TNSF The National Science Foundation
Acronym Definition
TNSF Tamil Nadu Self Financing
TNSF Talk of the Nation Science Friday
TNSF Technicolor Network Services France
TNSF The National Science Foundation
TNSF The Non Sufficient Funds
TNSF The Not Sufficient Funds (return check reason code)
TNSF The Name Search Facility
TNSF The Name Search File
TNSF The National Sanitation Foundation
TNSF The National Schizophrenia Fellowship (UK)
TNSF The National Secessionist Forces (gaming)
TNSF The National Security Forum
TNSF The National Service Framework (Department of Health UK)
TNSF The National Service Full-Time (Singapore conscription)
TNSF The National Sleep Foundation
TNSF The National Sport Federation (Canada)
TNSF The National Sports Festival
TNSF The National Sports Foundation
TNSF The National Stakeholders Forum
TNSF The National Standard Format
TNSF The National Storytelling Festival
TNSF The National Strike Force (US Coast Guard)
TNSF The Nationalsocialistisk Front (Swedish neo-Nazi political party)
TNSF The Natural Selection Foods LLC (San Juan Bautista, California)
TNSF The Naval Support Facility
TNSF The Naval Surface Fire
TNSF The Navy Stock Fund
TNSF The Nederlandse Sport Federatie
TNSF The Nederlandse Strandzeil Federatie
TNSF The Need for Speed (gaming)
TNSF The Needy Student Fund
TNSF The Nephrogenic Systemic Fibrosis
TNSF The NES (Nintendo Entertainment System) Sound File (file extension)
TNSF The Net Square Foot
TNSF The Network Specific Facility (ISDN)
TNSF The New Student Forum
TNSF The Nintendo Sound File
TNSF The No Significant Findings
TNSF The Non-Standard Facilities
TNSF The Non-Stock Fund
TNSF The Non-Stop Forwarding
TNSF The Norges Seilforbund (Norway)
TNSF The Norges Sjakkforbund (Norwegian Chess Association)
TNSF The Norges Standardiseringsforbund
TNSF The Norges Svømmeforbund (Norwegian Swimming Federation)
TNSF The Norsk Selvhjelpsforum (Norwegian Self-help Forum)
TNSF The Norsk Sjømannsforbund (Norwegian Sailors League)
TNSF The Norsk Sosiologforening (Norwegian Association of Sociologists)
TNSF The Norsk Speider Forbund (Norwegian Scout Association)
TNSF The Norsk Statistisk Forening (Norwegian Statistical Society)
TNSF The Norsk Sveiseteknisk Forbund (Norwegian Association for Welding
Engineering)
TNSF The Norsk Sykepleierforbund (Norwegian Nurses League)
TNSF The North Shore Frogmen (Beverly, Massacusetts scuba club)
TNSF The Northwest Secessionist Forces (Deus-Ex game)
TNSF The Norway, Sweden, Finland (in order, left to right)
TNSF The Not Safe For
TNSF The Not So Fast
TNSF The Notes Storage Facility (Lotus Notes)
TNSF The Nuclear Storage Facility
TNSF The Nuclear Structure Facility
TNSF 6-P-Toluidino-2-Naphthalenesulfonic Acid Food
TNSF Taco Neck Syndrome Fool
TNSF Tactical Name Server Framework
TNSF Tactical Name Service Force
TNSF Tactical Navigation System Framework
TNSF Take No Stuff Freak
TNSF Tao Nan School Fools
TNSF Target Name Space Framework
TNSF Tazewell Numismatic Society Framework
TNSF Technology Needs Survey Framework
TNSF Telecom & Network Services Framework
TNSF Temporal Noise Shaping Framework
TNSF Tensin Framework
TNSF The Naked Sun Framework
TNSF The Naturist Society Food
TNSF The New School Framework
TNSF Time Not Specified Framework
TNSF Times News Service Framework
TNSF Tooth-and-Nail Syndrome Framework
TNSF Total Network Solutions Framework
TNSF Transcultural Nursing Society Forum
TNSF Transcutaneous Nerve Stimulation Framework
TNSF Transit Network Selection Framework
TNSF Transit Network Selection Framework
TNSF Transparent Network Services Framework
TNSF Transparent Network Substrate Framework
TNSF Trauma Nurse Specialist Forum
TNSF Travel & Night Subsistence Food
TNSF Tungston Neutron Source Framework
TNSF Tamil Nadu Self Financing
After all the controversy about scrapping the TNPCEE, the Tamil Nadu
government finally decided to hold it on the 18th and 19th of May 2006.
Initially, all the self-financing and government aided colleges in Tamil Nadu
were to admit students considering the cut-off with the TNPCEE marks. Then, by a
ruling called the Inaamdar Commission, around 180 self financing colleges
decided to break away from the TNPCEE clique and formed the TNSF (Tamil Nadu
Self Financing) Consortium. This consortium then conducted an exam called the
CET on 15th and 16th of July.
