Presentation

Grant Writing with National Geographic Society

27 November 2023
Online

The Pathshala South Asian Media Institute and the World Press Photo Foundation invite photographers in the Asia region to join this online presentation about grant applications with National Geographic Society (NGS).

Sana Ullah, a Senior Program Officer in Storytelling at National Geographic Society, reviews hundreds of grant applications every year. If you are looking for support to fund your next project, join this presentation and Q&A where Sana will provide information about NGS’s grants program, and practical tips that you can take with you when preparing grant applications.


Event information

Date: Monday 27 November
Time: 18.00 Dhaka, Bangladesh

Speaker

Sana Ullah (she/her) is a Senior Program Officer at the National Geographic Society (NGS) in Washington, D.C. where she works closely with the Storytelling Grants Program and helps manage projects by NGS Explorers. She often hosts internal and external grant writing workshops, provides 1:1 support and mentorship to emerging storytellers, and sits on the jury for various photo competitions. Aside from NGS, Sana is a trained multimedia journalist with over a decade experience in creating and producing visual content. She has worked for Discovery, the Smithsonian Institution, and the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS). Her visual work has a heavy focus on women, People of Color, and/or Muslims. She is mostly known for her project, Places You'll Pray: a community engagement photo series of Muslims praying in locations outside of a mosque or designated prayer area(s).

Sana Ullah received a Bachelor of Science in digital media studies from Florida International University's School of Journalism and Mass Communication in Miami, Fla. and a Master of Arts in new media photojournalism from the George Washington University's Corcoran School of the Arts and Design in Washington, D.C. She currently resides in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area.

NGS Grants program

The NGS grants program provides seed funding and support to individuals who are working to address critical challenges, advance new solutions, and inspire positive transformation. Funded projects incorporate science, storytelling, and/or education, and aligns with one or more of the five focus areas: Ocean, Land, Wildlife, Human History & Cultures, and Human Ingenuity. The deadline for Level I and II grants is April 2024.
Photo credit: Alessandro Cinque, Pulitzer Center/National Geographic