The FIG Foundation - 2014 Research Grants


2014 FIG Foundation PhD Scholarships

OUTLINE

The FIG Foundation will be providing scholarships of up to 4,000 euros to PhD students.

Applicants shall:

  1. be studying for a PhD degree and registered solely in a surveying/geomatics academic programme that teaches surveying1) in a country listed by the World Bank as a low-income, lower-middle or upper-middle income economy2),
  2. must have had a paper accepted by a peer reviewed international journal based on their doctoral research project; applicants should be the lead author, and the paper should be co-authored with their supervisor,
  3. should not have submitted their final thesis at the application deadline

Applications will be judged on the quality of the application and need. In the event that two excellent applications are judged to be of equal quality, applications from low-income and lower-middle income countries will be preferred.

Applications are to be sent to [email protected]  with “FIG Foundation PhD Scholarship Application” shown in Subject Line. Applicants are not to contact Foundation directors individually. Decisions are final. No correspondence will be entered into during or after the competition.

1) See FIG Definition of the Functions of the Surveyor http://www.fig.net/general/definition.htm
2) See World Bank Country & lending Groups http://data.worldbank.org/about/country-classifications/country-and-lending-groups


DOCUMENTATION

Deadline 1 February 2014.

Applicants should submit the following set of documents in English in the order set out below as a single file in PDF format on A4 paper:

  1. A cover sheet showing the candidate’s personal details and those of his/her institution.
  2. A 200 word abstract. This should be written in terms understandable to the lay person; similar to a press release and which the FIG Foundation could actually use as a press release in the event of a successful application.
  3. A one page research proposal as per the template below on A4 size paper. Note that the one page limit will be strictly enforced; material that extends beyond one page will be deleted.
  4. A copy of the paper that has been re-submitted to the journal after corrections have been completed.
  5. A letter from the editor of the journal indicating that the paper has been accepted and that the necessary corrections have been completed satisfactorily.
  6. The journal paper’s referees’ reports.
  7. A list of peer reviewed journal publications over the last 6 years using the International Journal of GIS reference list format. See Notes for Authors on the IJGIS website.
  8. A list of research funding obtained over the past 5 years, indicating which grants are peer reviewed or not.
  9. A description of research compliance, the research account and activity auditing structures and processes in their institution. For example, if a scientist spends money inappropriately, are there structures in place to refund the granting agency?
  10. A copy of the ethics approval notice for the research from the institution if that is relevant to the grant application. If ethics clearance is not required, then this should be stated in the application.
  11. A budget indicating how the funds will be spent and a one page justification of the budget. Note that as a general rule, equipment will not be funded. Travel to FIG Conferences to present results and tuition fees may be included in the budget. Per diems for field work will not be funded, but reasonable actual costs of field work are refundable.

GOVERNANCE

Grant holders are expected to file a report, co-signed by their supervisor and department head, within a year of receiving their grant indicating how the money was spent.

FIG Foundation grants do not pay University overhead or administration assistant costs. Successful applicants will have to seek exemption if their institution requires a portion of research grants for overhead.

PROPOSAL TEMPLATE

Section 1 below, should be a maximum of one A4 page, typed in single spaced Times New Roman 12 point font using the stipulated headings. Any additional pages will be deleted from the proposal. Use layman’s language; evaluators are unlikely to be familiar with jargon.

RESEARCH PROJECT TITLE – new page - (maximum one line Times New Roman 12 point capitals)

Research Objective: State in a sentence or two the central objective of the research.

Significance of the Research / Problem: Why is this research worth doing? What problem or situation does it address? What are the practical applications of the research? What does it contribute to knowledge?

Current State of Knowledge / Room for Improvement/Gaps: What is the existing theory in the particular field? What aspects of existing theory are open to challenge or further development?

Research Methodology and Methods: Describe the theoretical foundation of your work, the primary strategy of inquiry, and the methods of data collection and analysis.

Key Contribution: Describe the key contribution(s) of this research project, both practical (i.e. to society at large) and theoretical.

References – new page - in IJGIS format.

Suggested Reading – Sources of Useful Information for Writing a Proper Grant Proposal:

http://research.microsoft.com/en-us/um/people/simonpj/papers/proposal.html
http://www.ubc.ca/okanagan/ikbarberschool/research/infofac/sshrc-instructions.html
http://www.biochem.uwo.ca/funding_opportunities/getandkeepnserc.pdf
http://research.uwaterloo.ca/grants/documents/StudyonSuccessfulSSHRCApplications_000.pdf

Send your proposal by email to: [email protected]

or by post:

The FIG Foundation
c/o FIG
Kalvebod Brygge 31-33
DK-1780 Copenhagen V
DENMARK
Tel. + 45 3886 1081
Fax + 45 3886 0252
E-mail: [email protected]

FIG Office 25 September 2013



This page is maintained by the FIG Office. Last revised on 20-08-14.