The Federal S&E Support Survey is a congressionally mandated survey and the only source of comprehensive data on federal science and engineering funding to individual academic and nonprofit institutions.
The Federal S&E Support Survey is a congressionally mandated survey that is the only source of comprehensive data on federal science and engineering (S&E) funding to individual academic and nonprofit institutions. The target population is federal agencies that obligated money in the survey year for direct support of research and development by academic and nonprofit institutions.
The FY 2020 survey was conducted by Synectics for Management Decisions, Inc. (Synectics) under contract to the National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics.
Status | Active |
---|---|
Frequency | Annual |
Reference Period | FY 2020 |
Next Release Date | June 2025 |
The Survey of Federal Science and Engineering Support to Universities, Colleges, and Nonprofit Institutions (Federal S&E Support Survey) is the only source of comprehensive data on federal science and engineering (S&E) funding to individual academic and nonprofit institutions. The survey is sponsored by the National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics (NCSES) within the National Science Foundation (NSF).
The FY 2020 survey was modified to enable separate reporting of funding provided under the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act plus any other pandemic-related supplemental appropriations from regular appropriations.
Annual.
FY 1963.
FY 2020.
Federal agencies.
Census.
The survey is a census of all federal agencies that obligate money to academic or nonprofit institutions or consortia for S&E research and development or the construction or maintenance of R&D facilities. In the survey cycle for data collection on FY 2020, the population is 18 federal agencies.
Not applicable.
Key variables of interest are listed below.
Data are collected at the funding-agency level and provided in aggregated form for individual academic institutions—991 in FY 2020. The survey provides data on federal funding by the following key variables:
Data are also collected at the funding agency level and provided in aggregated form for nonprofit institutions—860 for FY 2020. The survey provides data on federal funding to nonprofit institutions by the following key variables:
Note that the variables in this survey use definitions comparable for R&D and R&D plant to those used by the Office of Management and Budget and the Survey of Federal Funds for Research and Development (Federal Funds Survey).
The target population was all federal agencies that obligated money in FY 2020 to academic or nonprofit institutions or consortia for S&E R&D or the construction or maintenance of R&D facilities. Academic institutions are institutions of higher education in the United States that engage primarily in providing resident or accredited instruction for not less than a 2-year program above the secondary school level that is acceptable for full credit toward a bachelor's degree or that provide not less than a 1-year program of training above the secondary school level that prepares students for gainful employment in a recognized occupation. Included are colleges of liberal arts; schools of arts and sciences; professional schools, as in engineering and medicine, including affiliated hospitals and associated research institutes; and agricultural experiment stations. Nonprofit institutions are private organizations, other than educational institutions, whose net earnings in no part benefit a private stockholder or individual and other private organizations created for the exclusive purpose of turning over their entire net earnings to such nonprofit organizations. Consortia are organizations formed by the membership of institutions from one or more types of performers to promote and support efforts to enhance knowledge in one or more disciplines. NCSES has identified several consortia and classified them as either academic or nonprofit types based on the predominance of their membership at the time of identification. If a consortium's members are not primarily academic or nonprofit, but the consortium is legally organized as a nonprofit, NCSES classifies that consortium as a nonprofit institution.
This survey is a census. Its population is derived from the federal agencies identified in the Federal Funds Survey as providing R&D or R&D plant obligations to universities or nonprofit organizations. For FY 2020, there were 18 agencies (10 federal departments and 8 independent agencies). Because multiple subdivisions of a federal department were in some cases requested to complete the survey, there were 55 agency-level respondents (1 federal department, 46 department subdivisions, and 8 independent agencies) and 34 program-office level respondents, for a total of 89 respondents.
Not applicable.
The FY 2020 survey was conducted by Synectics for Management Decisions, Inc. (Synectics) under contract to NCSES. Data collection began with an e-mail to each agency to verify the name, address, fax and phone numbers, and e-mail address of each agency-level survey respondent. A Web-based data collection system is used to collect the Federal S&E Support Survey data, but some agencies submit data offline.
