Workshop Information: Foundation Relations and the Limited Submissions Office will conduct workshops via Zoom to explain the funding opportunity and process. While one has a focus on the College of Medicine you may join either on if that is what your schedule allows. You can register for the webinar or view the recording using the links below:
- University Park and Commonwealth Campus PI's can view the recording here: https://psu.mediaspace.kaltura.com/media/W.M.+Keck+FoundationA+Research+Program+Webinar/1_84kxmxhb
- Penn State College of Medicine: Noon, Wednesday, November 8: https://psu.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_NGY6h3WUQE2enG5NUNzOgw
The W. M. Keck Research Program seeks to benefit humanity by supporting two different areas: (1) Medical Research and (2) Science & Engineering. Keck seeks distinctive, novel projects that question prevailing paradigms, of have the potential to break open new territory in their field.
Past grants have been awarded to major universities, independent research institutions, and medical schools to support pioneering biological or physical science and engineering research, including the development of promising new technologies, instrumentation or methodologies. You will read about two categories throughout (1) Medical Research and (2) Science & Engineering; these two areas are distinct. However, research related to human biology, whether the PI considers it to fall under medicine, will be reviewed by Keck’s medicine team.
Grants range from $1 million to $5 million but are typically $2 million or less. Recent awards have been in the $1-1.5 million dollar range.
We cannot recommend strongly enough that you review the grant abstracts for examples of funded projects. As you do so, you might ask how your proposed project compares in scope and potential impact on your field or science.
The program is extremely competitive with about 200 applicants to the Foundation with only five awards in each category with approximately 75% of funding being awarded west of the Mississippi. If you are considering submitting we suggest asking yourself these questions which will be used to judge concept paper:
- How bold or groundbreaking is the idea and the fundamental science proposed?
- Why you, why this idea, and why now?
- Could this question lead to a life’s work or career-defining work that would shift scientific thinking in a field or the world?
Successful investigators should be published in top journals and those publications should indicate that the investigator is a leader in their field and capable of pursuing this line of research.
Keck questions that the concept paper should address:
- The breakthrough -- what about this work is field or science changing?
- Note: Innovations should not have already been published or funded and should not be likely be be reached before awards are made.
- If the field is crowded, what makes your approach different?
- Why Keck?
- Speak specifically to reviews where the project has been rejected by federal agencies (NIH/NSF/DOE) as too early, too risky, or too interdisciplinary.
- Keck wants to spur scientific breakthroughs and set PIs up to receive further support, so this is critical.
Competitive projects typically exhibit the following characteristics:
- Focus on critical and emerging areas of basic science research with the potential to develop breakthrough technologies, instrumentation or methodologies that would break down existing barriers to inquiry. We again recommend reading the grant abstracts.
- Keck will want to know:
- How is this proposed work transformational?
- What’s the big deal?
- Where is the breakthrough?
- Where is the risk?
- Keck will want to know:
- Are innovative, distinctive and interdisciplinary and have potential for transformative impact such as the founding of a new field of research, enabling of new observations, or altering perception of a previously intractable problem.
- What is the magnitude of the improvement?
- What difference will this make for science in your discipline or beyond?
- Demonstrate a high-level of risk due to unconventional approaches, or by challenging prevailing paradigms.
- Shows the potential for transformative impact
- Demonstrate that W. M. Keck Foundation support is essential to the project’s success.
- Projects that are too early-stage, high-risk, or interdisciplinary to fit within traditional agency funding mechanisms are sought.
- In fact, Keck looks for written evidence that other avenues of funding have been declined.
- More than speculating on the prospects of public funding, reviews or discussions with agency program staff should be pursued and a written rejection obtained (this may be in email form). A project that has received excellent reviews from NSF/NIH, but dismissed as too risky, ambitious, etc. would be considered responsive.
