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Open Source Grant Commitment Letter §

Pattern Summary §

Support faculty and research grant proposals with a commitment letter from the OSPO relating to open source and open requirements.

Problem / Challenge §

  • Funders increasingly require funded research to make research outputs publicly available.
  • Faculty and researchers may not know how best to demonstrate that their publications, data and/or software will meet these requirements in their funding applications.

Pattern Category §

  • Demonstrating value as an Academic OSPO
  • Funding & Financial Support
  • OSS Advocacy & Policy

Context §

A university or research institution that submits grant proposals to federal, state or private funding sources.

Faculty and researchers are applying for grants with open source requirements.

An OSPO with the resources/capacity to supply grant commitment letters (that meet funding application deadlines) and to provide guidance and support to address open requirements after grants are awarded.

Forces §

Teams working on proposals face competing pressures and time constraints when submitting proposals and their primary concern is the proposal narrative and budget.

Other components of a grant application (e.g. open source, OSS) may be outside their area of expertise and/or their area of concern.

Solution §

Provide a standard commitment letter to researchers to include in their grant applications. The template should be easy to tailor for each new grant.

Sample Letter of Commitment §

Dear Review Panel

If the proposal submitted by [NAME OF RESEARCHER/FACULTY MEMBER] entitled [NAME OF PROJECT] is selected for funding, it is my intent to collaborate and/or commit resources as detailed in the Project Description or the Facilities, Equipment, or Other Resources section of the proposal.

Sincerely

[NAME]

[ROLE]

[NAME OF OSPO]

Resulting Context §

Offering support with grant proposals develops and strengthens relationships with faculty, researchers and students.

Possibly better reactions from reviewers interested in the open source components of proposals.

Additional learning from The George Washington University OSPO §

The initial outcome of this commitment letter is appreciation and education from researchers. We are also connecting more closely with our Office of the Vice President for Research and demonstrating the value of the OSPO to university leadership. We have just started this work, so we do not have evidence to show if these commitment letters are improving our chances of winning grants.

Known Instances §

References §

Contributors & Acknowledgement §

  • David Lippert (The George Washington University) https://orcid.org/0009-0003-6444-9595
  • Ciara Flanagan https://orcid.org/0009-0005-3153-7673