Writing Hints:
Appendices
should be devoted to those aspects of your project that are of secondary
interest to the reader. Begin by assuming that the reader will only have a
short time to read your proposal and it will only be the main body of your
proposal (not the Appendices). Then, assume that you have gotten the attention
of the reader who would now like some additional information. This is the
purpose of the Appendices.
Here are some possible sections to include in the Appendices:
Dissemination
Plan - An important aspect of your proposal will be the plan for
disseminating information of/from the project to other audiences. Most
funding agencies are interested in seeing how their financial support of
your project will extend to other audiences. This may include newsletters,
workshops, radio broadcasts, presentations, printed handouts, slide shows,
training programs, etc. If you have an advisory group involved with your
project they can be very helpful in disseminating project information to
other audiences.
Time
Line - A clear indication of the time frame for the project and the
times when each aspect of the project will be implemented. Try creating the
time line as a graphic representation (not too many words). If done well, it
will help demonstrate the feasibility of the project in a very visible way.
Letters
of Support - Funding agencies would like to know that others feel
strongly enough about your project that they are willing to write a letter
in support of the project. Talk through with the potential letter writers
the sort of focus that you think will be important for their letter. (Try
and draw on the reputation of the letter writing group.) Do not get pushed
into writing the letters for the agencies - they will all sound alike and
will probably defeat your purpose of using them. The letters must be
substantive. If not, do not use them! Have the letters addressed directly to
the funding agency. (Do not use a general "To Whom It May Concern" letter -
it makes it appear that you are applying to many different potential funding
agencies and are using the same letter for each. This may really be the
case, so make sure you personalize each letter to the specific potential
funding agency.)
Cooperating
Agency Descriptions - If you have referenced in your proposal different
cooperating agencies that you will be working with, it is a good idea to
provide a more detailed description of each of these agencies in the
Appendices. Rather than include large descriptions of each cooperating
agency, a single page that gives the name/address of the agency, names of
key personnel, and brief descriptions of the major services provided is
sufficient. Try and prepare each of these single page descriptions so they
follow a similar outline/presentation of information.
Evaluation
Instrument - Include a draft copy of the actual evaluation instrument
you plan to use (survey, questionnaire, interview guide, etc.). This will
let your prospective funding agency know that you are serious about making
evaluation an integral part of your project - and funding agencies like to
hear this! Indicate DRAFT at the top of the instrument and then make it look
as real as possible. Never say things like, "I think I may have a question
that deals with...", or "Four or five questions will be included that
examine the concern of...". If you will be using an interview procedure or a
focus group discussion, include a draft copy of the specific questions that
will actually be used for the interview/discussion.
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