Ecole Polytechnique
Ecole Polytechnique
(French: "Polytechnic
School"), engineering school located originally in
Paris but, since 1976, in Palaiseau, Fr., and directed by
the Ministry of Defense. It was established in 1794 by the
National Convention as the École Centrale des
Travaux Publics ("Central School of Public
Works") under the leadership of Lazare Carnot and
Gaspard Monge. It took its present name in 1795 and absorbed
the state artillery school in 1802.
Originally under the
direction of the Ministry of the Interior, it was
transformed into a military school by Napoleon (1804). In
the past, most graduates became technical officers in the
military forces; today most go into government service or
business. There are faculties of mathematics, mechanical
engineering, physics, chemistry, economics, and humanities
and social sciences.
[Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1994]
The École Polytechnique was founded in 1794, originally to train
military engineers. Although still affiliated with the Defense
Ministry, its role has gradually changed over the years:
present-day ``Polytechniciens'' become researchers, top-ranking Civil
Servants, highly qualified engineers, and company directors. It is one
of the most prestigious of all French institutions of higher learning.
The best students nationwide
In France, a large portion of the best graduating secondary school
students do not enroll at a University. They go to France's top 50
Lycées (secondary schools) for 2 years to prepare for the competitive
entrance examinations to the ``Grandes Écoles'', elite institutions
of higher education.
Students with a scientific background will take the difficult entrance
examination to Polytechnique as well as those set by other ``Grandes
Écoles Scientifiques''. If accepted by several institutions, it is
Polytechnique that they will most likely choose. Out of 10,000
preparatory students, 380 are selected each year, about 1 in 15 being
foreigners.
The Course
Duration
French Polytechnique students do their military service during their
first year. They are trained as lieutenants and are given positions
of responsibility, often of leadership, throughout France and even the
world. Full academic training follows, and lasts 2 years. Because of the
levels obtained in the preparatory schools, a degree from Polytechnique
would be more equivalent to an American or British M.Sc. than a B.Sc.,
with solid grounding in several different scientific subjects.
An all-round education
Incoming students, as was mentioned earlier, are science majors; however,
the ``core curriculum'' of mathematics, physics, chemistry, biology,
fluid and solid mechanics and computer science, also includes economics
and the humanities--philosophy, politics, foreign languages, art and
architecture--as well as sports.
Academic training includes lectures and seminars, but also personal
projects. Students and faculty are encouraged to develop a personal
relationship with one another.
Before starting their second year, all students are expected to accomplish
an entry-level internship involving hands-on labor experience. From a
pedagogical point of view, this is considered an essential part of the
curriculum. At the end of their last year, students choose companies or
national research laboratories in which they do a 3 or 4 months work-study
research project, 25% of them in foreign countries. At the end of this
period they present a short thesis to a panel of professors.
The large majority of graduates complete their studies with a Ph.D. or an
equivalent degree in science, technology, economics or business, some at
foreign universities.
Indeed, the broad spectrum of their training enables them to specialize
in a number of fields.
Top quality facilities and teaching staff
The École Polytechnique recruits among the best lecturers and professors
both for teaching and research. The faculty is comprised not only of
scientists of repute, but also of leading writers, journalists, philosophers,
economists and politicians. The École Polytechnique also has 24 research
laboratories with over 250 doctoral students working alongside 450
professional researchers.
The library, founded in 1794, has extensive collections dating back to the
16th-century (about 10,000 volumes published before 1810) which cover all
sectors of contemporary scientific activity as well as the humanities.
Originally situated in Paris, the campus was transferred to a southern
suburb of Paris in 1976 where its 380 acres allow for excellent sports
facilities including soccer and rugby fields, tennis courts, 2 swimming
pools, an artificial lake for sailing as well as riding stables.
Social life
This is another outstanding feature of the École Polytechnique, as social
life tends to be nonexistent in many French universities. Sports activities
are well appreciated and attended at the school. These include all kinds
of matches and tournaments (soccer, rugby, fencing, to name a few) but also
a 5-day international sailing regatta, a world class 3-day equestrian
competition and a 3-day inter-collegiate ski competition.
The students, who all live on campus, organize full programs of entertainment
(cinema, theater, music) which draw large audiences from the neighbouring
communities. Dozens of student clubs and services are manned by teams with
a variety of interests ranging from the ordering of low-cost, high-quality
materials (from hi-fi and video to wine) to publishing the students
magazine or the more elegant X-Projets and X-Passion magazines which inform
the leading companies in the economic community of outstanding activities
on campus, including student consultancy projects for major firms.
Last year's special project of buying, racing and organizing trips in
a hot air baloon is a good example of the students' flourishing imagination
and initiative.
Career prospects
Many of the students go into company management and civil administration.
Famous alumni include military figures (Field Marshals Foch and Joffre),
renowned scientists (A. Fresnel, A. Becquerel, H. Poincaré, A. Cauchy,
P. Lévy), industrialists (André Citroën), economists (Maurice Allais,
Nobel Prize 1988), managers of major private companies (P. Barazer,
IBM France), and politicians (Valery Giscard d'Estaing, former French
president, as well as numerous government ministers).
Some noted alumni achievements
Polytechnique graduates have always been involved in France's technological
advances. Indeed, many leading French companies in key sectors are managed
by ``Polytechniciens'' and/or employ them on their staff. We will merely
mention 5 major projects initiated or carried out by alumni:
- the TGV, France's high speed train (made by Alsthom Atlantique)
- the Airbus (Aerospatiale)
- RITA, the military communications system (Thomson)
- Ariane (Centre National d'Études Spatiales, the French Space Agency)
- and France's civil nuclear energy programme carried out by the French
Atomic Energy Commission (CEA).
© 21 Aug 1995,
Nicolas Pioch -
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