Funding Opportunities
SEE-D Diversity to Success Workshop
Announcing the fourth annual mentoring and career-enhancement program, SEE-Diversity (Scholarships to Enhance and Empower Diversity), for diverse early-career neuroscientists.
Announcing the fourth annual mentoring and career-enhancement program, SEE-Diversity (Scholarships to Enhance and Empower Diversity), for diverse early-career neuroscientists. This program is sponsored by the APA Minority Fellowship Program and the International Brain Research Organization.
Stay tuned for information on the 2025 workshop. The workshop is followed with 6-10 months of individual career-development coaching. Eligible SEE-Diversity participants are early-career Ph.D. scientists in neuroscience-related fields who come from groups that are underrepresented in neuroscience, including racial and ethnic minorities and people with disabilities.
SEE-Diversity is a privately funded program whose goal is to increase the successful transition to and retention of diverse, early career neuroscientists into academic positions. The program will provide diverse Ph.D. neuroscientists with long-term mentoring and professional enrichment, with a particular emphasis on assistance with preparation, submission and revision of career development and research grant applications to NSF and NIH. In the initial workshop, participants will form small grant-coaching groups, facilitated by a senior faculty member. These groups will meet in person during the workshop and then engage in virtual meetings for 6-10 months to revise and hone grant applications prior to submission. Therefore, applicants should be planning to submit a career development (e.g., NIH K or NSF Career Award) or research grant (e.g., NIH R or NSF standard) application within 6-10 months of the workshop. Other structured activities during the workshop will address issues that impact the persistence of diverse neuroscientists in academic careers, such as the perception that they do not belong in the scientific community, isolation and solo status, and negotiating institutions and tenure.
Eligibility
APF encourages applicants from diverse backgrounds with respect to age, race, color, religion, creed, nationality, ability, sexual orientation, gender, and geography.
Eligible SEE-Diversity participants are early-career PhD scientists in neuroscience-related fields who come from groups that are underrepresented in neuroscience, including racial and ethnic minorities and people with disabilities. “Early career” includes senior postdoctoral researchers, assistant professors, assistant research professors, and other pre-tenure level academic positions.
Application Instructions
Application Materials:
- curriculum vitae/resume
- one-page description of proposed grant application (Specific Aims page for NIH applicants; Project Summary for NSF applicants) including planned submission deadline
- one-page personal statement describing your commitment to an academic career, your research area, availability of scientific advisors, and expectations of the workshop
- two letters of reference
Please be advised that APF does not provide feedback to applicants on their proposals.
Please review our Program FAQs for important details on the application process.
Recent Recipient
Dr. Richard Lopez
Worcester Polytechnic Institute
Past Recipients
2024
Dr. Richard Lopez, Worcester Polytechnic Institute
Dr. Rachel Heuer, University of Miami
Dr. Carine Lampert, University of Alabama at Birmingham
2023
Dr. Antonia Kaczurkin, Vanderbilt University
Dr. Debra Karhson, University of New Orleans
Dr. Farrah Madison, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Dr. Mariajose Metcalfe, University of California Irvine
Dr. Carlene Moore, Duke University
2022
Dr. Amelia Cuarenta, Temple University
Dr. Nicole Cruse, Sacred Heart University
Dr. Okunola Jeyifous, University of Chicago
Dr. Rammohan Shukla, University of Toledo