Meem admission. Moscow Institute of Electronics and Mathematics: faculties, history, reviews

Who led it from its founding to 1987. When created, it was called “Moscow Institute of Electronic Engineering”. Subsequently it was called the Moscow State Institute of Electronics and Mathematics.

The institute trains specialists, bachelors and masters in the fields of electronics, information technology, telecommunications, computer technology, applied mathematics, cybernetics and design.

Until 2015, it was located in two buildings. The first was located in the area of ​​the Kitay-Gorod metro station at the address: 109028, Moscow, B. Trekhsvyatitelsky per., no. 3. The second in the area of ​​the Paveletskaya metro station at the address: Moscow, st. Malaya Pionerskaya, 12.

In November 2014, construction of a new building in Strogino was completed.

Since the 2015 academic year, classes have been held in a new building in Strogino at the address: Tallinskaya, 34

Story

By mid-April 1962, the government was preparing a Decree “On the development of radio electronics in the country.” However, the State Committee for the Electronic Industry of the USSR (chairman A.I. Shokin) did not have “its own university” that would train specialists for a specific purpose in its organization. The Mechanical Engineering Institute proposed to create the Moscow Institute of Electronic Engineering on its basis. The Ministry of Higher and Secondary Specialized Education of the RSFSR agreed and included in the draft Resolution a clause on the creation of a new institute on the basis of MVMI. The decree was issued on April 12, 1962.

Since 2015, MIEM has received the status of a global faculty of the Higher School of Economics.

Faculties and departments

Currently, MIEM includes 3 faculties (departments):

  • Department of Applied Mathematics
    • Department of Applied Mathematics
    • Department of Cybernetics
    • Department of Mechanics and Mathematical Modeling
    • Department of Computer Security
  • Department of Electronic Engineering
    • Department of Electronics and Nanoelectronics
    • Department of Radioelectronics and Telecommunications
    • Department of Microsystem Engineering, Materials Science and Technology
    • Department of Engineering and Computer Graphics
  • Department of Computer Engineering
    • Department of Computer Systems and Networks
    • Department of Information Technologies and Automated Systems
    • Department of Information and Communication Technologies
  • General institute departments:
    • Department of Higher Mathematics,
    • Department of Physics
    • Department of Physical Chemistry and Ecology
    • Department of Foreign Languages

Image gallery

    Photo of the sign at the entrance to MIEM r.JPG

    Photo of the main building of MIEM.JPG

    Photo of the entrance to MIEM.JPG

    Photo of the end of the main building of MIEM.JPG

    Photo of the main MIEM building from the boulevard side.JPG

    Photo of the sign at the entrance to MIEM.JPG

    Moscow State Institute of Electronics and Mathematics 2011.JPG

    Moscow State University named after. M. V. Lomonosova(MAI) Automobile and road (MADI) Agrarian (Moscow Agricultural Academy named after K. A. Timiryazev) †Agroengineering named after. V. P. Goryachkina Military University of the Ministry of Defense High School of Economics Geodesy and cartography (MIIGAiK) † Geological exploration named after. S. Ordzhonikidze (MGRI) Civil aviation †Mountain City pedagogical Humanitarian-economic Humanitarian † Humanitarian named after. M. A. Sholokhova Humanities Design and technology Friendship between nations On land management †Industrial †Environmental Engineering † Information technology, radio engineering and electronics Research Technological University (“MISiS”) Research Nuclear (“MEPhI”) Linguistic Mechanical Engineering (MAMI) Ministry of Internal Affairs named after V. Ya. Kikotya Medical and Dental Institute named after. A. I. Evdokimova (“3rd med”) Medical named after I. M. Sechenov (“1st honey”) Medical named after N. I. Pirogova (“2nd med”) International Relations (MGIMO) Oil and Gas named after. I. M. Gubkina Regional † Opened by him. V. S. Chernomyrdina † Food production Pedagogical Prints named after I. Fedorova Justice †Environmental development Psychological and pedagogical Railways of Emperor Nicholas II (MIIT) Communications and informatics Social Construction (MISI) † Textile im. A. N. Kosygina Technical named after N. E. Bauman Technologies and their management. K. G. Razumovsky (PKU) Technological (MIREA) Technological (“Stankin”) † Technological named after. K. E. Tsiolkovsky † Fine Chemical Technologies named after. M. V. Lomonosova † Trade and economic † Management(MIPT) Physical culture, sports, youth and tourism (GTSOLIFK)(MGYuA)

