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  • 21 Aug, 2019

  • By, Wikipedia

École Des Mines De Nantes

The École des Mines de Nantes (French pronunciation: [ekɔl de min nɑ̃t]), or École nationale supérieure des mines de Nantes ([ekɔl nasjɔnal sypeʁjœʁ de min nɑ̃t]), Mines Nantes, EMN, was a French engineering school (grande école), part of the Institut Mines-Télécom. The school was based in Nantes, in the west of France. On 1 January 2017, it merged with Télécom Bretagne to form the IMT Atlantique.

The school offers 10 majors:

The EMN has also signed agreements with Audencia Business School to offer a joint degree in management of information technologies. The school depend on the French minister of industry.

Teaching philosophy

Although it offers a fairly typical education for an engineering school, the EMN strives to give its graduate a practical, pragmatic approach to the technical and business skills it teaches. Manifestations of this philosophy include programs such as the "Apprentissage par l'action" ("Learning through action"), a case-based approach to sciences that places students in front of industry-inspired puzzles and develops students' analytic skills and intellectual curiosity. The EMN is also a partner of "La main à la pâte" ("Hands in the dough"), an innovative initiative to teach sciences in primary courses supported by Georges Charpak, who won the Nobel Prize in physics in 1992.

Programs taught in English

EMN offers four Master of Science programs fully taught in English:

  • MOST (MSc in Management and Optimization of Supply Chains and Transport)
  • PM3E (Master of Science in Project Management for Environnemental and Energy Engineering)
  • ME3 joint masters (European joint Masters in Management and Engineering of Environment and Energy) in collaboration with four other partners (UPM Madrid, KTH Stockholm, BME Budapest and Queen’s University Belfast). This program has obtained the prestigious Erasmus Mundus label of the European Union.
  • SNEAM (Master of Science in Sustainable Nuclear Energy - Applications and Management)

Other schools of Mines in France

47°16′56″N 1°31′15″W / 47.28222°N 1.52083°W / 47.28222; -1.52083