Mines Paris – PSL: Difference between revisions
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* [http://mines-paris.org Old Mines Paris alumni union] |
* [http://mines-paris.org Old Mines Paris alumni union] |
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== External links == |
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[http://www.csi.ensmp.fr/WebCSI/4S/plan/mines.php |An excellent page with photos and historical overview] |
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==Other schools of Mines in France== |
==Other schools of Mines in France== |
Revision as of 09:46, 3 February 2007
The École Nationale Supérieure des Mines de Paris (also known as Ecole des Mines, Ecole des Mines de Paris, Mines Paris or simply Mines) was created in 1783 on the request of King Louis XVI in order to train intelligent directors of mines. It is one of the French generalist and most prominent engineering Grandes Ecoles.
Despite its small size (only up to 120 students accepted each year), it is a crucial part of the infrastructure of French industry.
History
Logo | |
Type | Grandes Ecoles |
---|---|
Established | 1783 |
Location | , |
Campus | Paris, Fontainebleau, Evry, Sophia-Antipolis |
Website | [1] |
Created by a decree of the King's Counsel on March the 19th 1783, the first school of mines is installed in the Hôtel de la Monnaie, in Paris.
This first school disappeared during the first times of the French revolution and was created again by a decree of the Committee of Public Safety the 13th messidor year II (1794), and was moved to Savoie, after a decree of the consuls the 23rd pluviôse year X (1802)
After the Bourbon Restoration in 1814, the school was definitevely settled in the Hôtel de Vendôme (all along the Jardin du Luxembourg in the 6th arrondissement of Paris). From the sixties it also has annexes in Fontainebleau, Évry and Sophia-Antipolis (Nice).
Education
Its former vocation to train mining engineers evolved in the course of time, because of technological progress and transformations of society. The École des Mines de Paris has become nowadays a "generalist" school, with a broad variety of disciplines. Its students are for the most part supposed to have management position in industrial companies and receive a good training not only in technical fields but also in economics and social sciences (e.g. a sociology of science course by Bruno Latour).
Diplomas
The Ecole des Mines provides different educational paths:
- The education for Civil Engineers of Mines, ranked between the three best French Grande Ecole diplomas.
- The education for the Corps of Mines, greatest technical corps of the French state. It is an honorific third cycle education, lasting for three years, and consisting mainly in long-term internships both in public and private economical institutions.
- Doctoral and Master studies in various fields.
Admission for French and International students
- For French nationals, admission to Civil Engineer of Mines is decided after concourse at the end of preparatory classes, a highly selective system.
- Admission to the Corps of Mines is possible at the end of the Ecole Polytechnique (top 10 ranked students each year), École Normale Supérieure and École des Mines de Paris (these two later, after specific concourse).
Famous alumni
Two of its alumni have received a Nobel Prize :
- Maurice Allais, Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel
- Georges Charpak, Nobel Prize in physics
Research centres
Energy, material science
- Centre d'energetique et procédés
- Centre de Matériaux
- Centre de mise en forme des matériaux
- Laboratoire de mécanique des solides
Applied math and computer science
- Morphologie mathématique
- Robotique
- Géostatistique
- Recherche en informatique
- Automatique et systèmes
- Mathématiques appliquées
Geology and environmental sciences
- Centre de géologie de l'Ingénieur
- Centre d'informatique géologique
- Centre de géotechnique et d'Exploitation du Sous-Sol
- Centre de géophysique
Economics and social sciences
See also
Other top ranked Grandes Ecoles:
External links
|An excellent page with photos and historical overview