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The Gantz Family Undergraduate Research Award


Vagelos Undergraduate Research Grant
The College of Arts and Sciences
College Alumni Society Research Grant
The School of Engineering Undergraduate Research Fund
Class of 1971 Robert J. Holtz Endowed Fund
South Asia Studies Department
Rosemary D. Mazzatenta Award
The Gantz Family Undergraduate Research Award
Pincus-Magaziner Family Undergraduate Research Grant
Biological Basis of Behavior Program
Summer Research Internships
Biology Department
Rose Award
History Department
Benjamin Franklin Scholar Summer Research Grant
History of Art
University Scholars Research Award
Jewish Studies Department
Religion in Urban Civil Society
Center for Molecular Studies in Digestive and Liver Disease
The Carol and Lawrence Zicklin Center Fund
Sociology Department
John Parker Fellowship for Undergraduate Research
Urban Studies Department
Penn Institute for Humanities
Center for Clinical Epidemiology & Biostatistics
Undergraduate English Research Grants  

The Gantz Family Undergraduate Research Award

Thanks to the generosity of the Gantz Family Foundation, an opportunity has been created for Penn students to undertake a research project each summer. These funds are for a student to conduct independent research in Israel on some episode topic or event of importance in the Arab-Israeli relationship, with a preference for a project studying how the United States, Israeli, and Arab media cover identical events in the Middle East. This competition is open to Penn freshmen, sophomores and juniors in the College.

Research Support

Research support from the Gantz Family Undergraduate Research Award will be awarded in accordance with the following principles:

  • Projects having no other funding source are particularly encouraged. When other funding sources can be identified, shared costs or matching funds will be encouraged whenever possible.
  • Each project must have a faculty advisor.
  • Projects may involve more than one student.
  • Examples of what may appropriately be requested in a budget include: research supplies, travel, and computer time. Books, software and capital equipment are almost never funded. Items costing $500 or more with a useful life of one year or more must be purchased with a University purchase requisition and will remain the property of the University. Salaries, benefits, and overhead are not to be included.

Proposals

Proposals should take the following form:

  1. Completed Application Form
  2. Short abstract (one page; no longer than 100 words)
  3. Objectives and Methodology (2 pages maximum)
    • State the objectives and relevance of the proposed work.
    • Evaluate existing knowledge and work in the area and provide a brief background summary to the proposed work.
    • Describe the design and procedures to be employed and provide a timetable and implementation plan for completion of the project.
    • If the work is to have practical application, describe the impact and usefulness.
  4. Budget (one page). List each budget item in order of priority and justify in terms of the work proposed.
  5. Faculty Endorsement The faculty advisor must send a letter of endorsement certifying the feasibility of the project and the adequacy of the student's preparation to undertake it. The Advisor's Recommendation Form includes the optional waiver of right to access to that letter.

Submission Procedure

Proposals (one original and four collated copies of items 1-4 above) must be submitted to the Center for Undergraduate Research and Fellowships by March 1.

Applications forms are available from the Center for Undergraduate Research and Fellowships or can be downloaded (MS Word format.)

Research involving animal or human subjects or hazardous materials must also be submitted for approval by the relevant University oversight committees at the same time. Students should consult with their advisors to correctly complete these forms.

Deadlines and Timeframes

Completed applications and letters from advisors must be submitted by March 1. (When that is a weekend, applications will be accepted on the following Monday before 10 am.) Applications with late material risk being not considered. Proposals will be reviewed before April 1 by a faculty committee designated by CURF. (In no cases will expenses incurred before this date be reimbursed). All applicants will be notified promptly of selection results.

Funds will be transferred to the student's departmental business administer (BA) along with a copy of the budget. The BA will be asked to reimburse students for receipts they present which reasonably match the amounts and purposes listed on the budget.

Contact

Cheryl Shipman
Center for Undergraduate Research and Fellowships
The ARCH, 3601 Locust Walk
Philadelphia, PA 19104-6224
shipman@pobox.upenn.edu
215-898-6066

 

 

 

Last updated on February 2008