First, this consortium was to fill up 100% of its seats based on a cut-off
combining the board marks and the CET marks. But now, by a court ruling, all
minority colleges have surrendered 50% of their seats and non-minority colleges
have surrendered 70% of their seats to the TNPCEE pool. This means that the CET
marks will be used to fill only 50% in minority and 30% in non-minority
colleges.
Counselling for general category candidates started on 21st of July 2006. The
vacancy positions at the end of each day are shown on the Anna University
Website. There is, however, no information brochure available online.
The State Government has been following the rule of 69% reservation for
SC/ST/OBC etc. This year, a high court ruling has stated that this reservation
should not exceed 50%. Due to this, the excess 19% seats have been allocated in
the open category under the title FOC - Fifty percent Open Category. This has
led to increased number of seats from self-financing and government colleges for
the open category.
Also, there will be no second round of counselling for TNPCEE. Seats that
have been taken and discarded will not be available to other deserving students
but will be wasted for a year and then offered to diploma holders who are
eligible for lateral entry.
TNSF The National Science Foundation
The National Science Foundation (NSF) is a United States government agency
that supports fundamental research and education in all the non-medical fields
of science and engineering. Its medical counterpart is the National Institutes
of Health. With an annual budget of about $5.91 billion (fiscal year 2007), NSF
funds approximately 20 percent of all federally supported basic research
conducted by the United States' colleges and universities. In some fields, such
as mathematics, computer science, economics and the social sciences, NSF is the
major source of federal backing.
The NSF's director, its deputy director, and the 24 members of the National
Science Board (NSB) are appointed by the President of the United States, and
confirmed by the United States Senate. The director and deputy director are
responsible for administration, planning, budgeting and day-to-day operations of
the foundation, while the NSB meets six times a year to establish its overall
policies. The current NSF director is Dr. Arden L. Bement, Jr., and the current
deputy director is Dr. Kathie L. Olsen.
Grants and the merit review process
Although many other federal research agencies operate their own
laboratories—notable examples being the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (NASA) and the National Institutes of Health (NIH)—NSF does not.
Instead, it seeks to fulfill its mission chiefly by issuing competitive,
limited-term grants in response to specific proposals from the research
community. (NSF also makes some contracts.) Some proposals are solicited, and
some are not; NSF funds both kinds.
NSF receives about 40,000 such proposals each year, and funds about 10,000 of
them. Those funded are typically the projects that are ranked highest in a merit
review process. These reviews are carried out by panels of independent
scientists, engineers and educators who are experts in the relevant fields of
study, and who are selected by NSF with particular attention to avoiding
conflicts of interest. (For example, the reviewers cannot work at NSF itself,
nor for the institution that employs the proposing researchers.) All proposal
evaluations are confidential.
Most NSF grants go to individuals or small groups of investigators who carry out
research at their home campuses. Other grants provide funding for mid-scale
research centers, instruments and facilities that serve researchers from many
institutions. Still others fund national-scale facilities that are shared by the
research community as a whole. Examples of national facilities include NSF’s
national observatories, with their giant optical and radio telescopes; its
Antarctic research sites; its high-end computer facilities and ultra-high-speed
network connections; the ships and submersibles used for ocean research; and its
gravitational wave observatories.
In addition to researchers and research facilities, NSF grants also support
science, engineering and mathematics education from pre-K through graduate
school. Undergraduates can receive funding through REU summer programs. Graduate
students are supported through IGERT (Integrative Graduate Education Research
Traineeships) and AGEP (Alliance for Graduate Education and the
Professoriate)programs and through the Graduate Research Fellowships, NSF-GRF.
Scope and organization
NSF’s workforce numbers about 1700, nearly all working at its Arlington,
Virginia headquarters. That includes about 1200 career employees, 150 scientists
from research institutions on temporary duty, 200 contract workers, and the
staff of the National Science Board office and the Office of the Inspector
General, which examines the foundation's work and reports to the NSB and
Congress.
Research directorates
NSF organizes its research and education support through seven directorates,
each encompassing several disciplines:
* Biological Sciences (molecular, cellular, and organismal biology,
environmental science)
* Computer and Information Science and Engineering (fundamental computer
science, computer and networking systems, and artificial intelligence)
* Engineering (bioengineering, environmental systems, civil and mechanical
systems, chemical and transport systems, electrical and communications systems,
and design and manufacturing)
* Geosciences (geological, atmospheric and ocean sciences)
* Mathematical and Physical Sciences (mathematics, astronomy, physics, chemistry
and materials science)
* Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences (neuroscience, psychology, sociology,
anthropology, linguistics and economics)
* Education and Human Resources (science, technology, engineering and
mathematics education at every level, pre-K to grey)
Other research offices
NSF also supports research through several offices within the Office of the
Director:
* Office of Cyberinfrastructure
* Office of Polar Programs
* Office of Integrative Activities
* Office of International Science and Engineering
Crosscutting programs
In addition to the research it funds in specific disciplines, NSF has launched a
number of crosscutting projects that coordinate the efforts of experts in many
disciplines. Examples include initiatives in:
* Nanotechnology
* The science of learning
* Digital libraries
* The ecology of infectious diseases
In many cases, these projects involve collaborations with other U.S. federal
agencies.
