Commission des Titres d'Ingénieur

Commission des Titres d'Ingénieur (in English: Accreditation authority for French professional engineers, abbreviated in French as "CTI") is the main committee responsible for evaluation and accreditation of higher education institutions for the training of professional engineers in France. It regulates the issuance of the Diplôme d'ingénieur and use of the academic title of "Ingénieur Diplomé" (qualified graduate engineer).

Accreditation authority for French professional engineers
Commission des titres d'ingénieur (CTI) | Accreditation authority for French professional engineers
Formation10/08/1934
TypeAccreditation agency
PurposeQuality Assurance of higher engineering education
Headquarters44 rue de Cambronne, 75 015 Paris (France)
ServicesQuality assessemnt, accreditation
Membership
32 representatives of engineering graduate schools, employers and engineers associations.
LeaderElisabetth Crépon (2018-...)
Websitehttp://www.cti-commission.fr/

Established by law on 10 July 1934, CTI does not exist as an independent administrative authority, but is nonetheless an autonomous structure within the Ministry of Higher Education and Research. In France, CTI is the relevant body in charge of carrying out evaluation procedures that lead to the accreditation of the institutions to award the engineering degree "titre d’ingénieur diplômé".

CTI is a member of the European Association for Quality Assurance in Higher Education and it is entered in EQAR, the European Higher Education Quality Register, which authorizes operation throughout the European Higher Education Area.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.