    An excerpt characterizing the Moscow Institute of Electronics and Mathematics

    Soon after the Rostovs arrived in St. Petersburg, Berg proposed to Vera, and his proposal was accepted.
    Despite the fact that in Moscow the Rostovs belonged to high society, without knowing it or thinking about what society they belonged to, in St. Petersburg their society was mixed and uncertain. In St. Petersburg they were provincials, to whom the very people whom the Rostovs fed in Moscow, without asking them to what society they belonged, did not descend.
    The Rostovs lived in St. Petersburg as hospitably as in Moscow, and at their dinners a wide variety of people gathered: neighbors in Otradnoye, old poor landowners with their daughters and the maid of honor Peronskaya, Pierre Bezukhov and the son of the district postmaster, who served in St. Petersburg. Of the men, Boris, Pierre, whom the old count, having met on the street, dragged to his place, and Berg, who spent whole days with the Rostovs and showed the elder Countess Vera such attention as a young man can give, very soon became household people in the Rostovs’ house in St. Petersburg. intending to make an offer.
    It was not for nothing that Berg showed everyone his right hand, wounded in the Battle of Austerlitz, and held a completely unnecessary sword in his left. He told everyone this event so persistently and with such significance that everyone believed in the expediency and dignity of this act, and Berg received two awards for Austerlitz.
    He also managed to distinguish himself in the Finnish War. He picked up a fragment of a grenade that killed the adjutant next to the commander-in-chief and presented this fragment to the commander. Just like after Austerlitz, he told everyone so long and persistently about this event that everyone also believed that it had to be done, and Berg received two awards for the Finnish War. In 1919 he was a captain of the guard with orders and occupied some special advantageous places in St. Petersburg.
    Although some freethinkers smiled when they were told about Berg’s merits, one could not help but agree that Berg was a serviceable, brave officer, in excellent standing with his superiors, and a moral young man with a brilliant career ahead and even a strong position in society.
    Four years ago, having met a German comrade in the stalls of a Moscow theater, Berg pointed him to Vera Rostova and said in German: “Das soll mein Weib werden,” [She should be my wife], and from that moment he decided to marry her. Now, in St. Petersburg, having realized the position of the Rostovs and his own, he decided that the time had come and made an offer.
    Berg's proposal was accepted at first with unflattering bewilderment. At first it seemed strange that the son of a dark Livonian nobleman was proposing to Countess Rostova; but the main quality of Berg’s character was such naive and good-natured egoism that the Rostovs involuntarily thought that this would be good, if he himself was so firmly convinced that it was good and even very good. Moreover, the Rostovs’ affairs were very upset, which the groom could not help but know, and most importantly, Vera was 24 years old, she traveled everywhere, and, despite the fact that she was undoubtedly good and reasonable, no one had ever proposed to her . Consent was given.
    “You see,” Berg said to his comrade, whom he called friend only because he knew that all people have friends. “You see, I figured it all out, and I wouldn’t have gotten married if I hadn’t thought it all through, and for some reason it would have been inconvenient.” But now, on the contrary, my father and mother are now provided for, I arranged this rent for them in the Baltic region, and I can live in St. Petersburg with my salary, with her condition and with my neatness. You can live well. I’m not marrying for money, I think it’s ignoble, but it’s necessary for the wife to bring hers, and the husband to bring his. I have a service - it has connections and small funds. This means something nowadays, doesn’t it? And most importantly, she is a wonderful, respectable girl and loves me...
    Berg blushed and smiled.
    “And I love her because she has a reasonable character - very good.” Here’s her other sister - the same last name, but completely different, and an unpleasant character, and no intelligence, and that, you know?... Unpleasant... And my fiancee... You’ll come to us... - Berg continued, he wanted to say dinner, but changed his mind and said: “Drink tea,” and, quickly piercing it with his tongue, released a round, small ring of tobacco smoke, which completely personified his dreams of happiness.
    Following the first feeling of bewilderment aroused in the parents by Berg’s proposal, the usual festivity and joy settled in the family, but the joy was not sincere, but external. Confusion and bashfulness were noticeable in the relatives' feelings regarding this wedding. It was as if they were now ashamed of the fact that they loved Vera little and were now so willing to sell her off. The old count was most embarrassed. He probably would not have been able to name what was the reason for his embarrassment, and this reason was his financial affairs. He absolutely did not know what he had, how much debt he had and what he would be able to give as a dowry to Vera. When the daughters were born, each was assigned 300 souls as a dowry; but one of these villages had already been sold, the other was mortgaged and was so overdue that it had to be sold, so it was impossible to give up the estate. There was no money either.
    Berg had already been a groom for more than a month and only a week remained before the wedding, and the count had not yet resolved the issue of the dowry with himself and had not spoken about it with his wife. The count either wanted to separate Vera’s Ryazan estate, or wanted to sell the forest, or to borrow money against a bill of exchange. A few days before the wedding, Berg entered the count's office early in the morning and, with a pleasant smile, respectfully asked his future father-in-law to tell him what would be given to Countess Vera. The Count was so embarrassed by this long-anticipated question that he thoughtlessly said the first thing that came to his mind.
    - I love that you took care, I love you, you will be satisfied...
    And he, patting Berg on the shoulder, stood up, wanting to end the conversation. But Berg, smiling pleasantly, explained that if he did not know correctly what would be given for Vera, and did not receive in advance at least part of what was assigned to her, then he would be forced to refuse.
    - Because think about it, Count, if I now allowed myself to get married without having certain means to support my wife, I would act basely...
    The conversation ended with the count, wanting to be generous and not be subjected to new requests, saying that he was issuing a bill of 80 thousand. Berg smiled meekly, kissed the count on the shoulder and said that he was very grateful, but now he could not get settled in his new life without receiving 30 thousand in clear money. “At least 20 thousand, Count,” he added; - and the bill then was only 60 thousand.
    “Yes, yes, okay,” the count began quickly, “just excuse me, my friend, I’ll give you 20 thousand, and in addition a bill for 80 thousand.” So, kiss me.