Information was collected for the federal fiscal year 2020 (i.e., 1 October 2019 through 30 September 2020). Data collection began 19 May 2021, and the requested due date for data submissions was 23 July 2021. Data collection is usually extended until all surveyed agencies have provided complete and final data.
A Web-based data collection system is used to collect and manage data for the Federal S&E Support Survey. This Web-based system was designed to help improve survey reporting and reduce data collection and processing costs by offering respondents direct online reporting and editing. However, some agencies submit their data in alternative formats.
The data are checked through both manual reviews and automated data checks that include a comparison of current year obligations by category of support and the corresponding prior year obligations. Problems are referred to the agency that submitted the data for correction; respondents' data are not changed by the survey contractor or NCSES.
There is no unit nonresponse or known item nonresponse; therefore, weighting or imputation techniques are not used. NCSES assumes a blank field is zero for estimation purposes.
Not applicable.
Occasionally, small amounts (less than $100,000) of R&D may be obligated to a university or college by an agency other than the ones included in the survey, and these amounts are not captured by this survey.
Agencies are encouraged to estimate information when actual data are unavailable. The survey instrument allows respondents to enter data or skip data fields. There are several possible sources of nonresponse error by respondents, including inadvertently skipping data fields, skipping data fields under the false assumption that blank fields are equivalent to zero, and skipping data fields when data are unavailable.
The major source of nonsampling error in this survey is measurement error. Agencies are not always able to provide the precise information requested. For example, federal agencies are not always able to identify which branch of a university receives funding from them. Thus, complete disaggregation by actual university branch may not be feasible for some universities.
Other problems include agency difficulties in matching program descriptions with the proper funding category (e.g., R&D, facilities and equipment for instruction in S&E) in the federal S&E support database. At least one agency has said that the "general support for S&E" and "other S&E" categories are a catchall for programs that do not fit anywhere else.
Annual data are available for FYs 1963–2020.
Eight federal agencies supplied data for FYs 1963–67 (data collection began in 1965). The initial survey elicited information about academic institutions only. Additional agencies have been included in the years since then. The survey has been conducted annually since 1968. Information on nonprofit organizations was added in 1968.
In some instances, prior year data have been modified based on discrepancies noted during the consistency reviews of the data across years. To obtain accurate historical data, data users should use only the most recent publication, which incorporates corrections agencies have made in prior year data.
NCSES publishes data from this survey annually in the detailed tabular data series Federal Science and Engineering Support to Universities, Colleges, and Nonprofit Institutions. Data for major data elements are available for FY 1963 onward.
Data from this survey are also available in the NCSES's Academic Institution Profiles.
Access to the data for major data elements is available for FY 1963 onward in NCSES's interactive data tool. Users can create custom tables about federal S&E funding to academic and nonprofit institutions by federal agency.
Purpose. The Survey of Federal Science and Engineering Support to Universities, Colleges, and Nonprofit Institutions (Federal S&E Support Survey) is the only source of comprehensive data on federal science and engineering (S&E) funding to individual academic and nonprofit institutions.
Data collection authority. The information from this congressionally mandated survey is collected under the authority of the National Science Foundation Act of 1950, as amended, and the America COMPETES Reauthorization Act of 2010.
Survey contractor. Synectics for Management Decisions, Inc.
Survey sponsor. The National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics (NCSES) within the National Science Foundation (NSF).
Frequency. Annual.
Initial survey year. FY 1963.
Reference period. FY 2020.
Response unit. Federal agencies.
Sample or census. Census.
Population size. The survey is a census of all federal agencies that obligate money to academic or nonprofit institutions or consortia for S&E research and development or the construction or maintenance of R&D facilities. In the survey cycle for data collection on FY 2020, the population is 18 federal agencies.
