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Find similar grantsRehabilitation Engineering Research Centers (RERC) Program is sponsored by Administration for Community Living (ACL), National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research (NIDILRR). This program funds advanced engineering research and development of innovative technologies designed to solve rehabilitation problems or remove environmental barriers for people with disabilities.
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About the National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research (NIDILRR) | ACL Administration for Community Living Documents on this website are being reviewed and updated as necessary to comply with President Trump's executive orders. Skip to content Skip to navigation Need help after an emergency event? Our Emergency Response page has links to help you find resources in your area.
About ACL: Mission, Vision, & Priorities About the National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research (NIDILRR) About the National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research (NIDILRR) ACL's National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research is the federal government’s primary disability research organization.
The NIDILRR leadership team includes: Kristi W. Hill, PhD, Deputy Director (Acting Director) Phillip Beatty, PhD, Director, Office of Research Sciences Pimjai Sudsawad, ScD, Associate Director, Office of Research Sciences LaVonnia Villanueva, Senior Advisor Explore the information and resources on this page to learn more about what NIDILRR is, what we do, and why we do it.
To make your exploration journey more efficient, use the hyperlinked table of contents below.
Archived Noteworthy Items From NIDILRR NIDILRR Funding/Grant Opportunities Peer Review Opportunities NIDILRR's Publications & Resources NIDILRR Planning Documents NIDILRR's Long-Range Plan NIDILRR's Research and Development Frameworks NIDILRR Legislation and Policy Regulations The Basic Business of NIDILRR According to Its Legislative Mandate The Rules that Help Translate the Intent of the Law Into Agency Operating Guidelines The Creation of NIDILRR and Its Legislative Mandate NIDILRR's Leadership & Staff Looking for Help for Yourself or A Loved One Looking for Information About ACL and Our Other Programs December 31, 2024: Administration for Community Living (ACL) Public Access Policy Issued December 31 2024 Effective December 31, 2025 (PDF, 1.
76kb) November 12, 2024: FY 2023 NIDILRR Annual Report to Congress (PDF, 1. 6MB) March 20, 2024: NIDILRR Toolkit (PDF, 5. 8MB) January 30, 2024: NIDILRR Announces 2024–2028 Long-Range Plan January 12, 2024: ACL’s Updated Plan for Making Research Available to the Public Archived Noteworthy Items From NIDILRR This section contains NIDILRR content items that are six months or older and is designed to serve as an archive.
September 15, 2023: View/Download NIDILRR's Tips for Grant Applicants May 29, 2023: View/Download NIDILRR's Recruitment Flyer November 1, 2022: View NIDILRR's new promotional video called Learn about NIDILRR: A Leader in Disability Research, Development, Knowledge Translation, & Training October 20,2022: NIDILRR FY 2021 Report to Congress July 2022: Interagency Committee on Disability Research Publishes Getting the Most Out of Stakeholder Engagement: A Toolkit to Better Understand and Measure Engagement : This toolkit is designed to give Administration for Community Living (ACL) staff and leadership guiding principles, promising practices, and resources to help enhance ACL’s stakeholder engagement efforts.
It includes practical information about stakeholder engagement—how and when to do it and why it is important—as well as interviews and case studies with examples from across ACL. The toolkit also focuses on the importance of measuring and analyzing stakeholder feedback, an area often lacking in engagement planning.
April 2022: Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on People with Disabilities : This downloadable PDF summarizes NIDILRR-grantee research findings that describe the many ways the COVID-19 pandemic has impacted the lives of people with disabilities.
February 8, 2022: NIDILRR-Funded Principal Investigator and Employment Expert Dr. Lisa Schur testified before the Senate Health Education Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee Download her Testimony (PDF, 339kb) or Watch her testimony . Tip: Hit TAB + Enter keys to start or stop the video. Hit the letter "c" on the keyboard to show closed-captions.
While the video is playing, hit the TAB key to highlight the time bar, then repeatedly hit the right arrow key to advance the video until timestamp 33:37. NIDILRR FY20 Report to Congress (PDF, 1559kb) NIDILRR FY 2020 Organization Highlights (PDF, 2.
5 MB) NIDILRR’s mission is to generate new knowledge and to promote its effective use to improve the abilities of individuals with disabilities to perform activities of their choice in the community, and to expand society’s capacity to provide full opportunities and accommodations for its citizens with disabilities.
