Associateship Programs at National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
History and Objectives
The National Research Council conducts the Research Associateship Programs in cooperation with sponsoring federal laboratories and research organizations approved for participation.
The National Research Council, through its Associateship Programs office, conducts a national competition to recommend and make awards to outstanding scientists and engineers at recent postdoctoral and experienced senior levels for tenure as guest researchers at participating laboratories. These Programs have been conducted on behalf of a number of federal agencies since 1954.
The objectives of the Programs are (1) to provide postdoctoral scientists and engineers of unusual promise and ability opportunities for research on problems, largely of their own choice that are compatible with the interests of the sponsoring laboratories and (2) to contribute thereby to the overall efforts of the federal laboratories.
For recent doctoral graduates, the Programs provide an opportunity for concentrated research in association with selected members of the permanent professional laboratory staff, often as a climax to formal career preparation.
For established scientists and engineers, the Programs afford an opportunity for research without the interruptions and distracting assignments of permanent career positions.
Participating laboratories receive a stimulus to their programs by the presence of bright, highly motivated, recent doctoral graduates and by senior investigators with established records of research productivity. New ideas, techniques, and approaches to problems contribute to the overall research climate of the laboratories. Indirectly, Associateships also make available to the broader scientific and engineering communities the excellent and often unique research facilities that exist in federal laboratories.
The Panel Review
The Associateship Programs office receives all application materials and supporting documents and conducts the competitive evaluations of applications. With a few exceptions, evaluations for National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Associateships are conducted each March (February 1 deadline) by special panels convened for this purpose. Applicants to the May, August, and November deadlines wishing to be reviewed in June, September, or November, respectively, must discuss special arrangements with the Adviser and the Laboratory Program Representative. Panelists are chosen to review applications on the basis of their stature and experience in the fields of science and engineering, and their evaluations become the basis from which awards are made on behalf of NOAA.
Applicants are recommended for awards only after this open, national competition, in which the panels rank candidates on the basis of quality alone.
Final ranking in order of quality and the recommendation of applicants for awards are the exclusive prerogatives of the panels, and only notification by the Associateship Programs office of an applicant's status in the competition is authoritative.
Associates on Tenure
A Research Associate is a guest investigator, not an employee of the National Research Council or of the laboratory. Associateships are analogous to fellowships or similar temporary programs at the postdoctoral level in universities and other organizations. They are not intended to be, or to compete with, permanent professional career positions.
No commitment on the part of an Associate, the sponsoring laboratory, or the National Research Council with regard to later employment is implied or should be inferred by the offer or acceptance of an award.
Associates must devote their full-time effort to the research program proposed in their applications and must be in residence at the sponsoring laboratory during the entire period of the Associateship. No period of tenure may be spent in residence at another laboratory or institution. Associates have the status of visiting scientists or engineers but are subject to the general regulations of the laboratory.
No additional monetary aid or other remuneration may be accepted from another appointment, fellowship, or similar grant, except for sabbatical leave, during the period of the Associateship.
Research at NOAA
This website contains abstracts, or opportunities for research that describe areas of research in which Associateships may be awarded at NOAA.
NOAA provides the funds for this program and furnishes all necessary support services, facilities, and equipment for the approved research program of each Associate.
While every effort has been made by NOAA to provide opportunities of ample scope and relevance, the publication of any opportunity in this website does not guarantee that it will be available at the time awards are offered. Changes and/or deletions may occur because of temporary lack of equipment, laboratory renovation, staffing already sufficient to meet research goals, or a lack of funding.
Publication
Since an Associate's later scientific and technical career will be judged by others, publication in the accepted open technical literature is highly encouraged.
Publications should include a statement indicating that the research was conducted while the author held a National Research Council Research Associateship.
Research Adviser and Laboratory Program Representative
Shown with each opportunity for research are the names of one or more Research Advisers who conduct or direct the work described in the opportunity.
An Adviser is a scientist or engineer at NOAA with whom a Postdoctoral Research Associate works most closely. An Adviser acts as a surrogate of the National Research Council in monitoring an Associate, and all matters related to an Associate's research program fall under his or her purview.
For a Senior Research Associate, an Adviser functions in a more collegial relationship and assists as needed in securing technical support and resources.
