Strengthening European Project Design: Helena Maria Castro Visits UniTS

Earlier this month, the University of Trieste welcomed Helena Maria Castro, Coordinator of the T4EU Joint Grants Office based in Porto.

As part of her visit, she held a series of meetings and training sessions with administrative staff and researchers, focusing on opportunities for attracting European projects, particularly within the Horizon Europe and Erasmus+ programmes. The sessions offered valuable insights into European funding strategies and the development of international collaborative projects.

We asked her what a Grant Officer actually does and which skills are most important today in the world of European funding.

Read the interview ↓

What exactly does the T4EU Joint Grants Office do?

The T4EU Joint Grants Office (JGO) is a team of 12 funding liaison officers: one from each T4EU partner university, plus the JGO Manager, who acts as the Alliance-level coordinator.

The JGO supports T4EU in identifying funding opportunities for joint education and R&I initiatives, building cross-university consortia, developing competitive proposals, and strengthening the Alliance’s capacity to compete in the European funding arena through dedicated capacitation of researchers and staff.

The JGO mission goes beyond attracting funds, though: by reinforcing collaboration at project-level, the T4EU JGO acts as a catalyst for building stronger and more robust connections within the Alliance.

What skills are needed today to develop effective European projects?

Skills are evolving alongside the technological environment in which we work nowadays. AI agents already outperform humans in most ‘operational’ tasks, like desk research, summarizing information, drafting texts, structuring ideas. This makes the human role more ‘strategic’ than ever.

We are no longer alone in the drivers’ seat: AI agents have become very efficient co-pilots. We must know how to use them intelligently, critically, and responsibly to win the very competitive European funding race.

Critical thinking is key: asking the right questions, designing meaningful prompts, assessing AI-generated outputs, and ensuring that the final project remains accurate and coherent. Other human skills also remain critical and irreplaceable, namely our ability to connect with and listen to people, and to use creativity to develop proposals that are passionate, authentic, and marked by a unique identity.

What added value does a European alliance such as T4EU bring to project design?

European alliances bring added value to project design by offering frameworks for transnational cooperation among universities that work together and have built a strong basis of trust that strengthens consortia credibility.

T4EU, in particular, brings additional value through its ‘unique’ diversity. With universities across 11 European countries, T4EU brings together different regional contexts and societal challenges. It also covers a broad range of disciplines, from exact sciences and social sciences to humanities and the arts.

This diversity is especially valuable at consortium design level. When a project idea needs additional expertise, complementary profiles or new perspectives, the T4EU community can be a first space to look for potential partners.

3rd Call for T4EU Seed Funding Programme

Apply by 15 March 2026!

Transform4Europe has launched the third call of the Seed Funding Programme, open from 8 December 2025 to 15 March 2026.

The call supports innovative, cross-university educational projects involving at least two T4EU partner universities, and is designed to encourage new collaborations within the Alliance.

What the call offers
Up to €22,000 per project to develop and pilot new educational initiatives.
Funding can support joint study programmes, micro-credentials, innovative PhD pathways, new mobility formats, and teaching activities addressing digital, social and environmental transformation.

Why apply
The Seed Funding Programme is an opportunity for UniTS staff to build lasting academic partnerships, experiment with new educational models and actively contribute to shaping the future of European higher education within T4EU.

Timeline
Applications open: 8 December 2025
Deadline: 15 March 2026
Results: April 2026
Project start: May 2026

Partner search is supported through the mandatory  Connect4Research platform.
Two online info sessions will take place on 26 January and 23 February 2026.

UniTS staff are encouraged to take part and submit their proposals.

Get all details and application materials here

Mobility Windows info session

On 5 September 2025 at 10:00 AM CET, academic staff is invited to join an online information session on “Planning, Designing, and Implementing Mobility Windows”.

The session targets study coordinators, programme directors, lecturers, and professors working to include structured international mobility in their study programmes.

This session will:

  • introduce the concept of mobility windows
  • share best practices for the entire process of planning, designing, and implementing mobility windows
  • increase awareness of funding opportunities (e.g. Seed Funding Programme – Transform4Europe)

To register for the information session, please complete the form or send an email to adele.robart@uni-saarland.de

You will receive the link a few days before the session. Feel free to submit any questions you may have in advance via the form.

To prepare for the info session, please review the following documents:

Online information session for the 2nd Seed Funding call

T4EU is organizing an online information session for the 2nd Seed Funding call which opened recently. For those of you who may develop questions during the proposal writing process, please consider joining one of the dedicated Q&A sessions:

  • 14 August
  • 18 August
  • 20 August

If you would like to attend the virtual sessions, please email t4eu-seedfunding@uni-saarland.de to receive the meeting link. The sessions will be recorded and made available on the website afterward.

Also, for anyone considering submitting a research project to the EU together with at least three other T4EU partners, we encourage you to reach out to the Joint Grants Office for support.