École nationale supérieure des télécommunications de Bretagne: Difference between revisions
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* [[Jean-Marc Jézéquel]], computer scientist and author, director of [[IRISA]] |
* [[Jean-Marc Jézéquel]], computer scientist and author, director of [[IRISA]] |
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* [[Imad Sabouni]], Minister of Communications and Technology of [[Syria]] |
* [[Imad Sabouni]], Minister of Communications and Technology of [[Syria]] |
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* [[Linda Bouali Naouali]], Minister of Accueil [[Brest]] |
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== Notable faculty == |
== Notable faculty == |
Revision as of 12:00, 29 July 2015
48°21′33″N 4°34′12″W / 48.35917°N 4.57000°W
Motto | A prestigious graduate engineering school and international research centre in the field of information technologies |
---|---|
Type | French Grande Ecole |
Established | 1977 |
President | Paul Friedel |
Students | 1,219 (2009) |
Undergraduates | 998 (2009) |
Postgraduates | 430 (2009) |
221 (2009) | |
Location | , France |
Campus | Brest, Rennes |
Website | official |
Telecom Bretagne (formerly known as ENST Bretagne) is one of the top French grande école and a high standard research centre providing high level training in Information Technologies and telecommunications. This grande école of engineering is located near Brest in Brittany.
As a member of the Institut Telecom, it has three campuses:
- Plouzané, in the Technopôle Brest-Iroise, near Brest (France);
- Campus de Beaulieu, in Rennes (France);
- Supaero campus, in Toulouse (France).
Telecom Bretagne has been the source of breakthroughs[citation needed] in the world of telecommunications, notably[citation needed] the turbo codes (first published in Proc. IEEE ICC'93) used extensively in 3G mobile telephony standards.
History
- 1974: Pierre Lelong – Secretary of State for the PTT (literally Postal Telegraph and Telephone) – decides to establish a second school of telecommunications that will be located in the Brest area.
- 1977: Creation of ENST Bretagne in Brest. Admission of the first student body which counted 31 students.
- 1986: Creation of the Rennes site.
- 1997: Creation of the Groupe des Écoles des Télécommunications (GET).
- 2008: Renamed Telecom Bretagne.
- 2012: Creation of the Institut Mines-Télécom.
Master of engineering
For students admitted in formation initiale (FI, literally initial formation), the curriculum takes 3 years and deals with six main domains in 1st and 2nd year:
- Mathematics and signal processing
- Electronics and physics
- Computer science
- Networks
- Economy and social sciences
- Languages and intercultural dimensions
and 4 options in 3rd year :
- Engineering and system integration
- Software systems and networks
- Services and business engineering
- Information processing systems.
Master of Sciences
Telecom Bretagne delivers Master of Science degrees, which are fully compliant with the Bologna system. MSc are two-year training courses leading to a high level of expertise in Information Technologies (IT):
- MSc in Telecommunication Systems Engineering
- MSc in Design and Engineering of Communication Networks
- MSc in Computer Science & Decision Systems
- MSc in Information Systems Project Management & Consulting
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (June 2008) |
(Mastères spécialisés, mastères de recherche, PhDs...)
Admission
Admission for the Engineering degree is decided, for most French students, through competitive examination after two to three years of mostly theoretical physics and mathematics classes in CPGE. Foreign students and a few French students are selected after undergraduate or graduate studies based on their results and specific tests.
Illustrious Alumni
- Pierre Gataz, CEO of Radiall, president of MEDEF
- Jean-Marc Jézéquel, computer scientist and author, director of IRISA
- Imad Sabouni, Minister of Communications and Technology of Syria
- Linda Bouali Naouali, Minister of Accueil Brest
Notable faculty
- Adrienne Jablanczy, President of the Institut supérieur européen de gestion group