École des mines d'Alès

École des Mines d'Alès
Type Grandes Ecoles
Established 1843
Director Bruno Goubet
Location Alès, France
Campus Alès, Nîmes, Pau[1]
Affiliations CGE, CDEFI, Groupe des écoles des mines
Website http://www.mines-ales.fr

L'École des Mines d'Alès (EMA) was created in 1843 by King Louis XVI, under the guardianship of the French Ministry of Economy, Finance and Employment, is a French technology and engineering university. From 2012, its full name changed into Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Mines d'Alès. Founded in 1843, this school was originally formed for study of the mining industry. It is now an engineering school in France Grandes écoles and of the Groupe des écoles des mines.[1]

There are three year engineering degree and master's degree programs.[2]

General Information

History

L'École des Mines d'Alès (EMA) was founded in 1843.

The First World War (1914–1918) forced the school to close down temporarily.[3]

Organisation

The EMA is a public national school (Grandes écoles) under the guardianship of the Ministry delegated to the industry. "Les écoles des Mines", are organised together, known as GEM (Groupe des Écoles des Mines) : Mines ParisTech, Albi-Carmaux, Douai, Nantes, Saint-Étienne and Nancy. These schools arrange an organisation to do research together (ARMINES) which contributes a lot to the technological innovation and the industrial development of France.

Campus

The main part of the school is in the city Alès. The students' residence is around 2 km from the main campus. The residence offers individual rooms, double rooms or studios, furnished and equipped. There are also a laundry, a kitchen equipped, rooms for entertainment, a bar, an auditorium, and a TV room with campus wide internet access.[4]

List of directors

The following is a list of directors by time period:[5]

Time Director
1845–1849 Pierre-Jules Callon
1849–1860 Gabriel Jules Étienne Dupont
1860–1862 Jules Alexandre Alphonse Meugy
1862–1869 Edouard Victor Descottes
1869–1874 Charles Ernest Ledoux
1874–1878 Oscar Linder
1878–1884 Jules Hippolyte Julien
1884–1890 Fernand Rigaud
1891–1895 Louis Jules Caesar Ichon
1895–1898 Henri Jean Baptiste Xavier Boutiron
1898–1900 Louis Albert Laurans
1900–1912 François Jules Camille Dougados
1911–1912 Alexandre André Belugou (par intérim)
1913–1924 Joseph Marie Pierre Loiret
1924–1927 André Charles Duby
1927–1936 Jules François Gabriel Daval
1937 Pierre Jules Lafay
1936–1945 Jean Paul Louis Damian
1945 Jean-Paul Robert Bernadet
1945–1948 Louis Charles Eyssautier
1948–1951 Marcel Georges Fernand Sala
1951–1960 Jean Alfred Vuillot
1960–1964 Pierre Charles Alexis Legoux
1964–1979 Jean-Pierre Arnold Marcel Pertus
1979–1982 Marcel Gerente
1982–1989 Gustave Defrance
1989–1994 Maurice Cotte
1994–2003 Henri Pugnere
2003–2013 Alain René Georges Dorison
2013– Bruno Goubet

Education fields

Areas of study:

The laboratories

There are three centers of research:

Statistics in 2009:[9]

Clubs and associations

See also

Notes and references

  1. 1 2 3 École Nationale Supérieure des Techniques Industrielles et des Mines d’Alès. Grandes Ecoles and Higher Education Schools. Campus France. Retrieved January 6, 2012.
  2. 1 2 "Introduction of EMA on Letudiant". Letudiant introduction_EMA. Retrieved 5 January 2012.
  3. 1 2 3 "History of EMA". 160 years. Retrieved 5 January 2012. ' (primary source)
  4. "Camups Site of EMA". Official introduction of the campus. Retrieved 5 January 2012. ' (primary source)
  5. "Directors in history". Directors of EMA. Retrieved 5 January 2012. ' (primary source)
  6. "Information engineering and Production engineering (LGI2P)". LGI2P website. Retrieved 5 January 2012. ' (primary source)
  7. "Centre of Materials and Grand Diffusion (CMGD)". CMGD website. Retrieved 5 January 2012. ' (primary source)
  8. "Industrial Environnement and Industrialand natural Risks (LGEI)". LGEI website. Retrieved 5 January 2012. ' (primary source)
  9. "Academis Statistics" (PDF). 2009_EMA_Activities&Statistics. Retrieved 5 January 2012. ' (primary source)
  10. http://www.emagine.asso.fr/presentation.php (primary source)

External links

Coordinates: 44°07′57″N 4°05′22″E / 44.13250°N 4.08944°E / 44.13250; 4.08944

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, September 06, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.