History and mission
The NSF was established by the National Science Foundation Act of 1950. Its
stated mission:
To promote the progress of science; to advance the national health, prosperity,
and welfare; and to secure the national defense.
Some historians of science have argued that the result was an unsatisfactory
compromise between too many clashing visions of the purpose and scope of the
federal government. NSF was certainly not the primary government agency for the
funding of basic science, as its supporters had originally envisioned in the
aftermath of World War II. By 1950, support for major areas of research had
already become dominated by specialized agencies such as the National Institutes
of Health (medical research) and the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission (nuclear and
particle physics). That pattern would continue after 1957, when U.S. anxiety
over the launch of Sputnik led to the creation of the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration (space science) and the Defense Advanced Research Projects
Agency (defense-related research).
Nonetheless, NSF's scope has expanded over the years to include many areas that
were not in its initial portfolio, including the social and behavioral sciences,
engineering, and science and mathematics education. Today, as described in its
2003–2008 strategic plan, NSF is the only U. S. federal agency with a mandate to
support all the non-medical fields of research.
In the process, moreover, the foundation has come to enjoy strong bipartisan
support from Congress. Especially after the technology boom of the 1980s, both
sides of the aisle have generally embraced the notion that government-funded
basic research is essential for the nation's economic health and global
competitiveness, as well as for the national defense. That support has
manifested itself in an expanding budget—from $1 billion in 1983 to just over
$5.91 billion by FY 2007. (fiscal year 2007).
Timeline
Pre-World War II
Academic research in science and engineering is not considered a federal
responsibility; almost all support comes from private contributions and
charitable foundations.
World War II
There is a growing awareness that America's military capability owes a great
deal to the nation's strength in science and engineering. Congress considers
several proposals to provide federal support for research in these fields.
1945
Vannevar Bush, head of the government's wartime Office of Scientific Research
and Development, issues a report to President Harry S. Truman, entitled
Science—The Endless Frontier. The report lays out a strong case for having the
federal government fund scientific research, arguing that the nation would reap
rich dividends in the form of better health care, a more vigorous economy, and a
stronger national defense. The report also proposes creating a new federal
agency, the "National Research Foundation," to administer this effort.
1945–1950
Although there is broad agreement in Washington with the principle of federal
support for science, there is far less agreement on exactly how that effort
should be organized and managed. Thrashing out a consensus requires five years
of negotiation and compromise.
1950
On May 10, President Truman signs Public Law 507, creating the National Science
Foundation. The act provides for a National Science Board of twenty-four
part-time members and a director as chief executive officer, all appointed by
the president.
1951
In early March, Truman nominates Alan T. Waterman, the chief scientist at the
Office of Naval Research, to become the first Director of the fledgling agency.
With the Korean War underway, money is tight: the agency's initial budget is
just $151,000.
1952
After moving its administrative offices twice, NSF begins its first full year of
operations with an appropriation from Congress of just $3.5 million, a figure
far less the almost $33.5 million requested. Twenty-eight research grants are
awarded.
1957
On October 5, the Soviet Union orbits Sputnik 1, the first ever man-made
satellite. The successful rocket launch forces a national self-appraisal that
questions American education, scientific, technical and industrial strength. For
1959, Congress increases the NSF appropriation to $134 million, nearly $100
million higher than the year before. By 1968, the NSF budget will stand at
nearly $500 million.
1958
NSF selects Kitt Peak, near Tucson, Arizona, as the site of the first national
observatory, a research center that would make state-of-the-art telescopes
available to every astronomer in the nation. (Prior to this time, there was no
equal access; major research telescopes were privately funded, and were
available only to the astronomers who taught at the universities that ran them.)
Today, that idea has expanded to encompass the National Optical Astronomy
Observatory, the National Radio Astronomy Observatory, the National Solar
Observatory, the Gemini Observatory and the Arecibo Observatory, all of which
are funded in whole or in part by NSF. Along the way, moreover, NSF's astronomy
program has forged a close working relationship with that of NASA, which was
also founded in 1958: just as NASA has responsibility for the U. S. effort in
space-based astronomy, NSF provides virtually all the U. S. federal support for
ground-based astronomy.
