Three Student-Faculty Research and Creative Activity Grants
Summer Research Experience for Undergraduates: Earn up to $2,300 and receive up to $600 in supplies to carry out your project during the summer. If multiple students work together on a project, maximum funding is $6,900 in student wages and $600 in supplies. The faculty mentor also receives a $2,300 stipend. Funds are available after July 1 through October 15. Unspent funds should be returned to ORSP.
Students must be enrolled at least part time in the Fall semester following the grant award. If you are working on multiple projects, you may earn a maximum of $3,500 from ORSP in the summer.
If your project involves your educational practice focus, talk to your mentor applying for the Summer Scholarship of Teaching and Learning Scholarship.
Application Deadline: February 10*
Student-Faculty Research Collaboration: Earn up to $2,000 and receive up to $600 in supplies to carry out your project during the academic year. If multiple students work together on a project, maximum funding is $6,000 in student wages and $600 in supplies. Funds are available after September 1 through May 15. Unspent funds should be returned to ORSP.
Students must be enrolled at least part time to be eligible for this grant. if you are working on multiple projects, you may earn a maximum of $3,000 from ORSP during the academic year.
Application Deadline: July 15 (1st round) and September 15 (2nd round)*
Diversity Mentoring: Projects for this program can be awarded during the summer or during the academic year with the stipend amounts noted above. Eligible students qualify as one (or more) of the following: student of color; low income (defined as Pell-Grant eligible); first-generation; non-traditional; no incoming credits; or registered with Services for Students with Disabilities. Please email orsp@uwec.edu to see if you qualify for this program. Students who are eligible for this program are also eligible for all other student funding opportunities in ORSP. Students are unlikely to receive more than two awards under this program in their career.
Students must be enrolled at least part time to be eligible for this grant. The above funding limits apply.
Application Deadline: Open
*If the application deadline falls on a weekend or holiday, the due date will be extended to the following Monday.
Characteristics of Ideal Projects
The ideal project engages students in as many aspects of the scholarly process as possible. This will look different for each project, but might include:
- Identifying a question, problem, or creative/scholarly goal
- Developing a process or approach to answer, solve or achieve it
- Carrying out the project
- Widespread dissemination of the results of the project
The project should be tailored appropriately by the mentor to match the skill level of the student. The level of independent work performed by a first-year student will typically be different from that of a senior student in their second year working on a project.
Projects under this program should lead to sharing the results at scholarly conferences/meetings, in published journal articles or book chapters, and in proposals for extramural funding.
As a condition of the grant, students are expected to present their results at the annual UW-Eau Claire Celebration of Excellence in Research and Creative Activity (CERCA), the Provost’s Honor Symposium, or the UW System Symposium for Undergraduate Research and Creative Activity. Students are also encouraged to present their research at professional conferences/meetings in their disciplines or at the National Conference on Undergraduate Research (NCUR). Travel funds to present at scholarly conferences/meetings are available through the Student Travel for Presentation of Research Results program [ADD LINK TO THIS WEBPAGE}.
Eligibility for Mentors
Faculty and academic staff with .5 FTE or greater appointments during the academic year of the grant or in the following academic year for summer funding.
Eligibility for Graduate Students
Graduate students may be involved in a student-faculty research and creative activity collaborative project, if they are enrolled at least part time and serve as mentor to undergraduate students on the project.
Application Process/Writing Guide
Faculty mentors are encouraged to mentor students in proposal writing. Part of the mentoring process is to carefully review student-written proposals prior to submission.
For students, the Center for Writing Excellence can help at any stage of the writing process, from brainstorming and outlining to organizing arguments and polishing claims.
Go to the eform application to see the required application components.
Apply Here
Proposal Evaluation
Proposals are evaluated using a common set of review criteria by disciplinary review committees, who are also asked to provide feedback to share with applicants. The review committee recommendations and ratings/rankings are reviewed by ORSP; funding decision are made by ORSP. If funding is limited and/or proposals are in the same recommendation category, preference may be given to:
- Tenure-track faculty, especially in the first three years
- Projects that bring in new students
- Interdisciplinary projects
- Projects from underrepresented disciplines
- Projects that involve students in proposal-writing
- The first project from a faculty member over the second or third from a faculty member in any proposal round
- Projects that are developing promising groundwork for an extramural funding proposal