A new grant program from the Office of Data and Evaluation will support data-grounded research studies that investigate the state, impact, and value of the humanities in the United States.
Two levels of funding (up to $75,000 and up to $150,000) will support either one- or two-year projects that should employ at least one empirical study design. Approaches may be quantitative, qualitative, or mix-method, and while supported projects may draw on data acquired as well as pre-existing data sets, they must involve data analysis activities that occur during the period of performance.
Project teams may be from a single institution or multiple institutions. Team members may be interdisciplinary or international, however there must be at least one collaborator who is actively working in the humanities.
- Activities supported through this program may include, but are not limited to:
- Planning: meetings, convenings, and community events
- Data collection: archival research, interviews, focus groups, web scraping, and surveys
- Digitization: scanning, metadata, storing, and publication of digital materials
- Data analysis: cleaning, coding, visualization, and statistical analysis
- Communication: writing, publication, social media, podcasts, and conferences
- Dissemination: workshops, seminars, forums, and public lectures
All proposed projects must seek to understand the state, impact, and value of the humanities in one or more of the following research categories:
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Humanities Education: Elementary
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Humanities Research: Scholarship (for academics, general audiences, or both) conducted within and across humanities disciplines, as well as interdisciplinary research involving humanities questions in the sciences, medicine, law, and other fields.
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Public Humanities: Humanities work intended to engage with large and diverse public audiences through a broad range of public-facing and publicly accessible formats such as interpretive museum exhibitions, historic site interpretation, public dialogues, public-facing projects led by educational or cultural organizations, and co-creative community collaborations.
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Preservation and Access: Preserving and providing access to humanities collections, including community and grassroots preservation initiatives.
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Humanities Infrastructure: Buildings, institutions, and communities and the financial and other resources that support them.
Check out the grant program page to read the full Notice of Funding Opportunity.
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