The Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) is the federal research funding agency that promotes and supports research and training in the sciences and engineering.

The Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) is the federal research funding agency that promotes and supports research and training in the social sciences and humanities.

Please note: the funding opportunities listed here represent ongoing or recurring ones (annually or quarterly). 
We strongly recommend checking the deadline on the Tri-Council website prior to considering to submit an application.

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC)

College and Community Innovation Program (CCI)

The Tri-Agency College and Community Innovation program (an umbrella term for a variety of grant opportunities) is one of the largest vehicles for funding applied research at colleges (including polytechnics and CEGEPs) across Canada. It strengthens research links and collaborations between Canadian colleges and other colleges, universities and/or partner organizations from the private, public, and not-for-profit sectors that have a common goal of creating economic, social, health and/or environmental benefits for Canada. The funding that the CCI program provides to applied research and development projects makes it easier for the partner organizations to collaborate and access the wealth of resources Canada’s innovative college system has to offer. The CCI program:

  • Provides partner organizations access to the unique knowledge, expertise, and capabilities available at Canadian colleges and universities.
  • Trains college students in essential technical skills required by organizations in the private, public, or not-for-profit sectors.
  • Provides economic, environmental, health and/or social benefits to the partner organization(s) and to Canada.
  • Allows a wide range of collaborations among colleges, universities and/or partner organizations.

Applied Research and Development grants support research and development projects led by college researchers in partnership with private, public, or not-for-profit organizations while encouraging collaboration with universities and/or other colleges. This opportunity trains students in essential technical skills and develops and strengthens research links and collaborations among different institutions and/or partners that have a common goal of creating economic, social and/or environmental benefits while contributing to the research ecosystem continuum. 

Funding: Up to $150,000 per year, over 1 to 3 years.
Application Deadline: applications can be submitted at any time.

Applied Research Tools and Instruments (ARTI) grants support the purchase of research equipment to foster and enhance the capacity of colleges to undertake applied research projects in partnership with industry, public, not-for-profit and health organizations within their community and to provide training opportunities for students. 

The applied research equipment may be purchased to enhance the capacity of a single, multiple, or institution-wide college applied research program(s) in the natural sciences, engineering, social sciences, humanities, and health sciences. The college must fully justify and demonstrate the need and the value of the equipment for its partners and applied research program(s), resulting in meaningful economic, environmental, social and/or health impacts for Canadians. In addition, the college must demonstrate how the use of the equipment will be optimized to maximize benefits to partners and contribute to the training of a diverse pool of trainees in an inclusive environment.

Colleges are invited to submit a limited number of applications per competition. The maximum allowable applications per college will vary from competition to competition based on a number of factors including budget availability.

Funding: $10,000 to $200,000 over 1 year
Application Deadline: January 16, 2024, by 8 pm (ET)

CCSIF grants support colleges conducting multidisciplinary research and collaborating on projects with community partner organizations. They should foster community innovation by connecting the talent, facilities and capabilities of Canada’s colleges and polytechnics with the research needs of community organizations. CCSIF proposals should facilitate collaborative and innovative research that brings together researchers, students, and partners to address challenges in community innovation in the social sciences, humanities, health sciences, natural sciences and engineering research fields.

CCSIF grants enable colleges to increase their capacity to work with communities, with the goal of developing partnerships that foster community innovation in areas such as the integration of vulnerable populations, community development, education and training, climate change, environmental degradation, and health and well-being.

Although curriculum development may be included in the proposal, it must not be the project's primary objective. Proposals must include a research component and/or address research challenges in community innovation.

A maximum of five applications can be submitted per college to each competition in any research area covered by the Tri-Agency, but a different principal investigator should lead each proposal.

Funding: Up to $120,000 per year, over 1 to 3 years.

Application Deadline: March 1, 2024.

