المدرسة المحمدية للمهندسين École Mohammadia d'Ingénieurs | |
Motto | Science and Engineering |
---|---|
Type | Public School of Engineering |
Established | 1959 |
Chairman | Prof. M. Larbi ABIDI |
Students | 500 (FTE, 2013) |
Location | , |
Campus | Urban |
Website | www |
The Mohammadia School of Engineers[1] (French: École Mohammadia d'Ingénieurs, abbreviated EMI; Arabic: المدرسة المحمدية للمهندسين) is the first to be established engineering school in Morocco. EMI was founded in 1959 by the King Mohammed V as Morocco's first polytechnic, it's the largest institution of higher education in technology and one of the leading technical schools in Morocco.
History
EMI became in 1982 under the order of the king Hassan II a school combining academic and military education in order to control the students promoting communism.[2] The new model set was following the establishment of the polytechnical school of Paris (École Polytechnique).
Special events
Organization
After three years of academic studies and military training the students have to take an oath in front of his majesty the King of Morocco in order to get the 'Grandes Ecoles d'ingénieurs' degree,a Bac+5 in the French education System, and the equivalent of a master's degree . In the military side the students graduate as reserve Officers. The school consists of nine departments :
- Department of Civil Engineering
- Department of Computer Science
- Department of Electrical Engineering
- Department of Industrial Engineering
- Department of Mechanical Engineering
- Department of Mineral Engineering[3]
- Department of Modelling and Scientific Computing
- Department of Networks & Telecommunications
- Department of Process Engineering
References
- ↑ "Islamic Financial Engineering Laboratory."Mohammadia School of Engineers. Retrieved on November 19, 2017. "The Lab capitalizes on the long-standing expertise of the Research Laboratory for Applied Mathematics (LERMA) at the Mohammadia School of Engineers,[...]"
- ↑ La mue de boujelloud - Brahim AGHZAF - Google Livres. 5 September 2014. ISBN 9782765903567. Retrieved 2022-08-19.
- ↑ "Génie minéral — Wikipédia". fr.m.wikipedia.org. Retrieved 2021-01-12.
External links
33°59′58″N 6°51′7″W / 33.99944°N 6.85194°W
- (in French) Official website
- AIEM Europe web site