Division of Research and Graduate Studies
Grants, Contract Awards - Set Another Record at $48 Million
FRESNO, Calif. (Dec. 16, 2003) -- Fresno State recorded another banner year for grants and contracts in 2002-03. Projects funded by non-state entities increased to more than $48 million, nearly 25 percent higher than the previous year’s high of $38 million.
The new total marks the sixth consecutive year of that faculty and staff have secured record totals in external funding for sponsored projects. Sponsored project funding has quadrupled since 1997.
A grant to the Division of Continuing and Global Education to improve agriculture and open international markets for Armenian farm produce provides internships at Getnatun Winery in Armenia for these students.
"Our grant funding capacity is expanding as faculty members continue to become more experienced at capturing the attention of funding sources," said Dr. Thomas McClanahan, associate vice president for University Research, Grants and Contracts. "In addition, faculty are backed by proactive administrators who encourage them to seek and create new programs and opportunities within their schools and colleges, despite state budget realities."
The University Grants and Research Office works closely with faculty to prepare and submit proposals. Last year more than 500 proposals were submitted to outside agencies. President Welty reaffirmed recently that he wants this trend to continue, and has directed a new task force to guide the reorganization of grants and contracts so that pre-award activities and post-award administration both fall under a single administrative structure on campus. The reorganization is expected to take most of 2004.
Fresno State receives project and research funding from numerous sources, including federal, state and municipal agencies and private foundations.
Key federal sources include the National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, the Department of Education and the Department of Agriculture.
Important state funding sources include the California Energy Commission, Department of Education, the Department of Water Resources and the Department of Food and Agriculture. Examples of private funding sources include the Public Utilities Commission, The California Endowment, the Garabedian Foundation, the James Irvine Foundation, the American Vineyard Foundation, the Coleman Foundation and the California Wellness Foundation.
The grants vary enormously in size and focus. Biology Professor Shirley Kovacs, for example, is in her fourth year of administering the SCORE program, funded by the National Institutes of Health. Through multiple contracts over several years, a total of more than $2.4 million in NIH funding supports meritorious, investigator-initiated research projects in biomedical or behavioral sciences. Individual faculty funded through this program include Dr. Alejandro Calderon-Urrea, Dr. Jim Prince, Dr. Jorge Benetiz, Dr. Maurice Cohen, and Dr. Christine Edmondson.
The College of Health and Human Services recently received a multi-year grant of more than $2 million from The California Endowment to establish and operate the Central Valley Health Policy Institute. The grant will help facilitate an interactive regional process to identify, monitor, and analyze emerging health policy issues that influence the health status of people living in Central California. The goal is to develop the infrastructure and regional capacity for addressing health policy issues that affect valley residents by implementing leadership development activities, facilitating community engagement in research, and conducting educational and training programs.
Dr. Dennis Nef, interim dean of Undergraduate Studies and the former associate dean of the College of Agricultural Science and Technology, continues to receive funding to support a variety of Ag Literacy activities. The programs are geared to encourage participants to think out of the box about careers in agriculture, exposing them to ag-related professions beyond field labor as well as to the ag programs offered at the university.
This year’s awards from the CF3 group (Kellogg Foundation) includes more than $50,000 for community-based activities emphasizing the importance of agriculture in the rural community of Firebaugh and an outreach effort to the farm worker families of a ranch owner in rural Orange Cove. In addition, a 3-year grant from USDA ($299,482), provides funding to encourage regional high school and community college students into enter ag programs and careers.
McClanahan is enthusiastic about the extraordinary growth in grant and contract funding but also realistic about the near-term prospects for more expansion.
"I am optimistic, but the next few years are likely to present some unique and difficult challenges, especially for California universities like Fresno State. The state budget crisis may already have begun to erode potential sources of research funds, and the growing federal budget deficit will undoubtedly take a toll as well. In addition, the transition to managing grants and contracts through the state will certainly require the University Research, Grants and Contracts Office and some faculty to focus on mastering a new process," he said.
"For a year or two, things will be very difficult, but given the necessary internal resources, in the long run our grants and contracts program has the potential to grow in both size and sophistication," McClanahan said.
Some of Fresno State’s recent major grants:
Title: Central Valley Health Policy Institute
Amount of Award: $537,903 (year 1 of 5)
Project director: Dr. Benjamin Cuellar
Purpose: To create a regional health research and services
partnership with a broad range of health care entities in Central
California
College/School: College of Health and Human Services
Title: Making Invisible Lives Visible: Farmworkers in the San Joaquin Valley
Amount of Award: $5,000Project director: Dr. Kathryn Forbes
Purpose: To document the life stories of farmworker families struggling in the Five Points area of Fresno County
College/School: College of Social Sciences
Title: Community College Outreach and Recruitment
Amount of Award: $299,482
Project Director: Dr. Dennis Nef
Purpose: To encourage regional high school and community
college students to enter agriculture programs and to pursue ag
careers.
College/School: College of Agricultural Science and
Technology
Title: Development of a Certificate in Program Evaluation
Amount of Award: $275,678
Project director: Dr. Phyllis Kuehn and Dr. Sharon
Brown-Welty
Purpose: To develop a certificate program in evaluation for
evaluators of externally funded programs, core curricula and
educational reform efforts. College/School: Kremen School of
Education & Human Development
Title: Going Global
Amount of Award: $160,000
Project Director: Dr. Ali Peyvandi and Dr. Rufus Waters
Purpose: To train students seeking careers in export
businesses and to help promote businesses that hire these students
College/School: Craig School of Business
Title: Garabedian Scholarships
Amount of Award: $22,500
Project director: Raul Moreno
Purpose: To provide internships for upper division migrant
students
College/School: Student Affairs, Office of University Migrant
Services
Title: USDA - Armenia Agribusiness
Amount of Award: $128,677
Project Director: William Erysian
Purpose: To improve agriculture and open international
markets for Armenian farm produce
College/School: Division of Continuing and Global
Education
Title: The Support of Continuous Research Excellence (SCORE) Program
Amount of Award: $2.4 million total over multiple years
Project director: Dr. Shirley Kovacs
Purpose: To increase the numbers of underrepresented minority
faculty, investigators and students engaged in biomedical or
behavioral research. Individual faculty funded for research grant
include Dr. Alejandro Calderon-Urrea, Dr. Jim Prince, Dr. Jorge
Benetiz, Dr. Maurice Cohen, and Dr. Christine Edmondson.
College/School: College of Science and Mathematics
Related Links:
- 2002: Grant funding tops $38 million, another record for Fresno State
- 2000: CSU Fresno Major Grants from 1999-2000