The objective of Idea to Innovation (I2I) grants is to accelerate the pre-competitive development of promising technology originating from the university and college sector, and to promote its transfer to a new or established Canadian company. I2I grants provide funding to college and university faculty members to support research and development projects with recognized technology transfer potential. This is achieved through defined phases by providing crucial assistance in the early stages of technology validation and market connection. There are four distinct funding options, characterized by the maturity of the technology or the involvement of an early-stage investment entity or industrial partner.

Eligible research and development activities include:

  • Refining and implementing designs
  • Verifying application
  • Conducting field studies
  • Preparing demonstrations
  • Building prototypes
  • Performing beta trials

Funding: Varies by activity.

Application Deadline: January 8, April 2, June 25, and September 16, 2024.

The Synergy Awards for Innovation were launched in 1995 by NSERC to recognize partnerships in natural sciences and engineering research and development between universities and Canadian industry. In recognition of an evolving research environment, the Synergy Awards for Innovation now also reward research partnerships taking place with colleges and research partnerships beyond those with industrial partners. Since their inception, the Synergy Awards for Innovation have honoured the most outstanding achievements of these collaborations. By working together, award-winning partner organizations and post-secondary institutions have proven that effective partnerships and innovation are the foundation of achievement. Their success has enriched the academic and research programs within Canadian post-secondary institutions while providing concrete benefits to Canadians. 

The Synergy Awards for Innovation are intended to showcase innovation and the benefits of uniting strengths to make the most of Canadian ingenuity.

College Partnerships
These involve a partnership between one or more eligible Canadian colleges and one or more non-academic partner organizations. The highlighted research partnership can be across the spectrum of natural and social sciences, engineering, humanities, or health.

Partnerships involving both eligible Canadian colleges and universities, and one or more partnering organizations, are eligible. The partnership should be presented under the category (University partnerships or College partnership) corresponding to the nominee’s affiliation.

Funding: Please see NSERC website for details
Nomination Deadline: December 14, 2023, 8 pm (ET)

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC)

Research Partnerships

SSHRC’s Research Partnerships program realizes the potential for social sciences and humanities research to influence, benefit and impact within and beyond post-secondary institutions, by supporting research and related activities and tools that facilitate the co-creating and exchanging of research knowledge while supporting the next generation of scholars.

The program objectives are to:

  • Strengthen knowledge and understanding by leveraging perspectives from across multiple disciplines and sectors.
  • Support collaboration among post-secondary institutions, and between post-secondary institutions and organizations from the public, private and not-for-profit sectors, to co-create knowledge and increase use of research outputs.
  • Mobilize research knowledge, within academia and other sectors, that can lead to intellectual, cultural, social, and economic outputs and outcomes.
  • Increase the accessibility and use of research knowledge within and beyond the post-secondary sector.
  • Support a high-quality training experience for students and/or postdoctoral researchers.

Please see the SSHRC website for rules involving multiple applications: individual and institutional.

For Formal Partnerships

Partnership Engage Grants provide short-term and timely support for partnered research activities that will inform decision-making at a single partner organization from the public, private or not-for-profit sector. The small-scale, stakeholder-driven partnerships supported through Partnership Engage Grants are meant to respond to immediate needs and time constraints facing organizations in non-academic sectors. In addressing an organization-specific need, challenge and/or opportunity, these partnerships let non-academic organizations and post-secondary researchers access each other’s unique knowledge, expertise, and capabilities on topics of mutual interest.

Funding: $7,000 to $25,000 for one year. 
Application deadline: June 15, September 15, December 15, and March 15 (8 p.m. Eastern).

Partnership Development Grants are expected to respond to the objectives of the Research Partnerships program. These grants provide support over one to three years to teams/partnerships, led by a project director, to:

  • Develop research and/or related activities in the social sciences and humanities—these can include knowledge mobilization and the meaningful involvement of students and emerging scholars—by fostering new partnerships with existing and/or potential partners; or
  • Design and test new partnership approaches for research and/or related activities that can result in best practices or models—these can either be adapted by others or have the potential to be scaled up to a regional, national, or international level.

Partnership funding is intended for formal partnerships between postsecondary institutions and/or organizations of various types. 