The Laboratory Program Representative is a professional staff member who is responsible for managing NOAA's Research Associateship program and for assisting an Associate with all administrative aspects of tenure:
Ms. Sharon A. MacLean
NOAA-NRC Program Representative
NOAA/NMFS/NEFSC
28 Tarzwell Drive
Narraganset, Rhode Island 02882-1199
Telephone: (401) 782-3258
FAX: (401) 782-3201
E-Mail: smaclean@mola.na.nmfs.gov
Prospective applicants may also contact the Program Representative if they have not received a response from the Research Adviser.
The NRC Program Administrator for NOAA is:
Dr. Judith K. Nyquist
Associateship Programs
Keck 552
National Research Council
500 Fifth Street, NW
Washington, DC 20001
Telephone: (202) 334-2202
E-Mail: jnyquist@nas.edu@nas.edu
Please direct ALL Application inquiries directly to the Research Associateship Programs at rap@nas.edu or by phone at (202) 334-2760.
Research Proposal
Each applicant must submit a research proposal that relates to a specific opportunity for research at NOAA. A proposal must be the original work of an applicant and be approved by an Adviser listed with the opportunity.
Before writing a proposal, however, an applicant is advised to communicate directly with the Adviser, who can provide more specific information on current research and available technical facilities and offer scientific support of proposal development.
Laboratory/Center Review
Each applicant's proposal must be approved by one of the Advisers listed in this website and endorsed by the laboratory director and NOAA-NRC Program Representative to be eligible for an award. The endorsement affirms that the proposal is compatible with NOAA’s interests.
No applicant will be eligible for further consideration until the Associateship Programs office has been advised by NOAA that his or her proposal has been approved by an Adviser and endorsed by the Program Committee. Otherwise, the Associateship Programs office will assume that the proposal is not of sufficient current interest to NOAA or that support facilities cannot be made available.
Since the final review of applications is conducted by special panels appointed by the National Research Council, all applicants should note that endorsement by an Adviser or laboratory, while essential to the application process, does not imply or guarantee an award by the National Research Council.
Consideration
Qualified applicants will receive consideration without regard to race, creed, color, age, sex, or national origin.
Education and Experience
Awardees must hold the PhD, ScD, or other earned research doctoral degree recognized in US academic circles as equivalent to the PhD or must present acceptable evidence of having completed all the formal academic requirements for one of these degrees before tenure may begin. Applicants must have demonstrated superior ability for creative research.
An applicant's training and research experience may be in any appropriate discipline or combination of disciplines required for the proposed research.
Citizenship
Opportunities at NOAA are open to all citizens of the United States and to citizens of other countries who have full command of the English language.
Visa Requirements
Non-US nationals who are offered awards must have valid visas throughout tenure. Only exchange visitor and immigrant visas are acceptable to the National Research Council. If an awardee chooses to apply for an exchange visitor visa, sponsorship must be by the National Research Council. If he or she chooses to apply for an immigrant visa, the National Research Council will not be involved in the procedure.
Permanent Resident Status
If an applicant does not yet have permanent resident status and intends to apply to obtain it, the National Research Council cannot act as a sponsor employer of the applicant.
Postdoctoral or Senior Research Associate Status and Length of Tenure
Postdoctoral Research Associateships are awarded to persons who have held the doctorate less than five years at the time of application and are made initially for one year.
Senior Research Associateships are awarded only to applicants who have held the doctorate five years or more at the time of application or to persons who hold a permanent appointment in academia, government, or industry and have research experience that has resulted in significant contributions and recognition as established investigators in their specialized fields. Although awards to Senior Research Associates are usually for one year, awards for periods of three months or longer may be considered.
Under certain conditions, extensions may be granted to allow Associates to bring their research to a reasonable stage of completion. However, extensions are not automatically granted, and applicants are advised to plan their research programs to conform to the length of tenure stated above.
Prior Affiliation with the Laboratory
A primary objective of the Associateship Programs is to provide a mechanism for new ideas and sources of stimulation to be brought to the sponsoring laboratory. Thus persons with recent prior affiliation with a specific laboratory may not be eligible to apply for an Associateship there.
Prior affiliation includes direct employment relationships either with the laboratory or with a contractor whose work is performed there. A long-term consulting relationship usually makes an applicant ineligible.
Research contracts with universities that provide support for graduate students or faculty who perform research on campus are not ordinarily considered to be disqualifying.
