Grant writing
Practice of completing an application process for a financial grant provided by an institution / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Grant writing is the practice of completing an application process for a financial grant provided by an institution such as a government department, corporation, foundation, or trust. Such application processes are often referred to as either a grant proposal or a grant submission. Successful grant writing requires a clear understanding of grantsmanship. While the principles and fundamentals of grantsmanship apply broadly, consistently successful grant writers are able not only to utilize knowledge about the form and content of the proposal documents, but also the intertextual relationships of the specific proposal to other, related documents (e.g., the funding agency's own mission statement and current projects, correspondence with agency personnel, supplementary materials, budgets, general and agency-specific writing guidelines, etc.).[1]
It has been suggested that Grantsmanship be merged into this article. (Discuss) Proposed since January 2024. |
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The elements of proposal-creation typically involve:
- Analyzing the intended audience for the proposal
- Analyzing the purpose of the proposal
- Gathering information about the subject of the proposal
- Writing the proposal
- Formatting the proposal
- Revising, editing, and proofreading the proposal
- Submitting the proposal
As with any writing process, all elements (before the submission of the final version) are less discrete stages than they are overlapping and often recursive activities.[2] Grant writing is a new career path and there is a growing body of education in the field.[3][4]