The quality of training, mentoring and employability plans for students and emerging scholars will be evaluated as an important part of the proposed initiative. 

Funding: $75,000 to $200,000 over 1 to 3 years
Application Deadline: November 15, 2023 (8 pm Eastern)

Partnership Grants are expected to respond to the objectives of the Research partnerships program. These grants provide support for new and existing formal partnerships over four to seven years to advance research, research training and/or knowledge mobilization in the social sciences and humanities. This is done through mutual co-operation and sharing of intellectual leadership, as well as through resources as shown by cash and/or in-kind contributions.

Partnership Grants are intended for large teams of postsecondary institutions and/or organizations of various types that work in formal collaboration.

The quality of training, mentoring and employability plans for students and emerging scholars will be evaluated as an important part of the proposed initiative.

Funding: 
Stage 1: up to $20,000
Stage 2: up to $2.5 million (by invitation only)  
Application Deadline: February 10, 2024 (8 pm Eastern)

For Individuals and Teams

Connection grants support events and outreach activities geared toward short-term, targeted knowledge mobilization initiatives. Connection Grants support workshops, colloquiums, conferences, forums, summer institutes, or other events or outreach activities that facilitate:

  • Disciplinary or interdisciplinary exchanges in the social sciences and humanities.
  • Scholarly exchanges between those working in the social sciences and humanities and those working in other research fields.
  • Intersectoral exchanges between academic researchers in the social sciences and humanities and researchers and practitioners from the public, private or not-for-profit sectors.
  • International research collaboration and scholarly exchanges with researchers, students and non-academic partners from other countries.

Although only a Canadian institution that holds institutional eligibility can administer funds, the intellectual leadership and governance for Connection Grant activities can come from within the research community and/or from within the not-for-profit sectors.

SSHRC welcomes applications involving Indigenous research, as well as those involving research-creation. Connection Grants would support events and outreach activities related to research-creation and Indigenous research.

Individuals can apply, as an applicant, for only one Connection Grant per calendar year.

Funding:

  • Events: $7,000 to $25,000
  • Outreach Activities: $7,000 to $50,000 (higher amounts can be considered if well justified)

Application Deadline: November 1, February 1, May 1, August 1 (8 p.m. Eastern)

Canadian Heritage is partnering with the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) to provide funding support through arm’s-length SSHRC Connection Grants as well as supplements to recipients of SSHRC Postdoctoral Fellowships and SSHRC Doctoral Awards (Canada Graduate Scholarships - Doctoral Scholarships and SSHRC Doctoral Fellowships).

The purpose of this funding is to:

  • Promote Canadian research that will develop better understanding — based on empirical evidence — of the impacts of online disinformation in Canada to better inform programs and policies.
  • Build Canada's capacity to conduct research on and related to countering online disinformation and other related online harms.
  • Help foster a community of research in the digital citizenship and online disinformation space in Canada.

The Joint Initiative for Digital Citizen Research supports the goals of the Government of Canada’s approach to protecting democracy and combatting disinformation and other online harms.

Connection Grants are open to institutions, individual applicants, and teams. They provide funding to selected events and outreach activities geared toward short-term, targeted knowledge mobilization initiatives. These events and activities represent opportunities to exchange knowledge and engage on research issues related to online disinformation and other related online harms as well as their impact in the Canadian context.

Find out how to apply for the Joint Initiative for Digital Citizen Research Connection Grants.

Funding:

  • Events: $7,000 to $25,000
  • Outreach Activities: $7,000 to $50,000 (higher amounts can be considered if well justified)

Application Deadline: November 1, February 1, May 1, August 1 (8 pm Eastern)

Insight Research

The goal of SSHRC’s Insight Research program is to build knowledge and understanding about people, societies, and the world by supporting research excellence in all subject areas eligible for SSHRC funding. The objectives of the Insight Research program are to:

  • Build knowledge and understanding from disciplinary, interdisciplinary and/or cross-sector perspectives through support for the best researchers.
  • Support new approaches to research on complex and important topics, including those that transcend the capacity of any one scholar, institution, or discipline.
  • Provide a high-quality research training experience for students.
  • Fund research expertise that relates to societal challenges and opportunities.
  • Mobilize research knowledge, to and from academic and non-academic audiences, with the potential to lead to intellectual, cultural, social, and economic influence, benefit, and impact.

