R36 Aging Research Dissertation Awards to Promote Diversity
UPDATE, May 2023:
The NIA Aging Research Dissertation Award to Promote Diversity has been reissued as PAR-23-174. The next due date for this award is July 19, 2023.
NIA supports senior graduate students via the R36 Aging Research Dissertation Awards to Promote Diversity (PAR-23-174). These awards provide funding to support underrepresented graduate students in finishing their dissertations. All R36 recipients must be U.S. citizens or permanent residents at the time of award. View other NIA fellowships available to graduate students.
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R36 at a Glance
- Eligibility: Underrepresented PhD students at the dissertation phase
- Maximum Award Duration: 2 years
- Yearly Due Dates: February 16, June 16, October 16
- Award Budget: $27,144 Salary, $20,000 Additional Expenses
Questions? Contact NIATraining@mail.nih.gov.
Important Dates
The R36 dissertation award is awarded in three cycles every year, as described below.
Receipt Cycle | Initial Application Due Date | Resubmission Due Date | Initial Review Date | Council Review Date | Earliest Possible Award Start Date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | February 16 | March 16 | June/July | August or October | September or December |
2 | June 16* | July 16 | October/November | January | April |
3 | October 16 | November 16 | February/March | May | July |
*In 2023, the June 16 due date is adjusted to July 19.
Award Duration
The R36 can support up to two years of dissertation work.
How to Apply
Find information on applying. R36 applicants should follow NIH instructions for research awards (PDF, 4M), not fellowships.
R36 Review
NIA R36 applications are reviewed by NIA Chartered Review Committee AGCD-4.
R36 Salary and Funding Levels
Yearly award budgets are composed of salary, tuition and fees, and additional expenses, as described below. The R36 salary follows the NRSA stipend rate, which can be found in NOT-OD-23-076.
Salary | Maximum Tuition | Additional Expenses |
---|---|---|
$27,144 | N/A | $20,000 |
Additional expenses include health insurance, travel to scientific meetings, and dissertation research costs. With the exception of costs associated with the dissertation (i.e., dissertation credits), no funds may be used to pay tuition or fees.
Components of a Dissertation Award Application
The R36 Dissertation Award application requires many parts; you should begin preparing your application well before the deadline. Below find the major components of an application and their length limits:
Application Component | Length Limit |
---|---|
Abstract | 30 lines of text |
Project Narrative | 3 sentences |
Applicant Biosketch1 | 5 pages |
Sponsor Biosketch | 5 pages |
Budget | Table |
Budget Justification | N/A |
Specific Aims | 1 page |
Research Strategy | 6 pages |
Letters of support (minimum of 2)2 | 2 pages each |
Certification Letter3 | N/A |
- A Biosketch is a document containing a curriculum vitae (CV), personal statement, and description of past research experience. R36 Applicant Biosketches should NOT include the Part D. Scholastic Performance section.
- The faculty advisor and at least one other member of the dissertation committee must submit letters of support, each no longer than 2 pages, that assess (a) the doctoral candidate’s progress to date; and (b) the candidate’s commitment to a career in aging-health-related research. The applicant may choose to include additional letters of support. All letters of support should be included in the application as a single PDF.
- The faculty advisor, dissertation committee chair, or university official directly responsible for supervising the dissertation research must submit a letter certifying that the applicant meets the eligibility criteria for the R36. Consult the notice of funding opportunity for more details.
Detailed instructions for each application part can be found in the SF424 (R&R) Application Guide. R36 applicants should follow the Research (R) instructions.