Reapplication
Persons who have previously held an Associateship may apply foranother award only if a period of at least two years will have elapsed between termination of the first award and the proposed tenure of a second.
Persons who have previously applied for an Associateship, but who were not recommended for an award by the panels, may reapply after one year.
Candidates who were recommended for an award by the panels, but who were not offered an award because of funding or other limitations, may reapply at any time without a mandatory waiting period.
Stipend
An Associate receives a stipend from the National Research Council while carrying out his or her proposed research. The annual stipend for a Postdoctoral Research Associate is $45,000, with the exception of the following locations:
NOAA Research Laboratories
National Severe Storms Laboratory; Norman, Oklahoma--$51,000
  (NSSL supplement for electrical engineering degree)--$24,000
Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory; Seattle, Washington--$46,000
National Environmental Satellite, Data, and Information Service
National Oceanographic Data Center; Silver Spring, Maryland--$46,000
Office of Research and Applications; Camp Springs, Maryland--$46,000
National Marine Fisheries Service
Southwest Fisheries Science Center
  Pacific Grove, California--$47,400
  Santa Cruz, California--$47,400
National Weather Service
National Center for Environmental Prediction--$55,000
  Environmental Modeling Center; Camp Springs, Maryland
Office of Hydrologic Development; Silver Spring, Maryland--$46,000
An appropriately higher stipend will be offered to Senior Research Associates.
Stipends are subject to adjustments from time to time in accordance with general national guidelines pertaining to scientists and engineers.
The National Research Council is required by the US Tax Code to withhold an amount from the stipends of non-resident aliens who hold exchange visitor (J-1) visas. Exchange visitors are advised that approximately 14% per month will be withheld from stipends and reported to the US Internal Revenue Service annually.
Applicants are cautioned against entering into any agreement or understanding with individual Advisers or other laboratory personnel for additional funding or other remuneration for work as an Associate.
Stipends for Associates are limited to the amounts and by the conditions set forth above, and any other arrangement, formal or informal, between an applicant and laboratory personnel for additional monies or other considerations is strictly prohibited by the National Research Council.
Taxes and Insurance
As a guest investigator, an Associate is self-employed. All arrangements for payment of income taxes are the responsibility of the individual Associate, who is advised to become familiar with the relevant sections of the current tax codes.
The National Research Council is required by the US Tax Code to withhold an amount from the stipends of non-resident aliens who hold exchange visitor (J-1) visas. Exchange visitors are advised that approximately 14% per month will be withheld from stipends and reported to the US Internal Revenue Service annually.
Information on current tax requirements will be supplied to all awardees who are non-US nationals.
A group health-insurance program is required for Associates and is optional for dependents. If you are not covered under a spouse's plan, you must participate in the National Research Council's plan. The cost of this program is shared by the Associate and the sponsoring agency. In addition, all exchange visitors and their dependent families are required by the US Department of State to carry health insurance while they are in the US. The Associateship Program's group insurance satisfies this requirement. The National Research Council provides this insurance during tenure.
Relocation and Travel
A suitable relocation reimbursement will be determined for each awardee. Details will be provided at the time of the award.
Funds are also available for limited professional travel during tenure, provided such travel is approved in advance by the Associate's Adviser, the NOAA Program Representative, and the Associateship Programs office.
Application Procedure
Complete the WebRAP electronic application that can be accessed through this site. This system requires uploads of your proposal and other information. After completing the WebRAP application, you must submit supporting documents (transcripts, if applicable, and references) either electronically to RAP@nas.edu or by mail to the Associateship Programs office at the address listed below.
All deadlines for receipt of application materials are strictly observed by the laboratory and the Associateship Programs office. No allowances or exceptions are made for late submissions.
Application deadlines are February 1, May 1, August 1, and November 1. Application materials from previous competitions may not be used.
If you need to contact us:
Associateship Programs
Keck 568
National Research Council
500 Fifth Street, NW
Washington, DC 20001
Phone: (202) 334-2760
FAX: (202) 334-2759
E-Mail: rap@nas.edu
Internet: www.national-academies.org/rap
Initiation of Tenure
Sufficient time must be allowed between the offer of an award and the beginning of tenure to enable the Associateship Programs office and NOAA to complete all necessary administrative procedures.