Target population. The target population was all federal agencies that obligated money in FY 2020 to academic or nonprofit institutions or consortia for S&E R&D or the construction or maintenance of R&D facilities. For FY 2020, there were 18 agencies. Ten of the 18 are department-level federal agencies (the Departments of Agriculture [USDA], Commerce, Defense [DOD], Education [ED], Energy, Health and Human Services [HHS], Homeland Security [DHS], the Interior [DOI], Justice [Office of Justice Programs], and Transportation [DOT]), and 8 of the 18 are independent federal agencies (the Agency for International Development, the Appalachian Regional Commission, the Environmental Protection Agency, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration [NASA], NSF, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Trust Fund [PCORTF], and the Social Security Administration). Because multiple subdivisions of a federal department were in some cases requested to complete the survey, there were 55 agency-level respondents (1 federal department, 46 department subdivisions, and 8 independent agencies) and 34 program-office level respondents, for a total of 89 respondents.
Academic institutions are institutions of higher education in the United States that engage primarily in providing resident or accredited instruction for not less than a 2-year program above the secondary school level that is acceptable for full credit toward a bachelor’s degree or that provide not less than a 1-year program of training above the secondary school level that prepares students for gainful employment in a recognized occupation. Included are colleges of liberal arts; schools of arts and sciences; professional schools, as in engineering and medicine, including affiliated hospitals and associated research institutes; and agricultural experiment stations. Nonprofit institutions are private organizations, other than educational institutions, whose net earnings in no part benefit a private stockholder or individual and other private organizations created for the exclusive purpose of turning over their entire net earnings to such nonprofit organizations. Consortia are organizations formed by the membership of institutions from one or more types of performers to promote and support efforts to enhance knowledge in one or more disciplines. NCSES has identified several consortia and classified them as either academic or nonprofit types based on the predominance of their membership at the time of identification. If a consortium’s members are not primarily academic or nonprofit, but the consortium is legally organized as a nonprofit, NCSES classifies that consortium as a nonprofit institution. For FY 2020, there were 991 academic institutions and consortia and 860 nonprofit institutions and consortia.
Sampling frame. This survey is a census. Its population is derived from the federal agencies identified in the Survey of Federal Funds for Research and Development as providing R&D or R&D plant obligations to academic or nonprofit organizations.
Sample design. Not applicable.
Data collection. The Federal S&E Support Survey uses a Web-based data collection system, but some agencies submit files offline that the survey contractor will then enter into the data collection system. The FY 2020 survey cycle began with an e-mail to each agency to verify contact information for each agency-level survey point of contact. Data collection began 19 May 2021, and the requested due date for data submissions was 23 July 2021. Data collection is usually extended until all surveyed agencies have provided complete and final survey data. Information was collected for the federal fiscal year 2020 (i.e., 1 October 2019 through 30 September 2020).
Mode. Web-based data collection system; however, some agencies submit data offline. The FY 2020 Federal S&E Support Survey requested information from 55 departments, subdivisions, or independent agencies, but 1 agency, the Department of the Interior’s Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement, reported no funds. Of the remaining 54 respondents, 40 respondents (74%) submitted data through the Web-based data collection system, and 14 respondents (26%) submitted data offline.
Response rates. 100%.
Data editing. Neither data editing nor coding are used for Federal S&E Support Survey data. The data are checked through both manual reviews and automated data checks that include a comparison of current year obligations by category of support and the corresponding prior year obligations. Problems are referred to the agency that submitted the data for correction. Respondents’ data are not changed by the survey contractor or NCSES.
Imputation. None.
Weighting. None.
Variance estimation. Not applicable.
Sampling error. Not applicable.
Coverage error. Occasionally, small amounts (less than $100,000) of R&D may be obligated to a university or college by an agency other than the ones included in the survey, and these amounts are not captured by this survey.