NIDILRR achieves this mission by: funding research, demonstration, training, technical assistance and related activities to maximize the full inclusion and integration into society, employment, independent living, family support, and economic and social self-sufficiency of individuals with disabilities of all ages; promoting the transfer of, use and adoption of rehabilitation technology for individuals with disabilities in a timely manner; and ensuring the widespread distribution, in usable formats, of practical scientific and technological information.
NIDILRR addresses a wide range of disabilities and impairments across populations of all ages. Across NIDILRR’s agenda, the central focus is on the whole person with a disability, whose ability to function and quality of life are dependent on the complex interactions among personal, societal, and environmental factors. NIDILRR plays a unique role in that its target population includes all disability types and all age groups.
Whereas other federal research entities fund prevention, cure, and acute rehabilitation research, NIDILRR also invests in rehabilitation research that is tied more closely to longer-term outcomes, such as independence, community participation, and employment.
NIDILRR Funding/Grant Opportunities Disability and Rehabilitation Research Program (DRRP) - Funds knowledge translation, building capacity for minority research entities, individual research projects, and other work.
Rehabilitation Engineering Research Center Program (RERC) - Funds advanced engineering research and development of innovative technologies to solve rehabilitation problems or remove environmental barriers for people with disabilities. Switzer Research Fellowship Program - Provides grants for individuals to perform research on rehabilitation, independent living, and other experiences of people with disabilities.
Field-Initiated Projects Program Rehabilitation Research (FIP) - Investigator-initiated research with projects to generate new knowledge. Model Systems Program - Provides coordinated systems of rehabilitation care and conduct research on recovery and long-term outcomes for spinal cord injury, traumatic brain injury, and burn injury.
Advanced Rehabilitation Research and Training Program (ARRT) - Increases capacity for high-quality disability and rehabilitation research by supporting grants to institutions to provide advanced research training to individuals with doctorates or similar advanced degrees.
Rehabilitation Research and Training Center Program (RRTC) - Conduct advanced research, training, and information sharing on topic areas for improving rehabilitation methodology and service delivery systems; improving health and function; and promoting employment, independent living, family support and economic and social self-sufficiency for people with disabilities.
Small Business Innovation Research Program (SBIR) - Supports development of new ideas and projects useful to people with disabilities through grants to small business firms with strong research capabilities in science, engineering, or educational technology.
Americans with Disabilities Act National Network - Funds 10 regional centers for providing information, training, and technical assistance to individuals, businesses, and agencies with rights and responsibilities under the Americans with Disabilities Act.
NIDILRR Publications and Other Resources NIDILRR and NIDILRR grantees produce a variety of publications, other outputs and resources which can be viewed on our NIDILRR Publications and Other Resources page.
NIDILRR FY 2021-2022 Organization Highlights (PDF 2609kb) NIDILRR FY 2020 Organization Highlights (PDF, 1,559KB) NIDILRR FY 2015 Organization Highlights (PDF, 5713KB) NIDILRR FY 2014 Organization Highlights (PDF, 4500KB) NIDILRR FY 2013 Organization Highlights (PDF, 4500KB) As a result of the Rehabilitation, Comprehensive Services, and Developmental Disabilities amendments of 1978 (P. L.
95—602), which amended the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, the National Institute on Handicapped Research (NIHR) was created. NIHR was charged with the prime responsibility of providing the required knowledge for defining needs, and of identifying the means for improving services to individuals with disabilities.
NIHR was the result of intense effort by voluntary agencies of and for persons with disabilities, Congress, and the administration of the time. According to Leclair (1979), the original goal of NIHR was to focus in one agency a strong commitment to carry on a major program of research on all aspects of disability and the attendant socio-economic implications of the problems encountered by individuals with disabilities.
The scope of activities prescribed for NIHR was all encompassing and cut across practically every facet of rehabilitation and habilitation research activities imaginable, with no limitations in terms of type of disability, age, or intended goals.
Finally, NIHR was created, not to duplicate services but rather to ensure that NIHR could proceed with “full authority if research programs were found inadequate or non-existent in a specific area of concern.
NIHR retained most of the programs originally conducted by the Rehabilitation Services Administration (RSA) such as the Rehabilitation Engineering Centers (RECs), the Research and Training Centers (RTC), and the array of discrete psycho-social, vocational, and medical project grants that RSA and its predecessors had been conducting, in one form or other, since 1935.
