and industrial organization are often funded through
government grants. Health economists rely on both government grants and
foundation grants, with the most prominent such foundation being the
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Monetary economists are almost entirely
funded through think tanks. Experimental
economists tend to be funded
through foundations as well; this is especially true of behavioral
economists, whose work is often funded by the Russell Sage Foundation.
Given how each field has its funding idiosyncrasies, and given increasingly
stringent funding disclosure rules at many journals, I suggest reading the
acknowledgments footnote of the papers
published in your field for
indications of where research funding comes from in that field.
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