ESIEA (university)


The École supérieure d'informatique, électronique, automatique is a French engineering school. Its five-year general engineering program focuses in the field of Science and Technology in the Digital Computer, electronic and automatic.

History

Early years

In August, 1957, a team of researchers camped in a tent on the Mont Blanc glacier, Mer de Glace, facing Montenvers, taking ice measurements with electronic equipment, dreamed of creating an engineering school for electronics applications. The following year, in August 1958, Maurice Lafargue, one of the engineers from the glacier officially founded ESEA, a school to train engineers in interfaces and scientific applications, in Paris, rue Antoine-Dubois.
In 1973 the school moved to an old garage on Vesalius street in the 5th arrondissement of Paris, close to Rue Mouffetard and the Latin Quarter. Two years later, in 1975, the school becomes the property of the Association of Alumni and Friends of ESIEA, a non-profit.
In 1985, The Commission for engineering qualifications enabled ESIEA to deliver the ESIEA engineering degree. Growth continued with the opening of a facility in Ivry sur Seine and the permanent extension of their premises.

Additional campuses

This ESIEA graduate system is divided into three blocks:
The curriculum ESIEA is organized in three cycles and five levels: