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École supérieure de commerce et management

Coordinates: 47°21′53″N 0°42′16″E / 47.36472°N 0.70444°E / 47.36472; 0.70444
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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 / 47.36472°N 0.70444°E / 47.36472; 0.70444 (Tour)
46°34′51″N 0°20′35″E / 46.58083°N 0.34306°E / 46.58083; 0.34306 (Poitiers)
AffiliationsAACSB
Websitewww.excelia-group.fr
One of ESCEM's buildings in Tours.

The ESCEM School of Business and Management (French: "École Supérieure de Commerce et Management") was a business school located in Tours, Orléans and Poitiers in France which is now renamed Excelia Business School.[2]

ESCEM was formed through the merger between the business schools ESC Tours (1982) and ESC Poitiers (1961) in 1998[3] as well as EGC Orléans in 2012. With a yearly enrolment of about 2'600 business students, ESCEM awarded around 15 different qualifications from Bachelor to Masters level degrees.[4] ESCEM was a former member of Conférence des Grandes Écoles and successively obtained the AACSB and EQUIS accreditation.[5] In 2012, it initiated the project of France Business School.[6][7]

In September 2016, Sup de Co La Rochelle took a majority share of ESCEM.[8]

In 2020 ESCEM joined Sup de Co La Rochelle and formed Excelia,[2] a higher education group composed of three main campuses in La Rochelle, Tours and Orléans. It is structured as five schools offering programs from Bachelor (Bac+3) to Master level (Bac+5):

  • Excelia Business School
  • Excelia Tourism & Hospitality School
  • Excelia Digital School
  • Excelia Academy
  • Excelia Executive Education

Excelia has 4,550 students and about 40,000 alumni.[citation needed]

References

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  1. ^ "ESCEM: Ecole supérieure de commerce et de management". dimension-commerce.com.
  2. ^ a b "La communauté Excelia s'agrandit : L'ESCEM devient Excelia". Monde des grandes écoles et universités (in French). 2020-12-10. Retrieved 2020-12-18.
  3. ^ "ESCEM MBA 24". mba24.com.
  4. ^ "ESCEM Move On Net". moveonnet.eu. 12 March 2015.
  5. ^ "AACSB ESCEM School of Business and management (Tours-Poitiers)". aacsb.edu.
  6. ^ Christine Lagoutte, « À quoi servent les fusions entre business schools ? », Le Figaro étudiant, 22 mai 2012 http://etudiant.lefigaro.fr/orientation/actus-et-conseils/detail/article/a-quoi-servent-les-fusions-entre-business-schools-138
  7. ^ "France Business School : un projet ambitieux semé d'embûches - Educpros". letudiant.fr. Retrieved 2014-03-07.
  8. ^ "FNEGE website". Archived from the original on 2016-09-14. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
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