Writing Hints:
It may be
easier to think of this section as a review of Relevant Literature." Cite
previous projects and studies that are similar to what you are proposing. Show
the funding agency that you know what you are proposing because you are
familiar with what has preceded you.
Try to be
careful in your use of language. It can very helpful to have a friend, outside
of your area of focus/expertise, read your proposal to make sure that the
language is readable and minimizes the use of:
jargon
trendy or "in" words
abbreviations
colloquial expressions
redundant phrases
confusing language
Position
your project in relation to other efforts and show how your project:
a) will extend the work that has been previously done,
b) will avoid the mistakes and/or errors that have been previously made,
c) will serve to develop stronger collaboration between existing
initiatives, or
d) is unique since it does not follow the same path as previously
followed.
Use the
statement of the problem to show that your proposed project is definitely
needed and should be funded.
It is essential
to include a well documented statement of the need/problem that is the basis
for your project. What are the pressing problems that you want to address? How
do you know these problems are important? What other sources/programs
similarly support these needs as major needs?
Check to see
that the potential funding agency is committed to the same needs/problems that
your proposal addresses. Clearly indicate how the problems that will be
addressed in your project will help the potential funding agency in fulfilling
their own goals and objectives. As you write, keep the funding agency in your
mind as a "cooperating partner" committed to the same concerns that you are.
Is there a
special reason why you and/or your organization are uniquely suited to conduct
the project? (Geographic location, language expertise, prior involvements in
this area, close relationship to the project clientele, etc.)
When you get to
the Methods Section of your proposal it will be important to refer back to the
needs you've identified in this section (and show how your methods will
respond to these needs).
It can really
help gain funding support for your project if you have already taken some
small steps to begin your project. An excellent small step that can occur
prior to requesting funding is a need assessment that you conduct (survey,
interviews, focus groups, etc.). Write up your need assessment as a short
Report, cite the Report in your proposal, and include a copy with the
proposal.
This is an
excellent section to have the reader begin to understand that an ongoing
approach to the problem is essential (assuming that you are proposing a
project that is ongoing in nature) and that short term responses may have
negligible effect. This can begin to establish a rationale for why your
project needs external funding - it seeks to provide a long term response.
Return to the Process