The date on which tenure may begin is negotiated on an individual basis, normally within six months of the award. The starting date may be delayed by mutual agreement of NOAA, the Associate, and the Associateship Programs office but cannot be later than 12 months from the date on which the award was originally offered.
If this condition cannot be met, a new application, including a newly approved research proposal, must be submitted to the Associateship Programs office and will be judged without prejudice in the next competition.
Notification of Awards
Research Associateship awards are made by the National Research Council on behalf of sponsoring federal agencies. The endorsement of an application and research proposal by the sponsoring agency, while essential to the application and review processes, does not constitute an agreement or obligation to confer an award.
A review board, comprised of Chairs and Co-Chairs of the National Research Council panels, determines a cutoff score. Applicants who score below this cutoff score cannot be considered further for an award. All applicants will be notified of their results one week after the review board meets.
Applicants who score above the cutoff score are recommended to the sponsoring agency as eligible for an award. Final decisions on awards are made by the sponsoring agency based on ranking of the NRC panels and the availability of funding. Applicants are generally notified of final award status within 4-6 weeks following the review.
Acceptances and declinations must be made directly to the Associateship Programs office of the National Research Council.
For NIST awards only: NRC awards for applicants to NIST are made directly by NIST.
Addresses of Research Facilities
Correspondence to Research Advisers may be directed to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration at the laboratory locations shown with each opportunity for research. The following is a listing of these locations and their addresses.
National Environmental Satellite, Data, and Information Service (http://www.nesdis.noaa.gov/)
National Climatic Data Center (http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/)
Federal Building
37 Battery Park Avenue
Asheville, North Carolina 28801
National Oceanographic Data Center (http://www.nodc.noaa.gov/)
1315 East-West Highway, SSMC3
Silver Spring, Maryland 20910
Center for Satellite Applications and Research (http://www.orbit.nesdis.noaa.gov/)
World Weather Building
5200 Auth Road
Camp Springs, Maryland 20746
Cooperative Institute of Climate Studies (http://www.nrc.noaa.gov/ci/)
NESDIS Center for Satellite Applications and Research
University of Maryland
College Park, Maryland 20742
CIRA Regional and Mesoscale Meteorology Team (http://rammb.cira.colostate.edu/)
NESDIS Center for Satellite Applications and Research
Department of Atmospheric Science
Colorado State University
Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere Building
Foothills Campus
Fort Collins, Colorado 80523
National Marine Fisheries Service (http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/)
Alaska Fisheries Science Center (http://www.afsc.noaa.gov/)
7600 Sand Point Way NE
Bin C15700-Building 4
Seattle, Washington 98115-0070
Including the following location in Oregon:
  National Marine Fisheries Service
  2030 South Marine Science Drive
  Newport, Oregon 97365-5296
Northeast Fisheries Science Center (http://www.nefsc.noaa.gov/)
166 Water Street
Woods Hole, Massachusetts 02543
Including the following locations in New Jersey, Connecticut, Rhode Island, and Washington, DC:
  National Marine Fisheries Service
  James J. Howard Marine Laboratory
  74 McGruder Road
  Highlands, New Jersey 07732
  National Marine Fisheries Service
  212 Rogers Avenue
  Milford, Connecticut 06460-6499
  National Marine Fisheries Service
  28 Tarzwell Drive
  Narragansett, Rhode Island 02882-1199
  National Marine Fisheries Service
  Systematics Laboratory
  Smithsonian Institution, PO Box 37012
  NMRH Room WC-57, MRC 0153
  Washington, DC 20013-7012
Northwest Fisheries Science Center (http://www.nwfsc.noaa.gov/)
2725 Montlake Boulevard East
Seattle, Washington 98112-2097
Including the following location in Oregon:
  National Marine Fisheries Service
  2030 South Marine Science Drive
  Newport, Oregon 97365-5296
Southeast Fisheries Science Center (http://www.sefsc.noaa.gov/)
75 Virginia Beach Drive
Miami, Florida 33149
Including the following locations in North Carolina, Texas, Louisiana, and Florida:
