5 réponses
Hello,
As always in this kind of field, ambiguity prevails.
It is undeniable that Studi is a leader in the sector and has physical schools among its capital, some of which are publicly traded.
It should be noted that the "diploma" awarded is not a license, but a Bachelor, which is not even a university diploma but an institutional one; there are good ones and bad ones (some excellent and logically very selective ones exist as well).
The title in question holds the first level of recognition by the State (RNCP certification of a certain professional qualification) but not the second: it is "certified" but not "recognized", which means that its academic value is not acknowledged, let alone its equivalence to a license for entry into the LMD system.
Now, and I don’t know for sure, this may have nothing to do with the market value of the thing, in other words the way this program is perceived in the job market, knowing that an employer may prefer those who have gotten their hands dirty (including through alternation) over distance technical programs that can always raise questions when they require working on machines.
As always in this kind of field, ambiguity prevails.
It is undeniable that Studi is a leader in the sector and has physical schools among its capital, some of which are publicly traded.
It should be noted that the "diploma" awarded is not a license, but a Bachelor, which is not even a university diploma but an institutional one; there are good ones and bad ones (some excellent and logically very selective ones exist as well).
The title in question holds the first level of recognition by the State (RNCP certification of a certain professional qualification) but not the second: it is "certified" but not "recognized", which means that its academic value is not acknowledged, let alone its equivalence to a license for entry into the LMD system.
Now, and I don’t know for sure, this may have nothing to do with the market value of the thing, in other words the way this program is perceived in the job market, knowing that an employer may prefer those who have gotten their hands dirty (including through alternation) over distance technical programs that can always raise questions when they require working on machines.