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PUBLICATIONS
Inside
Illinois Vol.
25, No. 16, March 2, 2006

On
the job: Kathie Veach
By
Sharita Forrest, Assistant Editor
217-244-1072; slforres@uiuc.edu
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by L. Brian Stauffer |
| Kathie
Veach is
coordinator of grants and contracts in the Center
for Prevention Research Development. |
|
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Trying to find
a ‘yes’ answer in a ‘no’ world is how Kathie
Veach describes her job as a coordinator of grants and contracts in
the Center for Prevention Research and Development. A certified research
administrator, Veach helps researchers find funding for their projects
and administers awards once they are obtained. Veach started her career
at the UI as an account technician I in the department of nuclear engineering
in 1993, then joined the department of computer science in 1996 as an
account technician II. After a mentor encouraged Veach to further her
education beyond the associate’s degree in computer science that
she had earned at Southern Illinois University, Veach earned her bachelor’s
degree from the Board of Governors program at Eastern Illinois University.
She has worked for the CPRD, part of the Institute of Government and
Public Affairs, since last May.
What does the Center for Prevention Research
and Development do?
The center’s mission is to improve systems and programs that serve
communities, school reform, after-school programs and family life, especially
in disadvantaged communities. We collect a lot of data and conduct a
lot of surveys. One program we administer is the Carol White Physical
Education program, a federal grant program that aims to improve or expand
physical education and after-school programs for sixth through 12th
grade. The center has about 35 employees and three divisions: child
and family ecology, school reform and innovation, and state and community
systems.
What do you do each day?
The business office is the less glamorous side of research, and I sometimes
refer to us as the Internal Revenue Service of research. We look for
funding and help researchers apply for it. Once it’s awarded,
we review statements to make sure researchers’ spending is timely
and appropriate. Each award has its own rules. You have to be a detail-oriented
person.
What’s involved in becoming a certified
research administrator?
The first requirement is an academic degree combined with three to eight
years of experience in research administration. Candidates take a four-hour
exam encompassing the research administration “body of knowledge,”
which includes project development and administration, legal requirements
and financial management practices.
What is the most challenging and most rewarding part of what you do?
Explaining to people why they need to do what I’m asking them
to do. And my favorite part is when an award comes in on a proposal
that I’ve helped submit.
What do you enjoy doing away from work?
I like to make quilts, especially by machine appliqué. I make
them for myself and as gifts and have given four or five away. I also
like to cross-stitch. I read a lot of books, especially light fiction
such as Janet Evanovich and J.D. Robb.
My husband is a fifth-generation bricklayer, and members of his family
have worked on many of the buildings on campus, such as the Digital
Computer Laboratory and Memorial Stadium. It’s fun to walk around
campus and see all of the buildings that his family had a part in constructing.
On one of our first dates, my husband, Frank, took me on a tour of the
Illini Union and showed me all the fireplaces that one of his grandfathers
had constructed.
We met through a mutual friend and decided that we weren’t going
to get serious about each other, and we’ve been married for 15
years. We participate in historical re-enactment events together, portraying
1740s Illinois, which was the period during the French and Indian War.
We travel throughout the state and meet lots of interesting people.
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