Centrale Méditerranée
Motto | Nous avons un monde à transformer |
---|---|
Motto in English | We have a world to transform |
Type | Public, Graduate engineering |
Established | 1891 |
Founder | Jules Macé de Lepinay |
Budget | 22 000 000 € |
Director | Carole Deumié |
Students | 1100 (2019) |
Location | , |
Affiliations | Centrale Graduate School, Top Industrial Managers for Europe |
Website | https://www.centrale-mediterranee.fr/en |
The École Centrale de Marseille, also known as Centrale Méditerranée is a leading graduate school of engineering (or Grande école of engineering) located in Marseille, the second largest city in France. The École Centrale de Marseille was created in 2006 by the merging of different previous institutions and has its origins from the École d'ingénieurs de Marseille founded in 1891.
It is one of the prestigious Centrale Graduate Schools[1] (Paris, Lyon, Lille, Nantes, Marseille) and a member of the TIME (Top Industrial Managers for Europe) network.
From its creation, Centrale Méditerranée trains engineers, recruited since 2004 through a highly competitive exam shared with the other Centrale Graduate Schools.
Academic profile
The Ecole Centrale de Marseille is a multidisciplinary school, where the great majority of the students have endured two or three years of intensive maths and physics training (known as prepa) in order to train for the Concours Centrale-Supélec (known as one of the hardest competitive exams in France).
As future general engineers, students do not have any particular major before the last year (Master's level), during which they have to choose among a few electives:
- Mechanical engineering
- Chemical engineering
- Physics, optics and electrical engineering
- Business Administration and Finance
- Mathematics and computer science
The students can also complete their last year in one of the other Centrale Graduate Schools or be part of an exchange program.
There are three-years PhD programs available in all the aforementioned domains of research (the students are required to have completed a Master's program).
Exchange programs
Being a part of the TIME (Top Industrial Managers for Europe) network, the school has exchange program with many universities across the world, among them Technical University of Munich (Germany), Cranfield University (UK), Royal Institute of Technology (Sweden), Penn State (US), University of São Paulo (Brazil), University of Waterloo (Canada), Keio University (Japan) or University of Chile (Chile).
Research
Eight research laboratories are under the joint leadership of Ecole Centrale Marseille and Aix-Marseille University :
- Laboratory for Mechanics and Acoustics (LMA - Laboratoire de Mécanique et d'Acoustique)
- Institut Fresnel (Optics, Photonics and Signal Processing)
- Institute of Research on Non Equilibrium Phenomena (IRPHE - Institut de Recherche sur les Phénomènes Hors Équilibre)
- Institute of Molecular Sciences of Marseille (iSm2 - Institut des sciences moléculaires de Marseille)
- Mechanics, Modelling and Clean Processes (M2P2 - Mécanique Modélisation et Procédés Propres)
- Research Group in Quantitative Economics of Aix-Marseille (GREQAM - Groupe de Recherche en Économie Quantitative)
- Laboratory of Analysis, Topology, and Probability (LATP - Laboratoire d’Analyse, Topologie, Probabilités)
- Laboratory of Fundamental Computer Science (LIF - Laboratoire d’Informatique Fondamentale)
Rankings
Ecole Centrale de Marseille is ranked among the top 20[2] French Grandes Ecoles, though it does not appear in international rankings due to its very limited number of students (250 students for the class of 2016).
Alumni
The alumni network is made of over 16,000 graduates.[3]
Notable alumni
- Malika Haimeur (1956–), awarded the Irène Joliot-Curie Prize for Women & Business in 2009
References
- ^ "Groupe des Écoles Centrale – Des formations d'excellence de niveau international" (in French). 2023-09-11. Retrieved 2023-09-23.
- ^ "Admission & informations | Formation".
- ^ https://www.centraliens-marseille.fr