    Natasha was 16 years old, and the year was 1809, the same year that four years ago she had counted on her fingers with Boris after she kissed him. Since then she has never seen Boris. In front of Sonya and with her mother, when the conversation turned to Boris, she spoke completely freely, as if it were a settled matter, that everything that happened before was childish, which was not worth talking about, and which had long been forgotten. But in the deepest depths of her soul, the question of whether the commitment to Boris was a joke or an important, binding promise tormented her.
    Ever since Boris left Moscow for the army in 1805, he had not seen the Rostovs. He visited Moscow several times, passed near Otradny, but never visited the Rostovs.
    It sometimes occurred to Natasha that he did not want to see her, and these guesses were confirmed by the sad tone in which the elders used to say about him:
    “In this century they don’t remember old friends,” the countess said after the mention of Boris.
    Anna Mikhailovna, who had been visiting the Rostovs less often lately, also behaved with particular dignity, and every time she spoke enthusiastically and gratefully about the merits of her son and about the brilliant career he was on. When the Rostovs arrived in St. Petersburg, Boris came to visit them.
    He went to them not without excitement. The memory of Natasha was Boris's most poetic memory. But at the same time, he traveled with the firm intention of making it clear to both her and her family that the childhood relationship between him and Natasha could not be an obligation for either her or him. He had a brilliant position in society, thanks to his intimacy with Countess Bezukhova, a brilliant position in the service, thanks to the patronage of an important person, whose trust he fully enjoyed, and he had nascent plans to marry one of the richest brides in St. Petersburg, which could very easily come true . When Boris entered the Rostovs' living room, Natasha was in her room. Having learned about his arrival, she, flushed, almost ran into the living room, beaming with a more than affectionate smile.
    Boris remembered that Natasha in a short dress, with black eyes shining from under her curls and with a desperate, childish laugh, whom he knew 4 years ago, and therefore, when a completely different Natasha entered, he was embarrassed, and his face expressed enthusiastic surprise. This expression on his face delighted Natasha.
    - So, do you recognize your little friend as a naughty girl? - said the countess. Boris kissed Natasha's hand and said that he was surprised by the change that had taken place in her.
    - How prettier you have become!
    “Of course!” answered Natasha’s laughing eyes.
    - Has dad gotten older? – she asked. Natasha sat down and, without entering into Boris’s conversation with the countess, silently examined her childhood fiancé down to the smallest detail. He felt the weight of this persistent, affectionate gaze on himself and occasionally glanced at her.
    The uniform, the spurs, the tie, Boris’s hairstyle, all this was the most fashionable and comme il faut [quite decent]. Natasha noticed this now. He sat slightly sideways on the armchair next to the countess, straightening the clean, stained glove on his left with his right hand, spoke with a special, refined pursing of his lips about the amusements of the highest St. Petersburg society and with gentle mockery recalled the old Moscow times and Moscow acquaintances. It was not by chance, as Natasha felt, that he mentioned, naming the highest aristocracy, about the envoy's ball, which he had attended, about the invitations to NN and SS.
    Natasha sat silently the whole time, looking at him from under her brows. This look bothered and embarrassed Boris more and more. He looked back at Natasha more often and paused in his stories. He sat for no more than 10 minutes and stood up, bowing. The same curious, defiant and somewhat mocking eyes looked at him. After his first visit, Boris told himself that Natasha was just as attractive to him as before, but that he should not give in to this feeling, because marrying her, a girl with almost no fortune, would be the ruin of his career, and resuming a previous relationship without the goal of marriage would be an ignoble act. Boris decided with himself to avoid meeting with Natasha, but, despite this decision, he arrived a few days later and began to travel often and spend whole days with the Rostovs. It seemed to him that he needed to explain himself to Natasha, to tell her that everything old should be forgotten, that, despite everything... she could not be his wife, that he had no fortune, and she would never be given for him. But he still didn’t succeed and it was awkward to begin this explanation. Every day he became more and more confused. Natasha, as her mother and Sonya noted, seemed to be in love with Boris as before. She sang him his favorite songs, showed him her album, forced him to write in it, did not allow him to remember the old, making him understand how wonderful the new was; and every day he left in a fog, without saying what he intended to say, not knowing what he was doing and why he had come, and how it would end. Boris stopped visiting Helen, received reproachful notes from her every day, and still spent whole days with the Rostovs.