Some new initiatives and changes that NIHR spear-headed included, but were not limited to: Research that improved the rehabilitation and habilitation of children with disabilities as well as older Americans with disabilities Conduct of model research and training centers on innovative programs and techniques for evaluating, training, and placing individuals with disabilities in productive work; Conduct of a research program to determine ways to train and retain rehabilitation professionals to serve in rural areas; Development and implementation of a public education program, based on research results, to inform the public about the needs, concerns and problems of individuals with disabilities including information relating to family care, self-care, and preventative aspects of rehabilitation and habilitation; Establishment of a program to improve the development, evaluation, production, and distribution of technological systems and devices that could improve the quality of life of persons with disabilities; Development, in conjunction with other federal agencies, of statistical reports on the employment, health, income, and other demographic characteristics of individuals with disabilities; and The conduct of projects by private profit-making organizations, non-profit public entities, as well with universities.
In 1986, again as a result of amendments to the Rehabilitation Act, NIHR would become known as the National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research (NIDRR). Since its initial creation as NIHR in 1978, and its name change and expansion to NIDRR in 1986, NIDRR’s basic purpose and reason for being has not changed much.
Expressed using updated terminology to reflect current times, NIDRR’s mission still remains to generate new knowledge and to promote its effective use to improve the abilities of people with disabilities to perform activities of their choice in the community. NIDRR still sponsors research and development in broad outcome domains of health and function, employment, and participation and community living.
And ultimately NIDRR still remains committed to expanding society’s capacity to provide full opportunities and accommodations for its citizens with disabilities.
And now, with the passage of the Workforce Innovation Opportunity Act, NIDRR has a new home in the Administration for Community Living within the Department of Human Services as well as a new name — the National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research (NIDILRR). NIDILRR Planning Documents NIDILRR has several documents that inform and guide its planning efforts; they are each described in a section below.
NIDILRR's Long-Range Plan The legislative requirements governing NIDILRRs Long Range plan are described in 29 U.S.C. 762(h) . Note: Scroll down to Section (h) of this page.
The National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research (NIDILRR) at ACL has published a Long-Range Plan for 2024-2028 . As mandated by Congress, NIDILRR’s LRP provides a five-year agenda for advancing the vital work being done in applied research and development to improve the inclusion of people with disabilities into all aspects of society.
Shaped by extensive stakeholder input, the new LRP continues to emphasize scientific rigor and the need for research that is highly relevant to the lives of people with disabilities. In addition, it provides data to show progress made on goals included in the last LRP, demonstrating NIDILRR’s commitment to the field.
The plan also contains several new areas of emphasis, including: Expanded commitment to broader inclusion of people with disabilities across the research enterprise; New opportunities for international research and development activities; An increased focus on the enabling or disabling characteristics of the communities in which we live; and Call to the field to pursue work that has an intersectional focus.
“Our new long-range plan presents a bold research agenda for the next five years and represents an important evolution in how we think about, describe, and engage on research topics related to disability,” said NIDILRR’s director, Dr. Anjali Forber-Pratt.
“The plan lays out a modernized approach to guide our planning and activities, with a focus on ensuring that people with disabilities are centered in all facets of disability research and increasing expectations for inclusion, accessibility and workplace supports for disabled people. It sets the bar high for all of us in the disability research field – starting with NIDILRR itself.
” Read NIDILRR's Long-Range Plan for 2024-2028 Read NIDILRR’s previous 2018-2023 Long-Range Plan . Read NIDILRR's previous Long-Range Plan for Fiscal Years 2013-2017 . The logic model was designed by Dr. Margaret Campbell, former NIDILRR Senior Scientist and Evaluation Lead with assistance from Dr. William Schutz in 2005.
The logic model is composed of various elements and the interrelationships among them. The entire logic model focuses on NIDILRR’s targeted outcome arenas and does not provide information on inputs, activities, and outputs. The omission of these other elements found in traditional logic models was intentional because at the time our goal was to develop a one-page tool that helped us visualize our outcomes.
Additionally, we intended to add information on inputs, activities, outputs, but did not include them because that section of the logic of the logic model had not been fully developed at the time of publication in the Federal Register. NIDILRR’s Logic Model, (formerly NIDRR in 2006) was included in our 2005-2009 Long-Range Plan as an appendix.
The entire Long-Range Plan was published in Volume 71, Number 31 of the Federal Register on Wednesday February 15, 2006. A textual description of the logic model is presented below for visitors using assistive technologies such as screen readers. The NIDILRR logic identifies NIDILRR's targeted outcome arenas.