  National Marine Fisheries Service
  Beaufort Laboratory
  101 Pivers Island Road
  Beaufort, North Carolina 28516-9722
  National Marine Fisheries Service
  Galveston Laboratory
  4700 Avenue U
  Galveston, Texas 77551
  National Marine Fisheries Service
  Lafayette Laboratory
  646 Cajundome Boulevard, Suite 234
  Lafayette, Louisiana 70506
  National Marine Fisheries Service
  Panama City Laboratory
  3500 Delwood Beach Road
  Panama City, Florida 32408
Southwest Fisheries Center (http://www.swfsc.noaa.gov/)
PO Box 271
La Jolla, California 92038
Including the following locations in California:
  National Marine Fisheries Service
  Santa Cruz Laboratory
  110 Shaffer Road
  Santa Cruz, California 95060
  National Marine Fisheries Service
  Pacific Fisheries Environmental Laboratory
  1352 Lighthouse Avenue
  Pacific Grove, California 93950-2097
National Ocean Service (http://www.oceanservice.noaa.gov/)
Center for Coastal Fisheries and Habitat Research (http://www.ccfhr.noaa.gov/)
Beaufort Laboratory
101 Pivers Island Road
Beaufort, North Carolina 28516-9722
Center for Coastal Environmental Health and Biomolecular Research (http://www.chbr.noaa.gov/)
Charleston Laboratory
219 Fort Johnson Road
Charleston, South Carolina 29412-9112
Coast Survey Development Laboratory (http://www.nauticalcharts.noaa.gov/csdl/)
Silver Spring Metro Center 4
N/CS13
1305 East-West Highway
Silver Spring, Maryland 20910-3282
National Weather Service (http://www.nws.noaa.gov/)
National Center for Environmental Prediction (http://www.ncep.noaa.gov/)
World Weather Building
5200 Auth Road
Camp Springs, Maryland 20233
Office of Hydrologic Development (http://www.nws.noaa.gov/oh/)
Silver Spring Metro Center 2
1325 East-West Highway
Silver Spring, Maryland 20910
Space Weather Prediction Center (http://www.swpc.noaa.gov/)
325 Broadway
Boulder, Colorado 80305
NOAA Research Laboratories (http://www.research.noaa.gov/)
Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory (http://www.esrl.noaa.gov/)
2205 Commonwealth Boulevard
Ann Arbor, Michigan 48105
Earth System Research Laboratory (http://www.esrl.noaa.gov/)
  Global Monitoring Division
  Physical Sciences Division
  Chemical Sciences Division
  Global Systems Division
325 Broadway
Boulder, Colorado 80305
Air Resources Laboratory (http://www.arl.noaa.gov/)
Silver Spring Metro Center 3
1315 East-West Highway
Silver Spring, Maryland 20910
Including the following location in Tennessee:
  Air Resources Laboratory
  Atmospheric Turbulence and Diffusion Division
  456 South Illinois Avenue
  Oak Ridge, Tennessee 37831-2456
Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory (http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/)
4301 Rickenbacker Causeway
Miami, Florida 33149
National Severe Storms Laboratory (http://www.nssl.noaa.gov/)
National Weather Center
120 David L. Boren Boulevard
Norman, Oklahoma 73072
Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory (http://www.pmel.noaa.gov/)
7600 Sand Point Way NE
Seattle, Washington 98115
Including the following location in Oregon:
  Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory
  2115 SE OSU Drive
  Newport, Oregon 97365
Opportunities in Interdisciplinary Research
General information regarding opportunities in interdisciplinary research can be obtained by directing inquiries to the appropriate person listed below:
Dr. Richard D. Spinrad, Assistant Administrator
Oceanic and Atmospheric Research
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Silver Spring Metro Center 3
1315 East-West Highway
Silver Spring, Maryland 20910-3282
Dr. James W. Balsiger, Assistant Administrator
National Marine Fisheries Service
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Silver Spring Metro Center 3
1315 East-West Highway
Silver Spring, Maryland 20910-3282
Dr. Jack Hayes, Assistant Administrator
National Weather Service
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Silver Spring Metro Center 2
1325 East-West Highway
Silver Spring, Maryland 20910-3283
Jack H. Dunnigan, Assistant Administrator
National Ocean Service
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Silver Spring Metro Center 4
1305 East-West Highway
Silver Spring, Maryland 20910-3281
Mary Kicza, Assistant Administrator
National Environmental Satellite, Data and Information Service
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Silver Spring Metro Center 1
1335 East-West Highway
Silver Spring, Maryland 20910-3284