[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 7, Volume 15]
[Revised as of January 1, 2008]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 7CFR3406.15]

[Page 385-387]
 
                          TITLE 7--AGRICULTURE
 
  CHAPTER XXXIV--COOPERATIVE STATE RESEARCH, EDUCATION, AND EXTENSION 
                   SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
 
PART 3406_1890 INSTITUTION CAPACITY BUILDING GRANTS PROGRAM--Table of Contents
 
         Subpart D_Review and Evaluation of a Teaching Proposal
 
Sec. 3406.15  Evaluation criteria for teaching proposals.

    The maximum score a teaching proposal can receive is 150 points. 
Unless

[[Page 386]]

otherwise stated in the annual solicitation published in the Federal 
Register, the peer review panel will consider the following criteria and 
weights to evaluate proposals submitted:

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               Evaluation criterion                        Weight
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(a) Potential for advancing the quality of
 education:
    This criterion is used to assess the
     likelihood that the project will have a
     substantial impact upon and advance the
     quality of food and agricultural sciences
     higher education by strengthening
     institutional capacities through promoting
     education reform to meet clearly delineated
     needs.
        (1) Impact--Does the project address a      15 points.
         targeted need area(s)? Is the problem or
         opportunity clearly documented? Does the
         project address a State, regional,
         national, or international problem or
         opportunity? Will the benefits to be
         derived from the project transcend the
         applicant institution or the grant
         period? Is it probable that other
         institutions will adapt this project for
         their own use? Can the project serve as a
         model for others?
        (2) Continuation plans--Are there plans     10 points.
         for continuation or expansion of the
         project beyond USDA support with the use
         of institutional funds? Are there
         indications of external, non-Federal
         support? Are there realistic plans for
         making the project self-supporting?
        (3) Innovation--Are significant aspects of  10 points.
         the project based on an innovative or a
         non-traditional approach toward solving a
         higher education problem or strengthening
         the quality of higher education in the
         food and agricultural sciences? If
         successful, is the project likely to lead
         to education reform?
        (4) Products and results--Are the expected  15 points.
         products and results of the project
         clearly defined and likely to be of high
         quality? Will project results be of an
         unusual or unique nature? Will the
         project contribute to a better
         understanding of or an improvement in the
         quality, distribution, or effectiveness
         of the Nation's food and agricultural
         scientific and professional expertise
         base, such as increasing the
         participation of women and minorities?
(b) Overall approach and cooperative linkages:
    This criterion relates to the soundness of the
     proposed approach and the quality of the
     partnerships likely to evolve as a result of
     the project.
        (1) Proposed approach--Do the objectives    15 points.
         and plan of operation appear to be sound
         and appropriate relative to the targeted
         need area(s) and the impact anticipated?
         Are the procedures managerially,
         educationally, and scientifically sound?
         Is the overall plan integrated with or
         does it expand upon other major efforts
         to improve the quality of food and
         agricultural sciences higher education?
         Does the timetable appear to be readily
         achievable?
        (2) Evaluation--Are the evaluation plans    5 points.
         adequate and reasonable? Do they allow
         for continuous or frequent feedback
         during the life of the project? Are the
         individuals involved in project
         evaluation skilled in evaluation
         strategies and procedures? Can they
         provide an objective evaluation? Do
         evaluation plans facilitate the
         measurement of project progress and
         outcomes?
        (3) Dissemination--Does the proposed        5 points.
         project include clearly outlined and
         realistic mechanisms that will lead to
         widespread dissemination of project
         results, including national electronic
         communication systems, publications,
         presentations at professional
         conferences, or use by faculty
         development or research/teaching skills
         workshops?
        (4) Partnerships and collaborative          15 points.
         efforts--Does the project have
         significant potential for advancing
         cooperative ventures between the
         applicant institution and a USDA agency?
         Does the project workplan include an
         effective role for the cooperating USDA
         agency(s)? Will the project expand
         partnership ventures among disciplines at
         a university, between colleges and
         universities, or with the private sector?
         Will the project lead to long-term
         relationships or cooperative partnerships
         that are likely to enhance program
         quality or supplement resources available
         to food and agricultural sciences higher
         education?
(c) Institutional capacity building:
    This criterion relates to the degree to which
     the project will strengthen the teaching
     capacity of the applicant institution. In the
     case of a joint project proposal, it relates
     to the degree to which the project will
     strengthen the teaching capacity of the
     applicant institution and that of any other
     institution assuming a major role in the
     conduct of the project.
        (1) Institutional enhancement--Will the     15 points.
         project help the institution to: Expand
         the current faculty's expertise base;
         attract, hire, and retain outstanding
         teaching faculty; advance and strengthen
         the scholarly quality of the
         institution's academic programs; enrich
         the racial, ethnic, or gender diversity
         of the faculty and student body; recruit
         students with higher grade point
         averages, higher standardized test
         scores, and those who are more committed
         to graduation; become a center of
         excellence in a particular field of
         education and bring it greater academic
         recognition; attract outside resources
         for academic programs; maintain or
         acquire state-of-the-art scientific
         instrumentation or library collections
         for teaching; or provide more meaningful
         student experiential learning
         opportunities?
        (2) Institutional commitment--Is there      15 points.
         evidence to substantiate that the
         institution attributes a high-priority to
         the project, that the project is linked
         to the achievement of the institution's
         long-term goals, that it will help
         satisfy the institution's high-priority
         objectives, or that the project is
         supported by the institution's strategic
         plans? Will the project have reasonable
         access to needed resources such as
         instructional instrumentation,
         facilities, computer services, library
         and other instruction support resources?
(d) Personnel Resources: This criterion relates to  10 points.
 the number and qualifications of the key persons
 who will carry out the project. Are designated
 project personnel qualified to carry out a
 successful project? Are there sufficient numbers
 of personnel associated with the project to
 achieve the stated objectives and the anticipated
 outcomes?
(e) Budget and cost-effectiveness:

[[Page 387]]

 
    This criterion relates to the extent to which
     the total budget adequately supports the
     project and is cost-effective.
        (1) Budget--Is the budget request           10 points.
         justifiable? Are costs reasonable and
         necessary? Will the total budget be
         adequate to carry out project activities?
         Are the source(s) and amount(s) of non-
         Federal matching support clearly
         identified and appropriately documented?
         For a joint project proposal, is the
         shared budget explained clearly and in
         sufficient detail?
        (2) Cost-effectiveness--Is the proposed     5 points.
         project cost-effective? Does it
         demonstrate a creative use of limited
         resources, maximize educational value per
         dollar of USDA support, achieve economies
         of scale, leverage additional funds or
         have the potential to do so, focus
         expertise and activity on a targeted need
         area, or promote coalition building for
         current or future ventures?
(f) Overall quality of proposal: This criterion     5 points.
 relates to the degree to which the proposal
 complies with the application guidelines and is
 of high quality. Is the proposal enhanced by its
 adherence to instructions (table of contents,
 organization, pagination, margin and font size,
 the 20-page limitation, appendices, etc.);
 accuracy of forms; clarity of budget narrative;
 well prepared vitae for all key personnel
 associated with the project; and presentation
 (are ideas effectively presented, clearly
 articulated, and thoroughly explained, etc.)?
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