    One evening, when the old countess, sighing and groaning, in a nightcap and blouse, without false curls, and with one poor tuft of hair protruding from under a white calico cap, was making prostrations for evening prayer on the rug, her door creaked, and Natasha ran in, shoes on her bare feet, also in a blouse and curlers. The Countess looked around and frowned. She finished reading her last prayer: “Will this coffin be my bed?” Her prayerful mood was destroyed. Natasha, red and animated, seeing her mother at prayer, suddenly stopped in her run, sat down and involuntarily stuck out her tongue, threatening herself. Noticing that her mother continued her prayer, she ran on tiptoe to the bed, quickly sliding one small foot over the other, kicked off her shoes and jumped onto the bed for which the countess was afraid that it might not be her coffin. This bed was tall, made of feather beds, with five ever-decreasing pillows. Natasha jumped up, sank into the feather bed, rolled over to the wall and began fiddling around under the blanket, laying down, bending her knees to her chin, kicking her legs and laughing barely audibly, now covering her head, now looking at her mother. The Countess finished her prayer and approached the bed with a stern face; but, seeing that Natasha had her head covered, she smiled her kind, weak smile.

    2017: Launch of the InfoWatch personalized scholarship program

    On September 4, 2017, the InfoWatch Group of Companies (GC) announced the launch of a personalized scholarship program at the Moscow Institute of Electronics and Mathematics of the National Research University Higher School of Economics (MIEM NRU HSE), which is aimed at supporting and developing the intellectual and creative potential of students of technical specialties in area of ​​information security.

    According to the President of InfoWatch Group Natalya Kasperskaya, InfoWatch scholarships will be awarded annually to the best second and third year students of the university who are interested in the IT field. Based on the results of three stages of the competition, 10 university students will be selected annually, the best of whom will become direct scholarship holders of the company, and several more people will remain in the reserve of the program.