1959
The United States and other nations operating in Antarctica conclude a treaty
that reserves the continent for peaceful and scientific research. Shortly
thereafter, a presidential directive based on the treaty gives NSF the
responsibility for virtually all U.S. operations and research on the continent;
the U.S. Antarctic Program continues to this day.
1960
Emphasis on international scientific and technological competition further
accelerates NSF growth. The Foundation starts the Institutional Support Program,
a capital funding program designed to build a research infrastructure among
American universities; it will be the single largest beneficiary of NSF budget
growth in the 1960s. NSF's appropriation is $152.7 million; 2,000 grants are
made.
1968
The Deep Sea Drilling Project begins. Over the years, the project reveals much
new evidence about the theories of continental drift, sea floor spreading and
the general usefulness of the ocean basins. The program also becomes a model of
international cooperation as several foreign countries join the operation.
1972
NSF takes over management of twelve interdisciplinary materials research
laboratories from the Defense Department's Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA).
These university-based laboratories had taken a more integrated approach than
did most academic departments at the time, encouraging physicists, chemists,
engineers, and metallurgists to cross departmental boundaries and use systems
approaches to attack complex problems of materials synthesis or processing. NSF
begins to expand these laboratories into a nationwide network of Materials
Research Science and Engineering Centers.
1977
The first "Internet" is developed. This interconnection of unrelated networks is
run by DARPA. Over the next decade, increasing NSF involvement leads to a
three-tiered system of internetworks managed by a mix of universities, nonprofit
organizations and government agencies. By the mid-1980s, primary financial
support for the growing project is assumed by the NSF.
1983
The agency budget tops $1 billion for the first time. Major increases in the
nation's research budget are proposed as the country recognizes the importance
of research in science and technology, as well as education. A separate
appropriation is established for the U.S. Antarctic Program. NSF receives more
than 27,000 proposals and funds more than 12,000 of them.
1985
In November NSF delivers ozone sensors, along with balloons and helium, to
researchers at the South Pole so they can measure stratospheric ozone loss. The
action is taken in response to findings made in May of that year, indicating a
steep drop in ozone over a period of several years. The Internet project, now
known as NSFNET, continues.
1990
NSF's appropriation passes $2 billion for the first time.
1990s
NSF funds the development of several curricula based on the NCTM standards,
devised by the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics. These standards are
widely adopted by school districts during the subsequent decade. However, in
what newspapers such as the Wall Street Journal later call the "math wars",
organizations such as Mathematically Correct complain that some elementary texts
based on the standards, including Mathland, have almost entirely abandoned any
instruction of traditional arithmetic in favor of cutting, coloring, pasting,
and writing. During that debate, NSF is both lauded and criticized for favoring
the standards.
1991
In March, the NSFNET acceptable use policy is altered to allow commercial
traffic. By 1995, with the private, commercial market thriving, NSF
decommissions the NSFNET, allowing for public use of the Internet.
1993
Students and staff working at the NSF-supported National Center for
Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) at the University of Illinois,
Urbana-Champaign, develop Mosaic, the first freely available browser to allow
World Wide Web pages that include both graphics and text. Within 18 months, NCSA
Mosaic becomes the Web browser of choice for more than a million users, and sets
off an exponential growth in the number of Web users.
1994
NSF, together with NASA and DARPA, launches the Digital Library Initiative. One
of the first six grants goes to Stanford University, where two graduate
students, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, begin to develop a search engine that uses
the links between Web pages as a ranking method. They will later commercialize
their search engine under the name Google.
1996
NSF-funded research establishes beyond doubt that the chemistry of the
atmosphere above Antarctica is grossly abnormal and that levels of key chlorine
compounds are greatly elevated. During two months of intense work, NSF
researchers learn most of what we know today about the ozone hole.
1998
Two independent teams of NSF-supported astronomers discover that the expansion
of the universe is actually speeding up, as if some previously unknown force,
now known as dark energy, is driving the galaxies apart at an ever increasing
rate.
2000
NSF joins with other federal agencies in the National Nanotechnology Initiative,
dedicated to the understanding and control of matter at the atomic and molecular
scale. Today, NSF's roughly $300 million annual investment in nanotechnology
research is still one of the largest in the 23-agency initiative.
2001
NSF's appropriation passes $4 billion.
The NSF's Survey of Public Attitudes Toward and Understanding of Science and
Technology reveals that the public has a positive attitude toward science but a
poor understanding of it.
2004–5
NSF sends "rapid response" research teams to investigate the aftermath of the
Indian Ocean Tsunami and Hurricane Katrina. An NSF-funded engineering team helps
uncover why the levees failed in New Orleans.
2005
NSF's budget stands at just over $5.6 billion.
2006
NSF's budget stands at $5.91 billion for the 2007 fiscal year that began on
October 1, 2006 and runs through September 30, 2007.
2007
NSF requested $6.43 billion dollars for FY 2008

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