Nonresponse error. Agencies are encouraged to estimate information when actual data are unavailable. Although every attempt has been made to ensure complete response from the survey universe and for all items, it is possible there may be some item nonresponse. The survey instrument allows respondents to enter data or skip data fields. There are several possible sources of nonresponse error by respondents, including inadvertently skipping data fields, skipping data fields under the false assumption that blank fields are equivalent to zero, and skipping data fields when data are unavailable.
Measurement error. The major source of nonsampling error in this survey is measurement error. Agencies are not always able to provide the precise information requested. For example, federal agencies are not always able to identify which branch of a university receives funding from them. Thus, complete disaggregation by actual university branch may not be feasible for some universities.
Other problems include agency difficulties in matching program descriptions with the proper funding category (e.g., R&D, facilities and equipment for instruction in S&E) in the federal S&E support database. At least one agency has said that the “general support for S&E” and “other S&E” categories are a catchall for programs that do not fit anywhere else.
Data revisions. Annual data are available for FYs 1963–2020.
In some instances, prior year data have been modified based on discrepancies noted during the consistency reviews of the data across years. To obtain accurate historical data, data users should use only the most recent publication, which incorporates corrections agencies have made in prior year data. Do not use previously published data.Changes in survey coverage and population. Eight federal agencies supplied data for FYs 1963–67 (data collection began in 1965). The initial survey elicited information about academic institutions only. Additional agencies have been included in the years since then. The survey has been conducted annually since 1968. Information on nonprofit organizations was added in 1968.
Changes in questionnaire. A Web-based data collection system was developed for the FY 1998 survey cycle.
Changes in reporting procedures or classification.
Changes in reporting.
Since data were first collected for FY 1963, there have been some changes in reporting. The most recent of these changes include the following:
The terms used throughout the survey have remained relatively unchanged from the FY 1971 survey cycle to the present; however, for the FY 2016 cycle, the definitions of basic research, applied research, development, and R&D plant were aligned more closely to the definitions used by the Office of Management and Budget in the July 2016 version of Circular A-11. These definitions are also comparable to those used in the Survey of Federal Funds for Research and Development.
Facilities and equipment for instruction in S&E include all programs whose principal purpose is to provide support for construction, acquisition, renovation, modification, repair, or rental of facilities, land, works, or equipment for use in instruction in S&E.
If the instructional facilities are part of a larger facility devoted to other purposes as well, the funds should be distributed among the categories of support involved as appropriate. In general, the other category most likely to be involved is R&D plant.
FTTGs include all fellowship, traineeship, and training grant programs that are directed primarily toward the development and maintenance of the scientific and technical manpower. The total amounts pertaining to such awards (stipends and cost-of-education allowances) are reported in terms of the institution at which the recipient performs research or study.
Excluded are projects that support research and educational institutes, seminars, and conferences such as teacher-training activities provided through teacher institutes, short courses, research participation, and in-service seminars; activities aimed at the development of educational techniques and materials for use in S&E training; and programs that provide special opportunities for increasing the scientific knowledge and experience of precollege and undergraduate students. These activities are reported either under other S&E, or they are not reported if they are not S&E-related.
General support for S&E includes activities that provide support for nonspecific or generalized purposes related to scientific research and education. Such projects are generally oriented toward academic departments, institutes, or institutions as a whole. “General support” implies a spectrum of varying types of support. At one extreme is support provided without any specification of purpose other than that funds be used for scientific activities. Another kind of general support is to be found in projects that provide funds for activity within a specified field of S&E but without specifying an explicit purpose. The distinguishing feature of general support for S&E projects is that they permit a significant measure of freedom as to purpose (e.g., research, faculty support, education, institutional support). It is intended that among the projects to be reported under this category are projects awarded through the following agency programs:
Other programs consistent with the above guidelines may also be reported under this category.
R&D activities are defined as creative and systematic work undertaken in order to increase the stock of knowledge—including knowledge of people, culture, and society—and to devise new applications using available knowledge.
