IPPRA / Grant Monitor

2026-07-07
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Mathematical Sciences Infrastructure Program

PD-20-1260 · U.S. National Science Foundation

education workforce ai data science computing communications economic development Science & Technology R&D

Closes
2026-08-04 · 28 d
Award ceiling
Award floor
Program funding
Expected awards
Cost sharing
No
Posted
2020-08-07
Instrument
Grant
Characterization · gpt-5.4-mini · 2026-07-07

NSF funds novel mathematical sciences research infrastructure projects, training projects with a core research component, and certain conferences/workshops/travel support with regional or national impact that extends beyond the submitting institution.

Funds
other
University
direct
social behavioral
minor
physical sciences
minor
engineering
minor
computational data
substantial

⚑ Conference proposals have lead-time requirements and are subject to a separate submission timing rule. · Training projects must not fit the NSF Workforce Program in the Mathematical Sciences. · Proposals must demonstrate regional or national-scale impact beyond the submitting institution or event location. · Some training proposals must include partnerships, broadening participation, or replication potential.

Unit fits — one characterization, each unit's own rules

IPPRA 58 good education policy/evaluation (core line, primary); signature methods: community engaged, policy analysis; social/behavioral work is minor; funds other — not a research fit
Physical Sciences & Engineering (demo) 50 partial technical depth: substantial; funds other (capped)
Tom Love Innovation Hub 10 none deep-tech content; no commercialization signal

Description

The primary aim of the Mathematical Sciences Infrastructure Program is to foster the continuing health of the mathematical sciences research community as a whole. In addition,the program complements the Workforce Program in the Mathematical Sciences in its goal to increase the number of well-prepared U.S. based individuals who successfully pursue careers in the mathematical sciences and in other professions in which expertise in the mathematical sciences plays an increasingly important role. The DMS Infrastructure program invites projects that support core research in the mathematical sciences, including: 1) novel projects supporting research infrastructure across the mathematical sciences community; 2) training projects complementing the Workforce Program, and 3) conference, workshop, and travel support requests that include cross-disciplinary activities or have an impact at the national scale.

Proposals under this solicitation submitted to DMS Infrastructure must show engagement in developing or enhancing the mathematical sciences research infrastructure in the U.S., including, but not limited to, broadening participation activities; professional development training; or involvement of students and early career researchers. Proposals must explain the regional or national scale impact of the activity that goes substantially beyond the submitting institution or the location of the event.

Full proposals (with exception of conference proposals, which are subject to lead-time requirements) must be submitted close to one of the Full Proposal Target Dates.

See below for more information about each category of Infrastructure projects.

(1)Novel projects that serve to strengthen the research infrastructure: The DMS Infrastructure Program will consider novel projects that support and strengthen the research infrastructure across the mathematical sciences community. These projects most often cut across multiple sub-disciplines supported by DMS or involve interdisciplinary collaborations. The main goal of these projects should be to create a new research infrastructure or substantially enhance or transform an existing infrastructure with regional or national impact that goes substantially beyond the submitting institution or the location of the project. Full proposals must be submitted by the Full ProposalTarget Date.

(2)Training projects: Training proposals submitted to DMS Infrastructure must not fit into one of the areas covered by solicitations in the Workforce Program in the Mathematical Sciences ; they must be submitted by the Full ProposalTarget Date; and they must:

A. Include a core research component for trainees in mathematical sciences;

B. Demonstrate promise for an impact at the regional or national scale that goes substantially beyond the submitting institution or the location of the project;

C. Satisfy at least one of the following criteria:

i. Serve as models to be replicated, ii. Promote partnerships with non-academic entities, minority-serving institutions, or community colleges, or iii. Include a substantial broadening participation initiative.

In addition, all proposals of this type must clearly identify:

Goals to be achieved;

Specific new activities to be conducted, the way in which these address the goals, and the way in which the activities significantly differ from or enhance common practice;

Measurable outcomes for the project;

Plans and methods for assessment of progress toward the goals to be achieved, and for evaluation of the success of the activity;

Recruitment, selection, and retention plans for participants, including members of underrepresented groups;

Sustainability plans to continue the pursuit of the project's goals when funding terminates; and

A budget commensurate with the proposed activity.

3) Conferences, Symposia, Working Research Sessions, Travel Support Requests: Principal Investigators should carefully read the program solicitation Conferences and Workshops in the Mathematical Sciences to obtain important information regarding the substance of proposals for conferences, workshops, summer/winter schools, international travel support, and similar activities.Conference/workshop proposals that concern topics within a particular subdiscipline of mathematics or statistics should be submitted to the appropriate DMS disciplinary program(s). These submissions are subject to the lead-time requirements specified by the disciplinary program(s); see the program web pages listed on the DMS home page .

Conference/workshop proposals may be submitted to the DMS Infrastructure program only if the intended topical areas span a wide range of the mathematical sciences and are consequently not within the scope of DMS disciplinary programs. The required lead time for submission of such proposals is:

6 months in advance of the meeting date for proposals requesting no more than $50,000 to support a domestic meeting;

9 months in advance of the meeting date for proposals requesting more than $50,000 to support a domestic meeting;

12 months in advance of the meeting date for proposals requesting support for participation in a meeting taking place outside the United States.

Apply

View on Grants.gov → CONTACT: U.S. National Science Foundation <grantsgovsupport@nsf.gov>

Proposal brief SEE AN EXAMPLE →

A one-page internal memo: fit assessment, submission requirements, document scaffold, and next steps dated back from the deadline — tailored to your project idea if you add one.

ONE LLM CALL (~1¢) · CACHED · REQUIRES STAFF KEY

Proposal shell · National Science Foundation conventions SEE AN NSF EXAMPLE →

Funder-faithful document skeletons — National Science Foundation's document set with section headings, page limits, reviewer guidance, and writing prompts; add a project idea to get [DRAFT] starter bullets. Download as .md for Word or Overleaf.

ONE LLM CALL (~2-3¢) · CACHED · SCAFFOLDING, NOT GHOSTWRITING