Please see the SSHRC website for rules involving multiple applications.

Insight Grants are expected to respond to the objectives of the Insight Research program. Insight Grants support research excellence in the social sciences and humanities. Funding is available to both emerging scholars and established scholars for research initiatives of two to five years.

Stable support for long-term research initiatives is central to advancing knowledge. It enables scholars to address complex issues about individuals and societies, and to further our collective understanding.

Insight Grants support research proposed by scholars and judged worthy of funding by their peers and/or other experts. Insight Grant research initiatives can be undertaken by an individual researcher or a team of researchers working in collaboration.

Applicants choose from one of two streams, depending on the amount of funding required. Both streams will be adjudicated by the same committees, and will receive the same rigorous level of merit review. The deadlines and application process are identical for both; however, the targeted success rate for Stream A is higher than for Stream B.

Funding
Stream A: $7,000 to $100,000
Stream B: $100,001 to $400,000
Over 2 to 5 years

Application Deadline: October 4, 2023 (8 pm Eastern)

Insight Development Grants are expected to respond to the objectives of the Insight research program. They support research in its initial stages. The grants enable the development of new research questions, as well as experimentation with new methods, theoretical approaches and/or ideas. Funding is provided for short-term research development projects of up to two years that are proposed by individuals or teams. Insight Development Grants are not intended to support large-scale initiatives. Long-term support for research is offered through SSHRC’s Insight Grants. Proposed projects can involve, but are not limited to, the following types of research activities:

  • Case studies
  • Pilot initiatives
  • Critical analyses of existing research

Projects can also involve national and international research collaboration, and the exploration of new ways of producing, structuring, and mobilizing knowledge within and across disciplines and sectors. Funding is available for two distinct categories of scholars:

  • Emerging scholars who will develop new research questions and/or approaches. Such projects can build on and further the applicant’s (or team’s) graduate work and/or represent a continuation of their overall research trajectory.
  • Established scholars who will explore new research questions and/or approaches that are distinct from the applicant’s previous/ongoing research. Research projects should be clearly defined and in the early stages of the research process. Insight Development Grant funding is not intended to support ongoing research for established scholars.

Funding: $7,000 to $25,000 over 1 to 2 years
Application Deadline: February 2, 2024

SSHRC Impact Awards are designed to build on and sustain Canada’s research-based knowledge culture in all research areas of the social sciences and humanities. The awards recognize outstanding researchers and celebrate their research achievements, research training, knowledge mobilization and outreach activities funded partially or entirely by SSHRC. Past recipients of SSHRC funding are listed in the Awards Search Engine.

Impact Award recipients are to use award funds for activities that promote and further develop the work being honoured. In recognition of the crucial role postsecondary institutions play in mobilizing research knowledge, at least 10 per cent of each award must be used to promote the recipient’s research achievements. Individual recipients and their institutions can choose to devote additional funds, including a higher percentage of the award funds, to these activities.

A multidisciplinary jury made up of distinguished individuals from academia, as well as the public, private and not-for-profit sectors from Canada and abroad, will select award recipients according to the selection criteria associated with each of the five awards.

Before announcing the names of the award winners and finalists, SSHRC will share competition results through the SSHRC Extranet for Applicants.