    One of the main goals of the InfoWatch scholarship is to support specialized training of highly qualified personnel in the field of information security,” emphasized Natalya Kasperskaya, president of the InfoWatch group of companies. - Despite the fact that everyone knows about the importance of information security in the modern digital world, Russia still experiences a shortage of personnel in this area. I hope that our scholarship will help talented students who are interested in information security and related fields to develop their knowledge and skills and continue to conduct research activities. I am especially pleased that the company’s scholarship recipients will be MIEM students, and the InfoWatch company will thus support the high reputation of my native alma mater.

    The InfoWatch scholarship program is open to students who study at the budget department of MIEM NRU HSE and do not have grades lower than “Good” in the last two (before the competition) modules of the year. In addition, the applicant will be required to write a project paper on one of nine topics: computer networks, microcontrollers and robotics, Internet of things, information security, wireless sensor networks, programming for the Internet, applications for mobile devices, quantum algorithms, mathematical modeling and optimization. The selection of candidates will be carried out by a special commission, which will include representatives of InfoWatch and program coordinators from MIEM NRU HSE. Each finalist of the competition will receive 15 thousand rubles monthly for a year.

    In 2016, Natalya Kasperskaya and the management of MIEM NRU HSE signed a framework agreement on cooperation between the company and the university. The launch of the scholarship program became the next stage in the development of comprehensive cooperation between InfoWatch Group of Companies and MIEM NRU HSE. Plans for 2018, within the framework of a cooperation agreement, define the creation at MIEM NRU HSE of a specialized department of information security, the graduates of which should in the future form the intellectual core of the InfoWatch Group of Companies.

    Training specialists in the field of information technology, including protection and security, is a priority task, the solution of which will be the main focus in the near future. In this regard, cooperation with InfoWatch Group of Companies is considered by MIEM as a driver of one of the strategic directions of the university’s development,” said MIEM Director of the National Research University Higher School of Economics, Professor, Doctor of Technical Sciences

    In the modern world, higher education is no longer considered a luxury. This is a necessity. Only thanks to him do people get prestigious positions and work in complex but interesting fields of activity. of Electronics and Mathematics (MIEM) invites applicants to study and lay the foundation for their future career.

    The beginning of the way

    At the end of the 20s of the last century, a university appeared in the country, thanks to which MIEM now exists. An educational institution was opened in the capital and was called the Evening Mechanical Engineering Institute. He has been training specialists for several decades. In 1962, the history of a new educational organization began. The Institute of Electronic Engineering was founded on the basis of the Mechanical Engineering Institute. It was from this that the modern university was subsequently formed.

    The Institute of Electronic Engineering quite quickly gained interest among applicants. Just a couple of years later, the competition at this university was one of the highest in the capital. The educational institution operated under the name of the Institute of Electronic Engineering until 1993. Then it was renamed the Moscow Institute of Electronics and Mathematics.

    Changes and organizational structure

    Important changes in the history of the higher education institution occurred in 2011. A document was received from higher authorities, according to which it was required to include MIEM within the Higher School of Economics, which is a National Research University. This was accomplished.

    Now let's talk about the organizational structure. 3 faculties have been created at the higher educational institution. They are called departments. Here is a list of their profiles:

    • electronic engineering;
    • Applied Mathematics;
    • computer engineering.

    Department of Electronic Engineering

    This division of electronics and mathematics at the National Research University Higher School of Economics appeared in 2015. It was opened as a result of the merger of several departments that previously existed at the university. The Department of Electronic Engineering offers quality education. The advantages of the unit lie not only in the presence of qualified teaching staff. An important advantage is the work of 10 educational laboratories with modern technology.

    At the bachelor's degree in this department, only one area of ​​training is offered - “Infocommunication technologies and communication systems.” It is interesting and useful, as it relates to a developing sector of the economy. The university strives to train highly qualified specialists, which is why the experience of the world's leading educational institutions is taken into account when organizing training.

    Department of Applied Mathematics

    The named department, now working at the Moscow State Institute of Electronics and Mathematics, began its history in 1968. A department with the same name was created at the higher educational institution. During the period of its development, its name changed, and additional departments were included in its composition. In 2015, the faculty became a department, i.e. it took on its real name.

    Both in the past and in the present, the department in question is a sought-after structural unit. It attracted applicants then and is of interest now, because only here mathematicians are trained who can solve various problems using mathematical methods, models, and computer automation tools.