For reporting R&D activities, the following are included:
Excluded from R&D activities are the following:
Research is systematic study directed toward fuller scientific knowledge or understanding of the subject studied. Research is classified as either basic or applied according to the objectives of the sponsoring agency. Basic research is defined as experimental or theoretical work undertaken primarily to acquire new knowledge of the underlying foundations of phenomena and observable facts. Basic research may include activities with broad or general applications in mind, such as the study of how plant genomes change, but should exclude research directed toward a specific application or requirement, such as the optimization of the genome of a specific crop species. Basic research represents DOD Budget Activity 1. Applied research is defined as original investigation undertaken in order to acquire new knowledge. Applied research is, however, directed primarily toward a specific practical aim or objective. Applied research represents DOD Budget Activity 2.
Research equipment is any item (or interrelated collection of items comprising a system) of nonexpendable tangible property or software having a useful life of more than 2 years and an acquisition cost of $500 or more that is used wholly or in part for research. Research equipment is included under R&D.
Experimental development is creative and systematic work, drawing on knowledge gained from research and practical experience, which is directed at producing new products or processes or improving existing products or processes. Like research, experimental development will result in gaining additional knowledge.
For reporting experimental development activities, the following are included:
Excluded from the experimental development category are the following:
R&D plant is defined as materials for use in R&D activities including the following:
Amounts include acquisition of, construction of, major repairs to, or alterations in structures, works, equipment, facilities, or land for use in R&D activities at federal or nonfederal installations, and housing for R&D personnel at remote locations.
Excluded from the R&D plant category are the following:
These excluded costs are reported under “total conduct of research and development.”
Obligations for foreign R&D plant are limited to federal funds for facilities that are located abroad and used in support of foreign R&D.
If the R&D facilities are to be a larger facility devoted to other purposes as well, the funds should be distributed among the categories of support involved as appropriate. In general, another category that would be involved is facilities and equipment for instruction in S&E.
Other S&E include all academic S&E activities that cannot be meaningfully assigned to one of the five categories previously set forth. Among the types of activities to be included in this category are support for scientific conferences and symposia, teacher institutes, and activities aimed at increasing the scientific knowledge of precollege and undergraduate students.
1Data from this survey are published annually in the series Federal Science and Engineering Support to Universities, Colleges, and Nonprofit Institutions. Data from this survey are also available in the Academic Institutional Profiles and in the NCSES interactive data tool (https://ncsesdata.nsf.gov/ids/). Users can create custom tables about federal S&E funding to academic and nonprofit institutions by federal agency and type of support.
Recommended data tables
These tables present the results of FY 2020 Survey of Federal Science and Engineering Support to Universities, Colleges, and Nonprofit Institutions. This congressionally mandated survey is the only source of comprehensive data on federal obligations to academic and nonprofit institutions for science and engineering research and development. Data include science and engineering support by type of activity, as well as ranking by state, agency, and individual institution. These data enable users to examine patterns of support for individual institutions over time and to compare such patterns with those of other institutions.
Christopher V. Pece of the National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics (NCSES) developed and coordinated this report under the guidance of John Jankowski, NCSES Program Director, and the leadership of Emilda B. Rivers, NCSES Director; Vipin Arora, NCSES Deputy Director; and Matthew Williams, NCSES Acting Chief Statistician. Jock Black (NCSES) reviewed the report.
Under contract to NCSES, Synectics for Management Decisions, Inc. conducted the survey and prepared the statistics for this report. Synectics staff members who made significant contributions include LaVonda Scott, Elizabeth Walter, Mauri Esfandiari, Suresh Kaja, and John Millen. Data processing support was provided by Devi Mishra (NCSES).
NCSES thanks the federal agency staff that provided information for this report.
National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics (NCSES). 2022. Federal Science and Engineering Support to Universities, Colleges, and Nonprofit Institutions: Fiscal Year 2020. NSF 22-342. Alexandria, VA: National Science Foundation. Available at https://ncses.nsf.gov/pubs/nsf22342/.
For additional information about this survey or the methodology, contact