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Professeur certifié (PRCE): Secondary school teacher teaching at university level. These teachers have a lesser degree than PRAGs, the certification . Chargé d’enseignement : Title used broadly for every instructor who teaches at any university on a regular basis, though not at a full-time position.
Certified teachers (Professeurs certifiés), educated in both a University and an INSPE, have a "master" (Bac+5) and must pass a competitive exam called Certificat d'aptitude au professorat de l'enseignement du second degré (CAPES) in a specific domain. Their rank usually determines their geographic assignment for the first years of their careers.
« L'inspection du travail en France en 1998. les chiffres clés » de Collectif, La Documentation Française, 2000 « L'Inspection du travail », Bureau international du travail, 2000; Gérard Lyon-Caen et Jacques Pellissier, Droit du travail, Dalloz, 1996; Marie-Thérèse Join-Lambert, Politiques sociales, Presses de Sciences-Po et Dalloz, 1997
In France, various types of institution have the term "University" in their name. These include the public universities, which are the autonomous institutions that are distinguished as being state institutes of higher education and research that practice open admissions, and that are designated with the label "Université" by the French ministry of Higher Education and Research. [1]
"Extraits des Registres de la Chambre des Comptes de Pau (XVIe et XVIIe siècles.)" [Extracts from the Registers of the Chambre des Comptes of Pau (16th and 17th Centuries.)] (application/txt/pdf). Bulletin de la Société des Sciences, Lettres et Arts de Pau (in French). Vol. II série–1.
France Travail receives those that have declared unemployment and provides them with social benefits, while helping companies to find candidates for a job. France Travail publish job offers, select themselves candidates and follow their first months in the job. They develop partnerships with companies to advise them.
Comptes rendus was initially established in 1835 as Comptes rendus hebdomadaires des séances de l'Académie des Sciences. [2] It began as an alternative publication pathway for more prompt publication than the Mémoires de l'Académie des Sciences, which had been published since 1666.
The Cour des Comptes was reorganized by Napoleon through the Law of September 16, 1807. In 1842, it eventually moved away from the Île de la Cité into the Palais d'Orsay. In May 1871 at the end of the Paris Commune, the Palais d'Orsay was entirely destroyed by fire and the Cour des Comptes was temporarily relocated in the Palais-Royal.