SCUOLA NORMALE SUPERIORE DI PISA


Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa

The 'Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa', also known in Italian as 'Scuola Normale' (English: ''Normal School''), is a higher learning institution in Italy. It was founded in 1810, by Napoleonic decree, as a branch of the École Normale Supérieure of Paris. Since its foundation it has operated a highly selective student admission procedure, and its main goal was, during that period, essentially to form the best college and high school teachers. Recognized as a "national university" in 1862, one year after Italian unification, and named during that period as "Normal School of the Kingdom of Italy", it then obtained its administrative autonomy in 1936, surviving the fascist dictatorship of Benito Mussolini. Since that period, the Normal School has become an entity separate from the University of Pisa, with complete administrative, didactic and regulative freedom. The Scuola, together with the University of Pisa and with Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies, belongs to the Pisa University System.

Contents
Fields of study
Admission
Teaching activities
Campus
Famous alumni
External links
See also

Fields of study


The ''Normal School's fields of study are historically two: philosophic and scientific. Currently the college offers the classes as follows:
''Philosophy- and literature-related''

★ Ancient History and Classical Philology

★ Italian Literature and Linguistics

★ Arts History and Archaeology

★ History and Paleography

★ Philosophy
''Science-related''

★ Biological Sciences

★ Chemistry

★ Physics

★ Computer Science

★ Mathematics

★ Physics (PhD)

★ Condensed Matter Physics (PhD)

★ Molecular Biophysics (PhD)

★ Mathematics (PhD Course)

★ Mathematics for Finance and Business Technologies (PhD)

★ Neurobiology (PhD)

★ Molecular Biology (PhD)

★ Chemistry (PhD)
''Palazzo della Carovana'': ''Scuola Normale Superiore'' main building

Admission


In order to become a student member of the ''Normal School'', or ''normalista'', it is necessary for the candidate to pass an extremely selective admission exam (there are only sixty admissions out of nearly 1000 applicants on average every year), with questions which space into the entire chosen field of study: for example, for a would-be Computer Science student, it's not sufficient to be an IT ''guru'', but it's necessary to have a definitely higher-than-average, valuable knowledge about mathematics and physics too. The ''normalisti'' receive free housing, free lunches and dinners, and a monthly salary.

Teaching activities


The Scuola does not host a full programme of undergraduate and graduate (master) studies; instead, the students follow the ordinary courses at the public University of Pisa, and complement them with additional classes and seminars taught by the professors of the Scuola. The ''normalisti'' are required to score high marks in their exams at the public university (average marks of at least 27/30 and no mark below 24/30) in order to maintain their grant.
Instead, the Ph.D. programme is separate and completely independent of the one hosted by the University of Pisa. The Ph.D. course is called ''corso di perfezionamento'', and the students are called ''perfezionandi''.

Campus


The Scuola Normale is located in its first historical building, called Palazzo della Carovana, in Piazza dei Cavalieri, in the medieval downtown of Pisa.
Nowadays, the students are hosted in four dorms located inside the inner city.

Famous alumni



Enrico Fermi, physicist and Nobel prize winner

Carlo Rubbia, physicist and Nobel prize winner

Giosuè Carducci, poet & Nobel prize winner

Carlo Azeglio Ciampi, economist & politician, lifetime senator, former Prime Minister of Italy, former President of the Italian Republic, former Governor of the Banca d'Italia

Massimo D'Alema, (withdrew), politician, Italian Minister of Foreign Affairs, former Italian prime minister

Ennio de Giorgi, mathematician

Giovanni Gronchi, politician, former President of the Republic of Italy

Giovanni Gentile, philosopher and politician

Fabio Mussi, (withdrew), politician, Italian Minister of the University

Vito Volterra, mathematician

Guido Fubini, mathematician

Luigi Bianchi, mathematician

External links



Scuola Normale Superiore - Official Site (in Italian & English)

See also



List of Italian universities

Pisa

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