Eligible institutions are invited to put forward nominations for the:

  • Gold Medal ($100,000)
  • Talent Award ($50,000)
  • Insight Award ($50,000)
  • Connection Award ($50,000)
  • Partnership Award ($50,000)

Funding: $50,000 or $100,000 annually
Nomination Deadline: April 1, 2024

Other Research Funding Opportunities

Okanagan College maintains a Grants-in-Aid (GIA) fund to support research, scholarly and creative activity among members of the Okanagan College Faculty Association (OCFA). The OCFA collective agreement (Article 18.1.4.1) defines scholarly activity as:

“Scholarly activity shall be understood to include scholarship, research and creative activities. Scholarship involves oral or written activities that reflect a thorough and critical collection of knowledge of one’s profession or discipline. Research involves contributing to the expansion of knowledge and the sharing of that knowledge through appropriate professional means. Research includes application of research findings for purposes of practical application. Creative activities involve creative practice, exhibition, performance, composition, multimedia presentations and other similar activities that reflect applied practice of one’s profession or discipline.”

Each OCFA member may receive up to $4,000 per fiscal year from the GIA fund. This amount is subject to annual review.

GIA Guidelines, Application Forms, and Report Forms are available:

Please note that GIA has a new email address. All applications, reports, and questions should be sent to: GrantInAid@okanagan.bc.ca

With any other questions or queries, please feel free to contact Shannon Hawthorne at shawthorne@okanagan.bc.ca, or at ext. 4962

The College Fund supports projects that enhance the capacity of Canadian colleges to carry out applied research and technology development and foster partnerships that generate innovative products, processes or services that address the social, business, health or environmental needs of a Canadian industry or community.

The objectives of the College Fund are to:

  • Create and enhance partnerships with the public, private or not-for-profit sectors that lead to innovation. These innovations must address social, business, health or environmental needs of a Canadian industry or community.
  • Enhance and optimize the proven applied research capacity of the college that is related to the proposed applied research or technology development activities.
  • Generate social, economic, health or environmental benefits locally or nationally including the development of highly qualified personnel.

An eligible infrastructure project involves acquiring or developing research infrastructure to enhance existing applied research or technology development capacity.

Funding: Colleges can submit proposals with total CFI requests between $60,000 and $1 million.

Application Deadline:

  • Deadline to submit notices of intent: April 7 (each year)
  • Deadline to submit proposals: June 7 (each year)

Mitacs empowers Canadian innovation through partnerships that deliver solutions to our most pressing problems. It is a non-profit, national research organization that, in partnerships with Canadian post-secondary institutions, private industry and government, operates research and training programs in fields related to industrial and social innovation.

Mitacs helps college, undergraduate and graduate students, and postdoctoral fellows access funding, source research placements in their chosen discipline, and gain invaluable hands-on experience by applying their expertise to real-world projects with leaders in industry and not-for-profit organizations. The program pairs partner organizations with top-level research talent who can help achieve business and innovation goals. Mitacs Accelerate projects require both an academic partner and a non-academic partner (a for-profit or not-for-profit organization) which would also benefit from the research. College students can do three four-month internships.

Mitacs in the Okanagan is focussed on:

Advanced Manufacturing

Advanced Timber

  • Mass Timber Construction
  • Prefabrication

Agrotechnology

Aerospace

Computing and AI

  • Virtual Augmented Reality 
    (VR, AR, XR, and Digital Twins)
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Quantum Computing

Clean Technology

  • Hydrogen
  • GHG Emissions
  • Battery Storage

Emergency Management

  • Disaster Resistance and Resilience
  • Climate Change
  • First Responders

Life Sciences

Funding Model:

Partner contributes $7,500 per internship unit (4 months for college students) and Mitacs contributes $7,500, resulting in a research award of $15,000. Funds flow through the academic institution with a stipend to the student at a minimum of $10,000, with up to $5,000 to support research costs.

If a project has 6 or more internship units with 3 or more interns, it is possible for the partner organization to contribute $6,000 per internship unit instead. This will create a $13,300 research award with a $10,000 minimum stipend for the intern.

Application Deadline: ongoing, anytime, non-competitive funding support.

 

Grant-Writing Assistance

If you would like assistance with the writing of your grant application or simply wish to discuss your research project and relevant research funding opportunities, please contact the grant writer at learningandappliedresearch@okanagan.bc.ca or drop by the Office of Learning and Applied Research.