- If invited to the Phase I proposal phase, Keck will ask for reviews or documentation of discussions with Program Directors
Keep in mind the focus is on basic science with the potential broad impact, not clinical or translational research, treatment trials, or research for the sole purpose of drug development or focused on a single disease. For example, Medical Research proposals should describe innovative research that has the potential to impact fundamental mechanisms of human health and disease. The foundation is interested in endeavors that address more basic mechanisms/questions that will impact numerous diseases or disorders.
As noted, please research past winners and abstracts at the Foundation website to get a sense of the high-risk ideas funded as Keck advises us to offer this advice. Concept papers should be written as a narrative, not as you would write an NSF or NIH proposal and should both explain the science but leave the reader inspired from the outset by the potential of the work to change a field or science. The abstracts provided in the grants lists will give you a sense of the language to use.
Application Process:
The Research Program employs a two-phase application process with optional pre-application counseling. All communication with the Foundation, including submitting applications, proposals and reports must be via the institution’s designated liaison which is Dr. Sophie Penney Leach, Director of Foundation Relations.
The submission process is multi-staged, starting with a consulting period where the Foundation will review 1-page concepts from an institution. From the pool of concepts submitted to this downselect, the internal review committee will select up to eight papers (four each in Science & Engineering/Medical Research) that are consistent with Keck’s funding priorities. Selected teams will have the opportunity to refine these papers between December 203 and early January 2024 based on internal reviews in preparation for sharing by Keck program staff. This is essential as we must share these concepts with Keck when we request a call during which the selection committee, will on behalf of PIs, discuss the concepts with Keck staff (PIs are not permitted to participate in this discussion).
Keck Program Manager feedback on each concept’s aims, methodologies, impacts, and rationale for support will be obtained by February 15, 2024. As a result, up to two projects (one each in Science & Engineering/Medical Research) may be selected to submit a 3-page Phase I proposal by May 1. Successful Phase I proposals are invited to submit a 12-page Phase II proposal by August 15.
To apply to the internal downselect, use the concept paper template attached and upload application using the button on the right-hand menu bar and upload one PDF file (File name: Last name_KECK-Spring2023.pdf) containing the following items in order:
Internal Application Requirements:
- Concept Paper (written for a well-educated lay audience) - see Template file linked at the right (1-page, Times New Roman, 12-point font, one-inch margins):
- PI Names and Keck Funding Category (Science & Engineering or Medical)
- Overview: An overview of the proposed project emphasizing any unique aspects and pilot studies. Say what the breakthrough and leap forward may be
- Methodologies and Key Personnel: A description of the methodologies. Note which aspects are risky and how you can address that risk. This section should be the primary focus and largest section of the concept paper as Keck is more interested in the “what and how” rather than the “why”; Highlight key project personnel and demonstrate expertise/capacity to carry out proposed work
- Justification for Keck Support: A justification of the need for private funding (exhibit proof of "excellent" reviews that are "too early" or "too risky" or "too interdisciplinary" from federal funding agencies (NIH/NSF)
- Budget: A roughly estimated budget broken down by major areas, e.g., personnel, equipment, consumable supplies, etc. No F&A / indirect costs are allowed. (It is highly recommended budget should be $1 million from Keck over 3 years.)
- Internal Memo: (1-page):
- Explains to PSU reviewers with expertise in your discipline the more technical “so what” and why you can succeed.
- Explain to PSU reviewers the unique contributions of each of your team members, how it leverages resources/strengths at PSU, and any other information that would be relevant to the internal review panel.
- Include general statement regarding sources of cost share
- Excerpts of federal agency reviews or correspondence with federal program managers indicating that the project is too risky, too early, or too interdisciplinary for the agencies' programs.
Office of Foundation Relations is the designated institutional contact responsible for communicating with the Foundation and is collaborating with Limited Submissions on the internal downselect process. For questions concerning the application process, other foundation-related questions, or the competitiveness of particular concepts University Park applicants should please contact Sophie Penney Leach, Ph.D., Director, Foundation Relations (swp2@psu.edu). Penn State College of Medicine applicants should please contact Jessica Kiely, Director of Corporate and Foundation Relations, (jkiely1@pennstatehealth.psu.edu) for additional support.