CONCEPT PAPER
Concept paper:
-provides an overview of the
project, and helps funding agencies eliminate proposals that are likely to be
disapproved.
-a summary of what the project is
all about, the reasons for conducting the project, and how it will be carried
out.
Uses:
Serves as the foundation of the
full proposal
It helps determine whether a certain project is feasible or not.
It is used to pique the interest of
the potential funding agencies.
It is used to obtain informal
feedback on the ideas prior to preparing the full proposal.
The Five Elements of a Concept Paper
1. introduction
- identifies how
and where the applicant’s mission and the funder’s mission intersect or align.
It addresses the reasons why the funder should support projects in the given
general area. It also introduces the applicant’s partners and shows why the
partners want to participate in the project.
2. purpose/need/ rationale OR
‘BACKGROUND’
-outlines what
others have written about the general topic and focuses on the gap in knowledge
to be filled, the problem to be solved, or the need to be addressed by the
applicant’s proposed project. Similar to a literature review, this section
allows the applicant to state the purpose or need in such a way that the
applicant’s project is the best possible solution to the problem. Also, it
often provides statements addressing the significance of the project (showing
why the project should be supported).
NOTE!
In some cases,
these first two sections are merged into a Background section that both
introduces the alignment between the two organizations’ missions and provides
the need statement.
3. Project Description
-functioning as
the solution to the problem, the answer to the need, or the investigation that
will fill the knowledge gap. In this section, the applicant addresses the
unique, unusual, distinctive, innovative, and/or novel aspects of the approach,
showing why the applicant’s team has the best solution and presenting a
compelling case for funding.
*The project
description includes the project’s Goals and Objectives. A goal is an
abstract state of being, a condition, an end, or an aspiration while objectives
are statements of measurable outcomes that, collectively, will help the
applicant measure progress toward accomplishing the project goal(s). For
example, a goal might be to improve student academic performance via a
structured professional development program for teachers, while an objective
might be to offer a specific kind of workshop or seminar on a particular topic
for a defined set of teachers in a K-12 school district.
*The project
description also includes an overview of the project’s Methodology (sometimes
called Project Activities or Action Plan or Approach). The goals,
objectives, and methods (or activities) will need to align closely with each
other and will need to be accomplished within the proposed Timeline, expressed
in either months or years. The methods or activities will need to be congruent
with or based on what has been tried in the field in the past, they must be
based on empirical evidence, and they will need to be both reasonable in cost
and complexity and accomplishable within the proposed timeline.
4. SUPPORT OR BUDGET
-contains either
(1) an outline of the main budget categories for the requested project support
or (2) a single bottom-line amount of the request and a brief discussion of how
that amount will be used. Some concept papers may not even include an amount
requested.
5. CONTACT INFORMATION
-Contact Information of the
applicant organization’s chief executive or his/her designee authorized to make
funding requests.
NOTE!
The 5 Elements discussed are suggested general
outline for a concept paper. Ultimately, if a given funder provides a specific
template or format, the applicant must use the prescribed structure.
Reference:
hanover.com
hanover.com
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