École Normale Supérieure
The École Normale Supérieure (also known as Normale Sup', Normale, ENS, ENS-Paris, ENS-Ulm or Ulm), written École normale supérieure in french is an elite French grande école, whose main campus is located around the rue d'Ulm (Ulm Street) in the 5th arrondissement of Paris.
ENS has annex campuses on Boulevard Jourdan (in Paris) and in Montrouge (a suburb).
Table of contents |
Overview
Originally meant to train high school teachers through the agrégation, it is now an elite institution training researchers, university professors, and civil servants (as well as highschool teachers, in particular in the humanities). It focuses on the association of training and research, with an emphasis on freedom of curriculum.
Its alumni include eight laureates of the Fields Medal, which is the equivalent of the Nobel Prize for the mathematical sciences, as well as Nobel Prize winners in both science and literature.
Apart from the École Normale Supérieure in Paris, three other écoles normales supérieures have been established, with similar goals:
- École Normale Supérieure de Lyon (sciences),
- École Normale Supérieure Lettres et Sciences Humaines (humanities),
- École Normale Supérieure de Cachan (applied sciences, foreign languages, technical studies).
The normaliens, as the students of the several ENS are known, keep a level of excellence in the various disciplines in which they are trained. Normaliens from France and other European Union countries are considered civil servants in training, and as such paid a monthly salary, in exchange for an agreement to serve France for 10 years, including those of studies. This exclusivity clause, seldom applied in practice, is redeemable (often by the hiring firm), though.
Each year, there are about 100 normaliens students enrolled in the sciences, and 100 in the humanities.
Apart from the normaliens, ENS also welcomes selected foreign students ("international selection"), who receive a stipend, as well as, selected students from neighbouring universities, to follow the same curriculum. It also participates in various graduate programs and has extensive research laboratories.
The fictitious mathematician Nicolas Bourbaki's "association of collaborators" is based at ENS.
Famous alumni
(Non-exhaustive list.)
- Scientists
- Louis Pasteur (1843)
- Nobel Prize holders
- mathematicians
- Evariste Galois
- Henri Cartan
- André Weil
- Fields Medal holders (all French holders of the Fields medal were educated at the École Normale Supérieure)
- Humanities
- philosophers
- Louis Althusser
- Simone de Beauvoir
- Emile Auguste Chartier "Alain"
- Henri Bergson (1878) (Nobel Prise 1927)
- Hippolyte Taine (1893)
- Jean-Paul Sartre (1924)
- Raymond Aron (1924)
- Maurice Merleau-Ponty (1926)
- Michel Foucault (1946)
- Jacques Derrida (1952)
- André Comte-Sponville (1972)
- Simone Weil
- politicians
- Jean Jaurès (1878)
- Léon Blum (1890) (expelled during his third year)
- Édouard Herriot (1891)
- Georges Pompidou (1931)
- Alain Juppé (1964)
- Laurent Fabius (1966)
- Léopold Sédar Senghor
- sociologists (they studied philosophy at ENS)
- Emile Durkheim (1879)
- Pierre Bourdieu (1951)
- writers (some were philosophers too)
- Romain Rolland (1886) (Nobel Prize 1915)
- Jean Giraudoux
- Jean-Paul Sartre ((he turned down the Nobel Prize in 1964)
- Léopold Sédar Senghor
- Charles Péguy (1894)
- Julien Gracq (1930)
- philosophers
Famous professors
- Louis Althusser
- Samuel Beckett
- Pierre Bonnet
- Paul Celan
- Laurent Freidel
- Ernest Lavisse
See also
External link
ENS can also refer to studies of society and the environment.
Categories: Grandes écoles | Paris