    The department at the Moscow State Institute of Electronics and Mathematics also offers one thing at the undergraduate level. We are talking about “Applied Mathematics”. The training in this area is well thought out. To ensure high-quality training of specialists, university staff divided the program into 3 blocks. One of them is to study mathematics and physics, the second implies high-quality training in the field of information technology and programming, and the third is aimed at practical work.

    Department of Computer Engineering

    The Moscow State Institute of Electronics and Mathematics (MIEM) opened a computer engineering department in 2015. It included departments related to information and communication technologies, computing systems and networks, information technologies and automated systems.

    The bachelor's degree in computer engineering offers a field of study related to computer science and computer science. Here they learn to develop software, work with computer software and hardware, and create computer modeling systems.

    Rector Bykov Dmitry Vasilievich Location Moscow Website http://miem.edu.ru/

    Moscow State Institute of Electronics and Mathematics (Technical University)- State Technical University in Moscow, founded in. Former name - Moscow Institute of Electronic Engineering (MIEM). The institute trains engineering and scientific personnel in the fields of electronics, computer technology, mathematics and telecommunications.

    Classes are held in two buildings. The first is located in the Kitay-Gorod metro area at the address: 109028, Moscow, B. Trekhsvyatitelsky lane, 3. The second is located in the Paveletskaya metro area at the address: Moscow, st. Malaya Pionerskaya, 12.

    Currently at MIEM:

    • More than 3 thousand students study at 6 faculties.
    • Postgraduate and doctoral studies prepare candidates of sciences in 25 specialties in physico-mathematical, technical and philosophical sciences, as well as art history.
    • 6 dissertation councils accept candidate and doctoral dissertations in 15 specialties for defense.

    MIEM has always been famous for the fundamental training of students in mathematics and physics, which are the basis of modern engineering and technology. In the field of computing and information technology, changes occur so rapidly that the applied knowledge acquired by students over the years of study becomes outdated. A good foundation of theoretical and practical training in the field of natural sciences allows university graduates to quickly adapt to all changes in engineering and technology. The mathematics school at the institute is one of the strongest among engineering universities in the country.

    Faculties

    • Faculty of Electronics (FE)
    • Faculty of Automation and Computer Science (AVT)
    • Faculty of Informatics and Telecommunications (FIT)
    • Faculty of Applied Mathematics (FPM)
    • Faculty of Economics and Mathematics (FEM)
    • Evening Faculty (VF)

    Centers and associations

    • Educational and methodological association for education in the field of applied mathematics and quality management.
    • Test center for information display "Elite".
    • Distance learning center.
    • Educational and Scientific Center "Modern Information Technologies and Mathematical Education".
    • Educational and Scientific Center "Technical means of protecting objects".
    • Center for Advanced Research "New Mathematical Technologies".
    • Student Innovation and Research Center.
    • Motorola training center.
    • Authorized training center ZyXEL.
    • Training center of the Synopsis company.
    • European Center for Quality.

    Famous graduates

    • Backstein, Joseph Markovich - art historian, art critic. Director of the Institute of Contemporary Art (Moscow)
    • Mavrodi, Sergey Panteleevich - founder of MMM, which through its activities caused material damage to millions of its investors in the early 1990s
    • Yakubovich, Leonid Arkadyevich (only completed a few courses) - actor, host of the “Field of Miracles” program
    • Tikhonov Alexander Nikolaevich - From 1998 to 2000 - Minister of Education of the Russian Federation.
    • Kovalev, Nikolai Dmitrievich - Russian politician and intelligence officer, director of the FSB in 1996-1998. Army General (1997)
    • Dzhan Khan-Magomedov - director of the Regional Public Center for Internet Technologies, one of the founders of the Russian Internet
    • - General Director of the Russian Agency for Management Systems (June 1999 - April 2002)

    Links

    Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

    See what "Moscow Institute of Electronic Engineering" is in other dictionaries:

      - (MIEM) was organized in 1962 on the basis of the Moscow Evening Engineering Institute (founded in 1929). The institute (1973) includes: faculties of semiconductor and electric vacuum engineering, automation and computer technology,... ...