The first textbox at the top of says situation: significant gaps exist in knowledge, skills, policy, and practice and system capacity that prevent people with disabilities from having equal opportunities for employment, health and function and participation. Now going from left to right there are six text boxes with forward-pointing arrows connecting them.
The first box is labeled Short-term outcome arenas which are advances in understanding, knowledge, skills, and learning systems that happen via our capacity building, research and development, and knowledge translation efforts. Our research and development efforts produce discoveries, theories, measures, and methods, and interventions, devices, and environmental adaptations.
The second textbox is labeled intermediate Beneficiaries which include researchers, clinicians, service providers, educators, policy experts, federal and non-federal partners, industry representatives and product developers, employers, media, consumer advocates, and people with disabilities and family members. In short, intermediate beneficiaries re those that benefit from our short-term outcome arenas.
The third text box is labeled Intermediate Outcome Arenas which show adoption and use of new knowledge leading to changes and improvements in policy, practice, behavior, and system capacity. The fourth text box is labeled Intended Beneficiaries which are people with disabilities and family members. The fifth text box is labeled Long-Term Outcome Arenas which is where changes in overall conditions happen.
Changes in overall conditions include the elimination of disparities between people with disabilities and the general population in the following areas employment, participation and community living, and health and function. The sixth and final text box is labeled Major Domains of NIDILRR's mission.
A Venn diagram with three intersecting circles represent our major life domains: employment, participation and community living, and health and function. And this Venn diagram is encircled by the domains of technology and demographics because these last domains affect three major life domains in the Venn diagram. At the bottom of those six main boxes is a long rectangular box labeled performance assessment and outcomes evaluation.
This long rectangular box has arrows pointing upward to the six text boxes. And just below the box labeled performance assessment and outcomes evaluation is an even longer rectangular box (with arrows pointing upward) labeled contextual factors.
Contextual factors include variable funding; scientific and technological advancements; societal attitudes; economic conditions; changing public policies; coordination and cooperation with other government entities.
NIDILRR's Research and Development Frameworks NIDILRR funds research and development efforts that are aimed at generating new knowledge and promoting its use and adoption among a variety of internal and external stakeholders that make up the disability and rehabilitation community. These research and development efforts must be guided and informed by the use of frameworks.
NIDILRR has one framework to guide its research-funded efforts and one framework to guide its development-funded efforts. To learn more about these frameworks visit NIDILRR's Frameworks' page .
NIDILRR's Legislation and Policy Regulations The Basic Business of NIDILRR According to Its Legislative Mandate The core business of NIDILRR is to award grants and contracts to “states and public or private agencies and organizations, including institutions of higher education, Indian tribes and tribal organizations.
” These entities are then supposed to use this money to plan and conduct research, demonstration projects, training and related activities designed to: - Develop methods, procedures, and rehabilitation technology, that maximize the full inclusion and integration into society, employment, independent living, family support, and economic and social self-sufficiency of individuals with disabilities, especially individuals with the most significant disabilities; and - Improve the effectiveness of vocational rehabilitation and other rehabilitation services.
Source: 29 USC Section 764 . The Rules that Help Translate the Intent of the Law into Agency Operating Guidelines The Code of Federal Regulations (known as CFR) are the rules that help translate the intent of a Law into broad agency operating guidelines. With its move to the Administration for Community Living within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the NIDILRR consolidated its Code of Federal Regulations in one place.
This new location is 45 CFR Part 1330 . Read about the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' Final Rule that created these new regulations . The Creation of NIDILRR and its Legislative Mandate The National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research (NIDILRR) is a federal government agency that came into existence in 1978 as NIHR within the U.S. Department of Education.
It operates today under a federal law known as Title II of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. This law became part of the United States Code (USC) and NIDILRR’s mandate and mission. It is described in Title 29, Chapter 16, Subchapter II, Section 762.
NIDILRR's Leadership and Staff The Acting Director of the National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research (NIDILRR) is Dr. Kristi Hill . Dr. Hill's biography is available on the Administration for Community Living's Leadership Page . If you would like to contact any member of NIDILRR's leadership, you can send an email to NIDILRR's general email box at nidilrr-mailbox@acl.
hhs. gov Dr. Kristi Hill is NIDILRR's Acting Director. Dr. Phillip Beatty is NIDILRR's Director of the Office of Research Sciences.
