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Audencia Business School

Coordinates: 47°14′48″N 1°33′10″W / 47.2468°N 1.55271°W / 47.2468; -1.55271
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Audencia Business School
Former names
Audencia Nantes École de Management
Motto"Never stop daring"
TypeGrande école de commerce et de management
(Private research university Business school)
Established1900; 124 years ago (1900)[1]
AccreditationTriple accreditation:
AACSB;[1]
AMBA;[1]
EQUIS[1]
Academic affiliations
Conférence des grandes écoles
PresidentMichel Denis
DeanSébastien Tran
Academic staff
170[2]
98% PhD.;[3]
44% female;[3]
66% international[3]
Students7,800[2]
Location,
CampusNantes, Paris, La Roche sur Yon, China, Brazil, Australia
LanguageEnglish and French
WebsiteOfficial website
Map of France with mark showing location of Audencia Business School
Map of France with mark showing location of Audencia Business School
Audencia Business School
Audencia Business School, Nantes, France

Audencia Business School is a French grande école and business school located in Nantes, France. The school enrolls 7,800 students from almost 90 countries in bachelors, international masters, specialised masters, MBAs, doctorates and executive education courses.

It is one of the only 1% of business schools in the world accredited by the Association of MBAs (AMBA), European Quality Improvement System (EQUIS), and the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB).[5] Audencia is also BSIS labelled.

History

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Audencia was founded in 1900 as the École Supérieure de Commerce de Nantes.[6] Until 1970, the school occupied the building which is today home to the city's natural history museum. It then moved into a purpose-built campus of 23,000 m2 to the north of the city centre opposite Nantes University.

In 2000, the school changed its name to Audencia Nantes School of Management.[6] The name "Audencia" is a blend of two words: audientia, which means "listening," and audacia or "boldness."

Since 2004, the school has been associated with the Global Compact, a United Nations initiative that brings together firms, the business world and civil society united on ten universal principles relative to human rights, working conditions and the environment.

In 2015, the school was reaccredited by the three global accreditations (AMBA, EQUIS, AACSB) for the maximum period of five years.

In 2016, the school changed its name to Audencia Business School which includes the bachelor and masters programmes of former schools SciencesCom and the Ecole Atlantique de Commerce.

In 2017, the school adopted a new legal status and became a public-private partnership (École consulaire or EESC) largely financed by the public Chambers of Commerce in Nantes St-Nazaire.[1]

Grande école degrees

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Audencia is an École consulaire (EESC), a private institution of higher education funded and supervised by the city of Nantes, the local council and the chamber of commerce and industry.[1] As a member of the Conférence des grandes écoles, Audencia has the status of a Grande école.[7] Grandes écoles are elite French institutions of higher education that are separate from, but parallel and often connected to, the main framework of the French public university system. Grandes écoles admit students through an extremely competitive process, and a significant proportion of their graduates occupy the highest levels of French society.[8][9][10] Similar to Ivy League schools in the United States, Russell Group in the UK, and C9 League in China, graduation from a grande école is considered the prerequisite credential for any top government, administrative and corporate position in France.[11][12]

The degrees are accredited by the Conférence des Grandes Écoles[13] and awarded by the Ministry of National Education (France).[14] Higher education business degrees in France are organized into three levels thus facilitating international mobility: the Licence / Bachelor's degrees, and the Master's and Doctorat degrees. The Bachelors and the Masters are organized in semesters: 6 for the Bachelors and 4 for the Masters.[15][16] Those levels of study include various "parcours" or paths based on UE (Unités d'enseignement or Modules), each worth a defined number of European credits (ECTS). A student accumulates those credits, which are generally transferable between paths. A Bachelors is awarded once 180 ECTS have been obtained (bac + 3); a Masters is awarded once 120 additional credits have been obtained (bac +5). The highly coveted PGE (Grand Ecole Program) ends with the degree of Master's in Management (MiM)[15][16][17]

Audencia Business School is also accredited by EQUIS (European Quality Improvement System), AACSB (Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business) and Association of MBAs (AMBA).[18] It is among the top 1% business school in the world to have the triple crown (Triple accreditation). Of the 13,670 schools offering business degree programs worldwide, only 89 have triple accreditation as of May 2018.

Academic programmes

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Bachelor

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  • Bachelor in Management – Three-year programme. Admission possible in year three after prior studies.
  • Bachelor of Business Administration (BBA) – Four year programme with the fourth year split between studies and in-company period. Specialisations in agribusiness or purchasing.

Master

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  • Audencia Master in Management (Grande école programme) – Four years including one in-company.
  • Audencia Full-Time MBA – Taught in English over a 12-month period.
  • Executive MBA – 18 months part-time, taught in French, with international seminars in English.
  • Euro*MBA – Executive programme run by a consortium of six European business schools including Audencia Nantes. Taught over 24 months through distance learning and six European residential weeks.
  • MSc in Management-Engineering – An English-language programme followed by students from around 20 French and foreign engineering schools. An 18-month course with a study period abroad. Ranked 55th in the world in the Financial Times’ masters in management ranking (September 2020).
  • European and International Business Management Programme (EIBM) – Trilingual (English, French, Spanish) programme in 12 and 14-month formats taught in three countries. Run by Audencia Nantes and two academic partners in the UK and Spain.
  • International Master in Management (IMM) – Year-long programme taught in English with the possibility of studying on the campus of one of eight exclusive partners.
  • Master Supply Chain and Purchasing Management – English-taught double degree split between Audencia Nantes and MIP Politecnico di Milano (Italy). Available in 12 or 18-month formats.
  • MSc in Food and Agribusiness Management – a 15-month programme in partnership with ESPM (Escola Superior de Propaganda e marketing), Brazil and with the support of the Crédit Agricole. Taught 100% in English.
  • MSc in Management and Entrepreneurship in the Creative Economy (MSc MECE) – an 18-month programme taught in English in partnership with the Innovation School of The Glasgow school of Art.
  • Masters programme Communications and Media – Three-year programme including 15 months of internships.`
  • Masters programme Public policy Management – in partnership with Sciences Po Lille[19]
  • Specialised masters accredited by the French Conférence des Grandes Ecoles and taught in French: Management of Sports Organisations; Management and International Competences; Marketing Design & Création; Global Purchasing and Supply Chain Management; Finance, Risk, Control; Marketing Strategies for the Digital Age; Business Development