      National Research University Higher School of Economics (MIEM NRU HSE) ... Wikipedia

      - (technical university), transformed in 1992 from the Moscow Institute of Electronic Engineering (founded in 1962 on the basis of the Evening Mechanical Engineering Institute). Training in electronic engineering, radio engineering,... ... encyclopedic Dictionary

      - (Technical University) transformed in 1992 from the Moscow Institute of Electronic Engineering (founded in 1962 on the basis of the Evening Mechanical Engineering Institute). Prepares engineering personnel in the fields of electronic engineering,... ... Big Encyclopedic Dictionary

      Moscow State Institute of Electronic Technology (Technical University) (MIET) Internationally named ... Wikipedia

      Trains engineers and scientists in the latest areas of electronic technology. Founded in 1965. The institute (1973) includes: faculties of physics and technology, physics and chemistry, microdevices and technical cybernetics, electronic... ... Great Soviet Encyclopedia

      - (MIET, technical university since 1992), Zelenograd, founded in 1965. It trains engineers and scientists in the specialties of electronic engineering, technical cybernetics, physical technology, etc. In 1998, over 5 thousand students ... encyclopedic Dictionary

      - (technical university) (MIEM) ... Wikipedia

    : MIEM NRU HSE Moscow State Institute of Electronics and Mathematics NRU HSE (MIEM NRU HSE)

    The Moscow Institute of Electronics and Mathematics began its history in 1929, when the Moscow Evening Mechanical Engineering Institute was founded. In 1962, it was reorganized into the Moscow Institute of Electronic Engineering, whose main task was to train specialists in the electronics industry. A distinctive feature of MIEM was the new mathematical training program, for which 2 times more hours were allocated than in other universities. In 2012, MIEM was included in the Higher School of Economics, which opened a new page in the history of the institute’s development.

    Modern MIEM has 3 faculties (“Electronics and Telecommunications”, “Information Technologies and Computer Science” and “Applied Mathematics and Cybernetics”), a design department and 4 general institute departments - higher mathematics, physics, physical chemistry and ecology, foreign languages. In addition, there are teaching and research laboratories. MIEM trains specialists in the fields of electronics, information technology, telecommunications, applied mathematics, cybernetics and design.

    Admission to MIEM NRU HSE is carried out on the basis of a competition of Unified State Examination points in general education specialized subjects. For applicants to the design department, an additional creative test is provided. The results of the first admission campaign to MIEM NRU HSE in 2012 are as follows: 351 applicants became university students; the average score for one Unified State Examination subject was 72.9; the highest average score - 84.3 - was recorded in the field of study "Applied Informatics". As for the average score in three subjects, the most needed to be scored in the following areas of training: “Applied Informatics” - 241 points, “Computer Security” - 223 points and 215 points for the design department.

    At MIEM there is an evening physics and mathematics school-lyceum for gifted children, where schoolchildren starting from the 7th grade can study for free. To enroll, you must pass entrance exams. On the basis of the school-lyceum there are preparatory courses where those interested can prepare for admission and study at MIEM. Classes are held in mathematics, physics, computer science and the Russian language. All lectures are given by university teachers. Students from grades 9 to 11 are accepted. Training is paid.

    In addition, on the basis of several lyceums and gymnasiums in Moscow and the Moscow region, there are specialized and specialized classes of MIEM NRU HSE, in which training is free, but for enrollment you must pass entrance exams.

    For nonresident students, places are provided in one of 6 dormitories. Accommodation is paid. For students of budget departments there is a special “budget tariff” (according to data for 2012, payment is 55 rubles per month), for “paying students” the cost is much higher (from July 1, 2012 - 4800 rubles per month). In addition to students, applicants for entrance exams, master's degree applicants and members of conferences held by the National Research University Higher School of Economics can live in the dormitory on a paid basis.

    Since the Higher School of Economics has its own military department, all MIEM students can also take a military training course and become reserve officers.

    In addition to the basic higher education at MIEM, you can get a second higher education, take professional retraining and advanced training courses. There is also the possibility of distance learning thanks to the online program.

    According to an independent study by a job search portal, MIEM graduates occupy one of the leading positions in the ranking of the highest salaries in the IT field.

    Official website of MIEM NRU HSE.

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