The 3Cavaliers program provides support for groups of three collaborative faculty members spread across at least two disparate disciplines, located in different units or schools, to self-assemble, formulate and explore creative, high-risk, high-payoff interdisciplinary research ideas that might not be ready for more traditional funding. 3Cavaliers is supported by a university-wide faculty expertise database which helps faculty members self-assemble and pursue new research projects.

Developed by the Office of the Vice President for Research, 3Cavaliers unites three faculty members around a new research idea and provides seed funding of $60,000 or $15,000.

3Cavaliers 1.0 overview video: https://youtu.be/ZqCefgMoheE

3Cavaliers 2.0 overview video: https://youtu.be/RaQ1lNG5em8

 

There is no current call for proposals for 3Cavaliers.

 

News

Watch a video

See this video about 3Cavaliers 2.0 Projects

The 3Cavaliers process

 

  1. Log in. Researchers log in using their UVA ID to build or edit their faculty profile, follow along with peer research, and create a project.
  2. Create or join a project. Researchers can start their own project and invite collaborators to participate, or search the site to find a project to join. If a researcher creates a new project, all four of the project fields (Summary, Description, Desired Outcomes, and Student Engagement) are required.
  3. Form a trio. Once three tokens have been committed to a project, a trio has been formed. A project owner must have two other tokens submitted to the project to proceed (for a total of three tokens). Token holders invite other faculty to participate in a project or ask to join a project that is being formed. A project owner must have two pending tokens to accept them (cannot accept one at a time). Researchers do not need to take further action until they are notified that the project is funded. 
  4. Awards. Projects are checked to verify they meet requirements and funded in semi-random order until all funds are allocated.
  5. Funds distributed. Project owners are notified of the award, and funds are set up for immediate use.
  6. Research conducted. Research is conducted over a period of 18 months, with a possible six-month extension.
  7. Attend symposium. The final project report is submitted and participation in the annual symposium is required.

Guidelines and eligibility by school

Read more about guidelines and eligibility by school.

Learn the lingo

Project

A project is a new research idea shared by a faculty member on 3Cavaliers. Projects are eligible for funding once three tokens have been committed and a trio has formed.

There is no peer review requirement of projects. The mutual agreement of faculty members to join a project functions as the peer review step. 3Cavaliers administration will check to ensure that the requirements of the program are being met and that projects are weighted to account for portfolio diversity. Projects will not be reviewed for scientific merit prior to funding.

The administrative review for projects is as follows:

  1. The project must be new research. A project cannot be a continuation of a project a researcher has already started. A project cannot extend current projects or be used as a source of funding to continue a project that has been previously funded, including a prior 3Cavaliers award.
  2. An “interdisciplinary” team is one involving faculty members from two or more units and composed of faculty who are not currently funded or working together on the topic. Faculty are strongly encouraged to look beyond their school boundaries for research partners. A faculty trio cannot be a trio that was funded by a previous 3 Cavaliers award, even if the project is different. Trios with two members of a previous trio are permissible.

     

Priority Token System-new this year

The second round of 3Cavaliers will operate much like the first. One change is that a random ordering of projects is replaced by a semi-random ordering of projects based upon the number of priority tokens. The participating Schools/Units will be able to assign priority tokens to a limited number of projects during the selection process to increase the probability of a project being selected. The number of priority tokens is determined by the total number of tokens funded by the School/Unit.

Funding

At least 50% of the trio’s funding must be used to support UVA undergraduate students, graduate students, or postdocs (someone in a “training role”).

 

The remaining 50% of the funds can be used for equipment, supplies, lab fees, subject incentives, staff support, and travel. Other items may be allowed by request. Faculty salaries are not allowable expenses.

Projects are awarded $60,000 (or $15,000 for a mini-trio) in seed funding. Working with their collaborators, the project owner determines how the funds are spent for the project. In other words, funding is not intended to be used for three separate $20,000 projects.

Token

A token is a virtual voucher that can be exchanged for matching funds for a project. Each unit (school) provides faculty members with a set number of tokens, which authorizes faculty to participate in a project and commits a portion of matching funds to that project.

Each faculty member may use only one token. A token is equal to $5,000 or $20,000.

Tokens must be redeemed in groups of three to form a trio. Researchers cannot accept them one at a time.

If a researcher or unit does not have a token available, a token may be self-funded. Each token is supported one-third by a unit ($6,667) and two-thirds by the Office of the Vice President for Research ($13,333), for a total $20,000. If funding a mini-trio, the token would be funded one-third by a unit ($1,667) and two-thirds by the Office of the VPR office ($3,333), for a total $5,000.

Trio

A trio is an interdisciplinary group of three faculty members committed to a project. Each trio must contain tokens from at least two different units. A faculty trio cannot be a trio that was funded by a previous 3 Cavaliers award, even if the project is different. Trios with two members of a previous trio are permissible.

Faculty members can choose one of two funding levels for a trio. A trio is worth $60,000 (3 faculty members x $20,000), and a mini-trio is worth $15,000 (3 faculty members x $5,000).

A trio represents new research. At the time of submission, all three faculty members cannot be simultaneously on an existing sponsored research project. The funds cannot be used for extending existing externally funded projects or for projects with sufficient preliminary results that could be competitive for funding by external agencies (e.g., NIH, NSF).

A trio must support students or postdocs. At least 50% of the trio’s funding must be used to support UVA undergraduate students, graduate students, or postdocs. The remaining 50% of funds can be used for equipment, supplies, lab fees, subject incentives, staff support, publication costs, and travel. Faculty member salaries are not allowable expenses.

Funded trios have 18 months to spend the funds.

Unit

A unit typically represents a school or college at UVA. Read more about each schools’ guidelines.

Units determine how many tokens they want to invest in and which faculty categories are eligible to receive a token.

Symposium

The symposium is an event for faculty members to present all funded 3Cavaliers projects.

Deliverables

  • A brief final report is required for each project.
  • At least one member of the trio must participate in the symposium.
  • All trios are expected to submit a minimum of one proposal to an external funding agency and/or demonstrate progress toward the gold standard of scholarly excellence in their field.