Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM)
When you find a funding source that fits your project, please contact the Office of Sponsored Programs (OSP) for assistance with your proposals and grant applications.
Note: OSP requires 10 business days for review and approval of all proposal submissions. This timeline provides at minimum five (5) business days to assist in creating the internal business-related elements and five (5) business days for internal routing and approvals. Read more about this timeline.
Douglas County's 2025-26 Visitor Improvement Fund
Douglas County's 2025-26 Visitor Improvement Fund application is now available. Below you can find links to the application and guidelines:
Please download, complete and save the application. Then submit your complete application, including attachments, via the online submission form available here:
The application is due April 25, 2025 at 3:00 pm
We encourage you to review the guidelines and application submission form well in advance of the due date, in the event you have questions or need assistance with technical aspects. If you have questions, please contact me at this e-mail address or my phone number below.
Douglas County's Visitors Committee has scheduled the following dates/times to meet and review applications and prepare recommendations of award to the Douglas County Board of Commissioners:
May 15, 9:00 am
May 16, 8:00 am
May 21, 9:00 am
Additional review meeting details will be shared with applicants in May.
Special Projects - Hou Family Foundation
Limited Submission Opportunity
Nebraska EPSCoR FIRST Award
This opportunity provides $25,000 (with a $25,000 match required) and expert external reviews to an assistant professor to support his/her research and strengthen the researchers’ results to be more competitive for a faculty early career award. The new RFP can be found .
STEM Opportunities
Open funding opportunities from the American Heart Association (AHA)
NSF launches trainee track to help prepare graduate students to enter STEM careers
The new track will expand the NSF Research Traineeship Program in key technology areas
The U.S. National Science Foundation designed to help graduate students at – institutions without high research activity – develop the skills, knowledge and competencies needed to pursue a range of careers in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM). The NSF Research Traineeship Institutional Partnership Pilot (NRT-IPP) will catalyze a new partnership approach, bringing industry to the table to in turn enable students to receive industry-relevant experience in as outlined in the "CHIPS and Science Act of 2022."
The has long been dedicated to shaping and supporting effective training of students at the graduate level. The program focuses on high-priority interdisciplinary or convergent research areas using comprehensive traineeship models that are innovative, evidence-based and aligned with changing workforce and research needs. NRT-IPP advances these goals with further emphases on industry and specific focus areas within STEM.
The program invites proposals to test, develop and implement innovative and effective STEM graduate education models leading to industry-relevant graduate programs at non-R1 institutions. These institutions will collaborate with industry partners and partners at IHEs who have successfully implemented or are implementing NRT projects in the chosen focus area(s) identified for this new track.
Information Management Prototype for Clinical and Translational Research (IMPACT-CTR)
Dear Translational Team Leaders:
I invite you to participate in a study I’m conducting to understand how funded translational research teams manage their information. This study, Information Management Prototype for Clinical and Translational Research (IMPACT-CTR), is funded by an R01 from the National Library of Medicine and aims to understand the tools and strategies teams use in seeking, using, creating, sharing, storing, and retrieving information while conducting collaborative clinical and translational research. (For more information on this topic, please see our two JCTS papers on this topic, linked below.) We will use what we learn to create training materials to help teams develop evidence-based information strategies that can make CTR - and all scientific work - more efficient and effective.
To participate in this study, , and a member of the research team will reach out to schedule a brief informational call!
Please see below and attached for more information and feel free to forward this note on to any other translational team leaders who might be interested in participating. I look forward to hearing more about your information practices and strategies!
Thanks,
Betsy
Betsy Rolland, PhD MLIS MPH
Principal Investigator, IMPACT-CTR
Associate Director, Team Science
Sage Bionetworks
Why should you and your team participate?
You will be contributing to science! By sharing your strategies and challenges around information, you will help us create best practices that other teams can implement, saving everyone time and energy.
- You will be improving your team work! In previous research, we have found that the simple act of discussing team processes, like how your team manages information, will have a positive impact on how your team works together. Teams rarely take the time to discuss their approach to teamwork, which can lead to conflict and less effective teams. By participating in this project, your team will begin to pay attention to how you work together, instead of focusing exclusively on your scientific tasks.
- You will be modeling for your trainee and staff that “doing science” is more than just the data collection and analyses! By participating in discussions around teamwork, you’re providing essential training to future scientists in leading effective teams.
- You will have access to expert-facilitated and the new information learning module! At the end of the interviews, I will schedule a 90-minute facilitated Collaboration Planning session with your team, where I walk you through honing your team’s approach to collaboration. Once the new information-focused learning module is complete, your team will have early access to it.
Who is eligible to participate?
Any funded team working in CTR, broadly defined, is invited to participate! Your work could fall at any phase in the translational research process, from basic to clinical to population to community-based research. If your work has translational potential, we would love to talk with you! Teams should have a minimum of four members (including the PI) who are interested in participating, preferably representing multiple roles (e.g., project manager, data manager, scientist, student, etc.). If you are unsure about your eligibility, , and we would be happy to discuss!
What does participation entail?
Participation in this study requires you and members of your team to each complete a brief (~10 min) survey about your team’s processes, then participate in an interview about your team’s collaborative work (1 hour). There is no advanced preparation required for this interview, and most people find it quite fun to talk about the ways in which they collaborate! A few teams will be asked to allow a member of our study team to attend 1-2 team meetings to observe your team’s collaborative work in action and a few individuals will be asked to participate in an additional user experience interview (30-60 min) in which they demonstrate various tools or strategies for information management. All of these interviews and observations will be scheduled at your team’s convenience.
This study was deemed “not-research” by the WCG, IRB#1-1706645-1.
Where can I find more information about IMPACT-CTR?
Please visit for more information about this study and how you can participate!
Previous JCTS Papers on Information Behaviors of Translational Teams:
Chladek J, Kelly PW, Rolland B. . Journal of Clinical and Translational Science. 2023;7(1):e209. doi:10.1017/cts.2023.616
Kelly PW, Chladek J, Rolland B. Journal of Clinical and Translational Science. 2023;7(1):e210. doi:10.1017/cts.2023.614
Arts and Humanities Opportunities
Humanities Nebraska 2025 Grant Opportunities
Various deadlines between March 1, 2025 and November 1, 2025.
National Endowment for the Arts: Research Awards
The National Endowment for the Arts invites applicants to engage with the agency’s five-year research agenda through two funding opportunities for research projects: Research Grants in the Arts funds research studies that investigate the value and/or impact of the arts, either as individual components of the U.S. arts ecosystem or as they interact with each other and/or with other domains of American life. NEA Research Labs funds projects that support transdisciplinary research teams grounded in the social and behavioral sciences, yielding empirical insights about the arts for the benefit of arts and non-arts sectors alike. The NEA may enter into up to one subsequent renewal award with the recipient of a NEA Research Labs grant for a project consistent with the intent of these guidelines. Any such future awards are subject to agency priorities, the availability of funds, awardee performance, and the agency’s regular review process.
Deadline: March 24, 2025
Nebraska Arts Council 2025 Grant Opportunities
Arts Learning Projects Grants
This grant program supports initiatives with a strong educational emphasis in preK-12 schools or in community settings. Community-based projects must incorporate educational learning outcomes in the arts. School-based projects must incorporate local or national educational learning standards in the arts and may also be aligned with standards in other disciplines.
Learn more
Social Sciences Opportunities
- Applications are accepted on a rolling deadline.
- Applications are accepted on a rolling deadline.
- Applications are accepted on a rolling deadline.
- Applications are accepted on a rolling deadline.