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Choosing Sorbonne University means joining a world-renowned higher education and research institution. By joining our community of 55,000 students and 360,000 alumni worldwide, you'll be giving your all to a rigorous academic program and receiving the best in multidisciplinary teaching. 

Information for International Students

Are you a current or prospective international student? 

Whether studying on exchange or seeking a full degree at Sorbonne University, access essential contact information, resources for learning French and a glimpse into student life. 

Research and Innovation

Sorbonne University promotes excellence at the core of each of its disciplines and develops numerous interdisciplinary programs capable of meeting the major challenges of the 21st century.

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Participate in the great adventure of learning, succeed in high-level studies and prepare to create the future.

Parismus is the international student association of Sorbonne University

Parismus

Parismus is the international student association of Sorbonne University.

Bringing together 10 institutions that offer studies in literature, medicine, science, engineering, technology and management, our alliance fosters a global approach to teaching and research, promoting access to knowledge for all.

Alliance 4EU+

The 4EU+ Alliance

In a changing world, Sorbonne University has joined forces with six universities: Charles University in Prague, the University of Warsaw, Heidelberg University, the University of Milan, the University of Geneva and the University of Copenhagen to create the 4EU+ Alliance.

With an innovative model of the European university, seven large research-intensive universities are working together to respond to the educational and research challenges facing Europe today.

Les Alliances de Sorbonne Université


Le théâtre de l’oblitération

Par Élisabeth Angel-Perez

Essai sur la voix photogénique dans le théâtre britannique contemporain

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Medicine

The Faculty of Medicine teaches the 3 cycles of medical studies: from PASS (integrated into the faculty) to the 3rd cycle including DES, DESC, DU and DIU. The lessons are given mainly on two sites: Pitié-Salpêtrière and Saint-Antoine. The faculty also provides paramedical education: speech therapy, psychomotricity and orthoptics. The Saint-Antoine site includes a midwifery school.

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One of our riches is the diversity of students and their backgrounds. Sorbonne University is committed to the success of each of its students and offers them a wide range of training as well as support adapted to their profile and their project.

Associative life

One of our riches is the diversity of students and their backgrounds. Sorbonne University is committed to the success of each of its students.

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Chiffres-clés
Anais Abramian - Crédit photo : Jean-Charles Caslot

Anaïs Abramian

Physicist and Winner of the L'Oréal-Unesco Young Talent Award for Women in Science

Everyone agrees that women should have a place in science, but they remain less present in the highest positions.

Anaïs Abramian has become a specialist in the physics of natural disasters. Her work, which is in line with current climate issues, has been rewarded by the L'Oréal-Unesco Foundation for Women in Science.

As our planet gets warmer, more disasters will occur. Anaïs Abramian, a post-doctoral fellow at the Institut Jean le Rond d'Alembert, models the physical phenomena that cause disasters in order to better predict their risks.


Teacher or researcher?

Anaïs Abramian was born in 1991 and grew up in the 6th district of Lyon. Her parents encouraged their two daughters to pursue higher education. "There were no researchers in the family, but perhaps my mother had a curiosity for the sciences.” Anaïs liked science, obtained her baccalauréat in 2009 and entered the preparatory classes to pass competitive exams for entrance into the grandes écoles "without asking herself too many questions." Physics was already on her mind and one of her teachers transmitted his passion for the subject onto her.

Teaching physics is what interested her initially. So she entered the École normale supérieure (ENS) in Lyon in 2011, where a new world opened up to her. "We were strongly encouraged to do internships in experimental physics, which is how I discovered the world of research." During her four years at the ENS, she did an internship in astrophysics at the University of Aix-Marseille, then left for the New York University and returned to France, to the Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris (IPGP), to study fluid mechanics in greater depth and specialize in the modeling of natural phenomena, particularly geological ones. In her third year, she obtained an aggregation in physics, the prestigious qualification for teaching in secondary and higher education. But it was during her internship at the IPGP that she met Éric Lajeunesse and Olivier Devauchelle, who would become her thesis supervisors. "They are the ones who passed on their enthusiasm for the research profession and who motivated me to continue in academia."

A river runs through it

"My approach consisted of reproducing rivers in the laboratory by controlling parameters such as water or sediment flow to reveal the fundamental mechanisms." In this way, she shows that sediment transport dynamics are a key factor in the morphology of rivers, whether they form a single channel or braids.

In 2019, with her thesis in hand, after two research visits at Harvard University and then at Cambridge University, she joined the Institut Jean Le Rond d'Alembert at Sorbonne University. She is still working on granular media such as sand and pebbles, which represent 80 percent of the surface of our planet (seabed, soils, alluvial plains, deserts...), but is particularly interested in landslides. "Most natural phenomena involve a mixture of sand and water that induces cohesive forces between the grains. This is what happens in a landslide, a cohesive soil collapses. Better modeling of this type of flow would help predict natural disasters and improve land use planning." But not only that. Her work has industrial applications in the pharmaceutical, agri-food and construction sectors, where powders and granular media are numerous.

A helping hand

At the age of 30, Anaïs Abramian dreams of becoming a researcher or an associate professor. "I'm not the type of person who gets discouraged," she says, "but it's hard when you see so many brilliant people leaving research because of the lack of positions." For her, the L'Oréal-UNESCO Foundation's Young Talent Award comes at the right time. "It's a great recognition of my work. I received it at a time when reconciling my professional and personal lives was becoming difficult. It motivated me to continue my efforts to obtain a permanent position."

The Foundation also offers its laureates training programs, including on everyday sexism. "Everyone agrees that women have a place in science, but they are less present in the highest positions. We have to be careful of what is called benevolent sexism, which also contributes to the questioning of our skills. This training made me realize that this is not a trivial matter."

The young woman concludes: "Today, some women obtain high-level responsibilities, but this is not yet the case for most women. Luckily, I have always been supported, but you have to be careful not only for yourself, but also for others."