The Burt McMurtry Arts Initiatives Fund offers support to faculty-initiated interdisciplinary projects that test new directions and possibilities in the arts at Stanford.
The Deans of the School of Medicine, the School of Engineering, and the Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability are pleased to announce an opportunity to use synthetic biology to make life on Earth more sustainable.
The Dunlevie Maternal-Fetal Medicine Center for Discovery, Innovation and Clinical Impact is offering a Spring 2023 Seed Grant to support researchers and scientists in advancing specific domains of maternal-fetal science.
Stanford CARE seeks to improve the health of Asians, Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders (AsA-NHPI) by increasing knowledge, empowering education, and positively impacting their clinical care.
The Office of the Vice President for the Arts is pleased to offer grants to support faculty creative projects with significant impact on campus and beyond.
To train more researchers to better produce, purify, and characterize proteins, the Macromolecular Structure Knowledge Center (MSKC) at Sarafan ChEM-H is accepting proposals from scientists to start or enhance a protein characterization project.
The Stanford Accelerator for Learning and the Stanford Institute for Human-Centered AI invite proposals for innovative designs and/or research on critical issues and applications of generative AI in learning contexts.
Internal funding opportunity for Stanford Medicine faculty in all lines within seven years of first faculty appoinment. Open to women pursuing advancement or to men or women who support the advancement of women in medicine and/or medical research.
The Stanford Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center (ADRC) at Stanford University School of Medicine is now accepting applications for a one to two-year Research Fellowship.
The Woods Institute’s REIP awards seek to move research toward innovative solutions that private market, public policy and individual stakeholders can employ that are of significant consequence in solving pressing environmental challenges.
The EVP program provides seed grants from $5,000 to $250,000, for up to two years, for interdisciplinary research projects that seek to identify solutions to pressing problems of the environment and sustainability.
EST Initiatives invites applications for funding to support the development of projects that advance understanding of ethical implications or societal impacts of science and technology innovation.
CTL offers quarterly teaching advancement grants of up to $2500 to Stanford instructors to support projects that directly enhance learning for Stanford students, with a particular emphasis on IDEAL goals.
Course Innovation Awards support the development of new courses focused on topics of regional or global interest. The goal is to spur the design of courses that appeal to large numbers of students or reach students early in their academic careers.
MUIR provides stipends to Stanford undergraduate students to work on a specific research project in support of a faculty member's environmental research over the summer.