école normale - definitie. Wat is école normale
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Wat (wie) is école normale - definitie

FRENCH "GRANDE ÉCOLE" (ENS PARIS)
École Normale Superieure; L'École Normale Supérieure; Ecole Normale Superieure; École Normale Supérieure d'Ulm (ENS Ulm); Ecole normale superieure; L'Ecole normale superieure; Ecole Normal Superieure; École Normale; Ecole Normale; Ecole normale supérieure; Ecole Normale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts; École normale supérieure (rue d'Ulm); Ecole Normale Superieure d'Ulm (ENS Ulm); Ecole Normale Superieure des Beaux-Arts; L'Ecole Normale Superieure; Ecole Normale Supérieure of Education & Technology; Ecole Normale Supérieure of Paris; ÉNS; ENS Ulm; Ecole Normale Superieur; The École normale supérieure; École normale supérieure de la rue d'Ulm; École normale supérieure (Ulm); Normale sup; Normale Sup; Ecole normale supérieure, Paris; Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris; Normale sup’; École normale supérieure (rue d'Ulm — Paris); E.N.S.; Ens paris; E.N.S. paris; École Normale Supérieure (Ulm); École Normale Supérieure; Ecole normale supérieure de Paris; École normale supérieure in Paris
  • The school's ''Cour aux Ernests'' under a coat of snow.
  • quadrangle]] at the main ENS building on ''rue d'Ulm'' is known as the ''Cour aux Ernests'' – the Ernests being the goldfish in the pond.
  • The main entrance to the ENS on ''Rue d'Ulm''. The school moved into its current premises in 1847.
  • [[Jean-Paul Sartre]] attended the school at the same time as his intellectual foe [[Raymond Aron]].
  • [[Louis Pasteur]] was a student at the school before directing it for many years.
  • The ''[[Scuola Normale Superiore]]'' in [[Pisa]], [[Italy]], which was founded as a branch of ENS and retains very close links to it.
  • [[Simone Weil]] attended the ''École normale supérieure'' in the 1920s and beat classmate [[Simone de Beauvoir]] to first place in philosophy.
  • Entrance of the historic building of the ENS, at 45, ''rue d'Ulm''. The inscriptions on the pediment of the monumental doorway display the school's two dates of creation (the first, ''9 [[brumaire]] an III'' (30 October 1794), in the oculus, under the [[National Convention]], the second, 17 March 1808), and the date of dedication of this building, 24 April 1841.

Ecole Normale Superieure         
<body> (ENS) A higher education and research institution in Paris, France.
École normale supérieure         
  • Key decrees and laws on the upper part of the entrance of ''École Normale Supérieure'', 45 rue d'Ulm
TYPE OF STATE-RUN INSTITUTE OF HIGHER EDUCATION IN FRANCE
Ecole Normale Supérieure; Écoles Normales Supérieures; Écoles normales supérieures
An école normale supérieure () or ENS is a type of publicly funded higher education institution in France. A portion of the student body, admitted via a highly-selective competitive examination process, are French civil servants and are known as normaliens.
École Normale Supérieure of Bamako         
Ecole Normale Superieure of Bamako; Ecole Normale Supérieure of Bamako
École Normale Supérieure (ENSUP; alternate, National Superior School of Mali) is a public school of higher education in Bamako, Mali.

Wikipedia

École normale supérieure (Paris)

The École normale supérieure - PSL (French pronunciation: ​[ekɔl nɔʁmal sypeʁjœʁ]; also known as ENS, Normale sup', Ulm or ENS Paris) is a grande école university in Paris, France. It is one of the constituent members of Paris Sciences et Lettres University (PSL).

Originally conceived during the French Revolution, the school was founded in 1794 to provide homogeneous training of high-school teachers in France but it later closed. The school was subsequently reestablished by Napoleon I as pensionnat normal from 1808 to 1822, before being recreated in 1826 and taking the name of École normale in 1830. When institutes for primary teachers training called écoles normales were created in 1845, the word supérieure (meaning upper) was added to form the current name. It has since developed into an institution which has become a platform for French students to pursue careers in government and academia.

The ENS has a highly competitive selection process consisting of written and oral examinations. The selection rates for International Selection vary from year to year, between 5 and 10% During their studies, many ENS students hold the status of paid civil servants.

The ENS is a grande école and, as such, is not part of the mainstream university system. However, the vast majority of the academic staff hosted at ENS belong to external institutions such as one of the Parisian universities, the CNRS and the EHESS. This mechanism for constant scientific turnover allows ENS to benefit from a continuous stream of researchers in all fields. ENS full professorships are rare and competitive. Generalistic in its recruitment and organisation, the ENS is the only grande école in France to have departments of research in all the natural, social, and human sciences.

Due to the selectivity of its entrance exam and its turnover among French researchers, it has a high proportion of prize laureates and therefore a very good reputation. Its alumni include 14 Nobel Prize laureates (ENS has the highest proportion of Nobel laureates among its alumni of any institution worldwide), of which 8 are in Physics, 12 Fields Medalists, more than half the recipients of the CNRS's Gold Medal (France's highest scientific prize) and several hundred members of the Institut de France, and scores of politicians and statesmen. The school has achieved particular recognition in the fields of mathematics and physics as one of France's foremost scientific training grounds, along with international notability in the human sciences as the spiritual birthplace of authors such as Julien Gracq, Jean Giraudoux, Assia Djebar, and Charles Péguy, philosophers such as Henri Bergson, Jean-Paul Sartre, Louis Althusser, Simone Weil, Maurice Merleau-Ponty and Alain Badiou, social scientists such as Émile Durkheim, Raymond Aron, and Pierre Bourdieu, and "French theorists" such as Michel Foucault and Jacques Derrida. The school's students are often referred to as normaliens.

Its model has been replicated elsewhere, in France (at the ENSes of Lyon, Paris-Saclay, and Rennes), in Italy (at the Scuola Normale Superiore in Pisa), in Romania, in China and in former French colonies such as Morocco, Algeria, Mali, Mauritania, and Cameroon.