Mainstreaming Open Science Fund 2024
The Mainstreaming Open Science Fund is an ad-hoc funding initiative for the members of the Open Science Community Delft (OSCD), that is made possible due to the financial support of the TU Delft Open Science Programme. The main purpose of the funding is to stimulate bottom-up pilot initiatives that fall outside of traditional research funding and focus on either of the two goals:
- Building community/ies around Open Science Practice(s), or
- Advancing Open Science practices within one or several faculties of TU Delft.
-
Any member of the OSCD (TU Delft employees, including PhD candidates) who has not previously received funding from this initiative (if you're not a member yet, please, register here)
-
- OSCD Board members;
- Previous Mainstreaming Open Science Fund recipients;
- OSCD members whose projects could be funded though other TU Delft Open Science Programme funds, including Open Education Stimulation Fund.
-
Up to EUR 10.000 per accepted project.
-
- At least one person from the faculty needs to be involved;
- At least one researcher needs to be involved;
- Project (results) have to benefit OSCD/TU Delft.
-
Project proposals should be written using the Application Form. The Call is open for applications until 15 February 2024, 24:00. The applicants will be notified of the reviewers’ decision by the beginning of March. Projects should start no later than September 2024.
After submission, your proposal will be reviewed by the Review Board of the Mainstreaming Open Science Fund.
Applicants can send their grant application forms to t.y.yankelevich@tudelft.nl and CC openscience@tudelft.nl.
Any questions about the application process can be addressed to Tanya Yankelevich, the OSCD manager.
-
- Feasibility (Are the goals of the project achievable within the financial and time limitations of the Call?)
- Impact (How many members of the TU Delft community are served by the project? Does the project also serve people outside applicant’s faculty and/or TU Delft?)
- Collaboration (Is there collaboration between faculties? Or between members of the OSCD who represent different professional affiliations?)