École supérieure de commerce et management

The ESCEM School of Business and Management was a business school in France. By September 1, 2016, ESCEM was incorporated by Sup de Co La Rochelle.[2] With a yearly enrolment of about 2'600 business students, ESCEM awarded around 15 different qualifications from 2 year degrees to Masters level degrees.[3]

Ecole Supérieure de Commerce Et Management
MottoIntégrité - Engagement - Curiosité - Humilité
TypeGrande Ecole
Established1998 [1]
Students2,800
Location,
France

47°21′53″N 0°42′16″E (Tour)
46°34′51″N 0°20′35″E (Poitiers)
AffiliationsAACSB
Websitewww.escem.fr/en
One of ESCEM's buildings in Tours.

Created in April 1998, ESCEM is the result of a merger between two business schools: ESC Tours and ESC Poitiers.[4] Since the merger the ESCEM School of Business and Management has doubled its staff and its amenities. ESCEM has the AACSB accreditation.[5] In 2012, it in turn merged into France Business School [6][7]

Degrees

Initial Studies

  • ESCEM's Bachelor in Management[8]
  • ESCEM's Bachelor of Arts in International Business (BAIB)[9]
  • ESCEM's Master in Management:[10] Two years program (Master 1 and 2)taught in English or in French
  • Dual award programs in collaboration with Greenwich University entirely taught in English:[11]
    • International Marketing Communications Program[12]
    • International Finance Program[13]
    • International Business Program[14]
  • Single award program taught in English and/or in French
    • International Management Program[15]
  • Dual award programs in collaboration with the University of Poitiers[16][17]
  • Dual award programs in collaboration with Sherbrook University

Continued education

  • Executive MBA
  • International MBA (I.MBA)
  • Master Management : ESC Perspective - ESC GE
  • Mastère in Business (MiB)
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gollark: Do they actually have an opt out?
gollark: I don't actually have a car, but it seems like with the increasing amount of computers in them and requirements for mobile connectivity and such in them, they're moving away from this.
gollark: Generally, I think my things should do what I want and not enforce artificial lockouts on things, randomly break unrepairably, report data back to whoever, run unauditable proprietary software, or do weird stuff in the background.
gollark: Oh, and if I remember right all Teslas are constantly connected over the mobile network to Tesla and can refuse to work if you don't do software updates.

References

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