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THE ORGANIZATION OF SHAME: You can’t call this a school. As part of the 2019 cohort, I chose to do my Master 2 on the Paris campus, which cost me more than €10,000 a year. During the COVID crisis, my relocation was canceled without any solution or support from the school. But that’s nothing compared to what I went through during my Master’s program. I opted for a Master 1 and 2 in an alternating-work schedule, in English, because the teaching quality is poor: you don’t learn anything, the classes are subpar, and the required internships don’t start until the second year and last only three months. At that pace, we finish our studies with no real experience—unlike students from other schools. On top of that, they force you to do a two-year alternation in the same company. A lot of students want to switch companies after one year. What should be a normal progression quickly turns into a real obstacle course. If anyone tries, the alternation coordinators treat them like a problem. I’ve seen multiple students leave their offices in tears. But the worst part is the administration and the academic directors. I saw more than four academic directors burn out in a single year. I finished my M2 this year and was supposed to receive my diploma in September. However, the program director decided—without warning anyone—to cancel the September graduation board because, in her view, it involved too many meetings for her. The result: I can’t sign a permanent contract and I end up unemployed, because this organization is unable to provide a valid document confirming that I completed the five years of study and the required validation for companies. I tried to reach the academic directors, but they are impossible to contact: Friday remote work, “fake” meetings, and instructions not to pass along student calls or emails marked as high priority—without any follow-up. There’s no way to get a response. They absolutely don’t care about students—only about their own interests—with catastrophic management and no transparency toward students. Many complaints were sent by students, and every time those students were summoned for reprimands. I won’t even list all the other misconduct: missed deadlines for transcripts, errors in the grades that we have to check ourselves, exams moved at the last minute, and so on. I strongly advise all future students to avoid this school. Today, I’m forced to register as unemployed because this organization can’t provide my diploma, even though all my ECTS credits have been validated. Many students leave the school before finishing their studies, or they do a sixth year at another school to obtain a real Master’s degree. I regret choosing this school, and I’m advising you against it for your own professional well-being.