Grant Abstracts & Results
OCSE offers two discretionary grant program opportunities that further the national child support mission and goals: Section 1115 Demonstration Grants and Special Improvement Project (SIP) Grants.
Two types of abstracts describe each discretionary grant project. The initial grant abstract, usually just a few sentences, provides a brief, basic description of the project, including the grantee’s name and state, and the purpose, child support focus area and duration of the project.
The final abstract is based on the grantee’s final report. In 500 words or less, the abstract summarizes intervention strategies and findings into two sections: What it does and Results.
- What it does – a high-level description of the project including expected objectives/goals and overall project approach
- Results – a high-level summary of findings, which may focus on implementation challenges and implications rather than outcome measures
Related Pages
Featured Resources
SIP Grants Awarded in FY 2011
October 1, 20111115 Grants Awarded in FY 2011
October 1, 2011Noncustodial Parents: Summaries of Research, Grants and Practices
August 27, 2009
OCSE Grants Involving Child Support and Judicial Collaboration
September 24, 2007SIP Grants Awarded in FY 2010
September 30, 20101115 Grants Awarded in FY 2010
December 31, 2010