Dr. Pimjai Sudsawad is NIDILRR's Associate Director of the Office of Research Sciences. Lavonnia Villanueva is NIDILRR Director of the Office of Research Administration. NIDILRR Staff are administratively assigned to one of three NIDILRR offices: the Office of the Director, the Office of Research Sciences, and the Office of Research Administration.
However, the day-to-day functioning at NIDILRR is tightly integrated, and staff work together across NIDILRR and all of ACL to achieve agency goals and objectives. Looking for Help for Yourself or a Loved One Looking for Information About ACL and Our Other Programs Please see our A-to-Z Topic Index Page . Several ways exist to contact NIDILRR.
By email: You can send an email to NIDILRR's general email box at nidilrr-mailbox@acl. hhs. gov .
When you send an email to this email address, your request is analyzed and directed to the most appropriate NIDILRR staff person for action. National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research Administration for Community Living U.S. Department of Health and Human Services 330 C Street SW, Room 1304 If you have other questions about NIDILRR, call ACL's main number (202) 401-4634.
Select Option 5 (National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research when prompted. Your call will be routed to a NIDILRR staff person who can provide you with information or direct you to the appropriate staff. By Fax: Our fax number is ( 202) 205-0392 In Person: All visits to our physical location must be arranged in advance.
To arrange a visit, please call (202) 401-4634 . Select Option 5 (National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research) when prompted. Your call will be routed to a NIDILRR staff person who will work with you to set up an in-person visit.
You also can email NIDILRR directly at nidilrr-mailbox@acl. hhs. gov .
Questions about NIDILRR-related publications, our Program Directory, NIDILRR-funded resources, or general questions about disability research: You may wish to contact the NIDILRR-funded National Rehabilitation Information Center (NARIC). If you want to contact a NARIC Information Specialist, visit their AskMe Page . Last modified on 05/05/2025
Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: Universities, nonprofits, and state agencies are eligible. Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
Current published award information indicates Up to $925,000 per year for five years. Always verify allowable costs, matching requirements, and funding caps directly in the sponsor documentation.
The current target date is rolling deadlines or periodic funding windows. Build your timeline backwards from this date to cover registrations, approvals, attachments, and final submission checks.
Federal grant success rates typically range from 10-30%, varying by agency and program. Build a strong proposal with clear objectives, measurable outcomes, and a well-justified budget to improve your chances.
Requirements vary by sponsor, but typically include a project narrative, budget justification, organizational capability statement, and key personnel CVs. Check the official notice for the complete list of required attachments.
Yes — AI tools like Granted can help research funders, draft proposal sections, and check compliance. However, always review and customize AI-generated content to reflect your organization's unique strengths and the specific requirements of the solicitation.
Review timelines vary by funder. Federal agencies typically take 3-6 months from submission to award notification. Foundation grants may be faster, often 1-3 months. Check the program's timeline in the official solicitation for specific dates.
Many federal programs offer multi-year funding or allow competitive renewals. Check the official solicitation for continuation and renewal policies. Non-competing continuation applications are common for multi-year awards.
Disability and Rehabilitation Research Projects (DRRP) Program: Research on Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) As a Lifelong Condition is sponsored by Administration for Community Living (ACL), National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research (NIDILRR). This program aims to improve long-term health outcomes for people with traumatic brain injury by supporting research to develop and test interventions, services, and supports to address their complex and varied lifelong healthcare needs.
Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program (NIDILRR) is sponsored by Administration for Community Living (ACL), National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research (NIDILRR). The NIDILRR SBIR program supports the development of new ideas and projects that are useful to persons with disabilities by inviting the participation of small business firms with strong research capabilities in science, engineering, or educational technology. It aims to stimulate high-tech innovation and facilitate the commercialization of SBIR-generated products.
Research Project Grant (R01) is sponsored by National Institutes of Health (NIH). The NIH R01 grant is a widely used mechanism to provide substantial support for health-related research projects. While not exclusively for social work, social work faculty and doctoral students (often as part of a research team) can apply for R01 funding for projects exploring the linkages between education and health, or social work practice and health outcomes.
Small Research Grant Program (R03) is sponsored by National Institutes of Health (NIH). The NIH R03 grant supports small, time-limited research projects, which can include dissertation research. This grant mechanism is suitable for social work scholars conducting pilot studies, developing new methodologies, or performing secondary data analysis relevant to NIH's public health goals.