Doctorate

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  • DBA Audencia Business School – Toulouse Business School
  • DBA in Responsible Management, Audencia Business School – Tsinghua University, Beijing
  • DBA Audencia Business School – Western Business School of China, Chengdu

Non-degree

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  • Executive Education

Rankings

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In 2021, Audencia was ranked 7th business schools in France by L'Étudiant.[20] In 2022, the Financial Times ranked its Masters in Management program 47th in the world.[21] Audencia's Full-Time MBA was ranked 58th in the MBA ranking 2018 by CNN Expansion and 90th in the world by The Economist (October 2018).[22]

Partnerships

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Within France, Audencia entered an alliance with the École Centrale de Nantes and the Nantes École Nationale Supérieure d’Architecture (ensa Nantes) to promote engineering, management, architecture and creativity to enrich the teaching, research, corporate relations and international scope of all three schools.[1] The school signed its first agreement with a non-French academic institution in 1972.[23] Today, Audencia has more than 230 international partners. While the earliest accords concerned North American business schools (especially those in the USA), the school now has partnerships throughout the world.[24]

Alumni

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Audencia Business School has several alumni as follows:

Controversy

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In 2022 several articles in regional newspapers appeared indicating a sort of Toxic Management leading up to several people leaving the institution.

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g "History: Audencia". Audencia. Retrieved 24 January 2022.
  2. ^ a b "Home". Audencia. Retrieved 24 January 2022.
  3. ^ a b c "Audencia". Financial Times. Retrieved 24 January 2022.
  4. ^ "Audencia Business School". Letudiant. 26 May 2020.
  5. ^ "Business School Rankings Audencia". FT. Archived from the original on 2015-12-25. Retrieved 2014-10-08.
  6. ^ a b "Audencia Business School". Studyrama.
  7. ^ "AUDENCIA GROUP - AUDENCIA BUSINESS SCHOOL - Écoles - Conférence des Grandes Ecoles". cge.asso.fr. Archived from the original on 2016-03-25. Retrieved 2016-06-02.
  8. ^ "France's educational elite". Daily Telegraph. 17 November 2003. Retrieved 5 February 2019.
  9. ^ Pierre Bourdieu (1998). The State Nobility: Elite Schools in the Field of Power. Stanford UP. pp. 133–35. ISBN 9780804733465.
  10. ^ What are Grandes Ecoles Institutes in France?
  11. ^ Monique de Saint-Martin, « Les recherches sociologiques sur les grandes écoles : de la reproduction à la recherche de justice », Éducation et sociétés 1/2008 (No. 21), p. 95-103. lire en ligne sur Cairn.info
  12. ^ Valérie Albouy et Thomas Wanecq, Les inégalités sociales d’accès aux grandes écoles (2003), INSEE
  13. ^ "Conférence des grandes écoles: commission Accréditation". Conférence des grandes écoles. Retrieved 21 January 2022.
  14. ^ "Etablissements dispensant des formations supérieures initiales diplômantes conférant le grade de master". Ministry of France, Higher Education. Ministère de l'Enseignement supérieur, de la Recherche et de l'Innovation. Retrieved 16 January 2022.
  15. ^ a b "La Licence". enseignementsup-recherche.gouv.fr (in French). 2016-07-19. Retrieved 2016-07-19.
  16. ^ a b "Le Master". enseignementsup-recherche.gouv.fr (in French). 2016-07-19. Retrieved 2016-07-19.
  17. ^ Ben-David, Joseph and Philip G. Altbach. eds. Centers of Learning: Britain, France, Germany, United States (2nd ed. 2017).
  18. ^ "The Triple Accredited Business Schools (AACSB, AMBA, EQUIS)". MBA Today.
  19. ^ "03.03.04.01_presentation_audencia.pdf" (PDF). www.sciencespo-lille.eu.
  20. ^ "Classement SIGEM 2021 : les écoles de commerce toujours plébiscitées par les élèves de prépa". L'Etudiant (in French). Retrieved 2024-06-22.
  21. ^ "Masters in Management 2022 - Business school rankings from the Financial Times - FT.com". rankings.ft.com. Retrieved 15 September 2022.
  22. ^ "2016 MBA & Business School Rankings | Which MBA?". The Economist. Retrieved 2016-10-17.
  23. ^ "Audencia Saciol". Saciol. Archived from the original on October 8, 2014.
  24. ^ "International scope". Audencia. Retrieved 24 January 2022.
  25. ^ "International Collaboration".
  26. ^ "ABA Technology Appoints Othman el Ferdaous Vice President".
  27. ^ "Écoles de commerce et Politique #4 - Interview de Jean Arthuis". 4 February 2019.
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47°14′48″N 1°33′10″W / 47.2468°N 1.55271°W / 47.2468; -1.55271