Saltillo Institute of Technology explained

Saltillo Institute of Technology
Native Name:Instituto Tecnológico de Saltillo
Motto:La técnica por la grandeza de México (Technique for the greatness of Mexico)
Established:1951
Administrative Staff:258
President:Jesús Contreras García
Students:3,602 (2000)
Undergrad:3,569
Postgrad:33
Website:www.saltillo.tecnm.mx

The Saltillo Institute of Technology (Spanish; Castilian: '''Instituto Tecnológico de Saltillo'''), or ITS, is located in the city of Saltillo, state capital of Coahuila, Mexico. It is a college level technological institution. Founded in July 1950 by Mexican President Miguel Alemán Valdez, it started operations on January 3, 1951.

History

Since its foundation, the institute has changed names several times. It was founded as Instituto Tecnológico de Coahuila, but then changed in 1968 to Instituto Tecnológico Regional de Coahuila. Again, by 1977, it was renamed to Instituto Tecnológico Regional de Saltillo and, finally, since 1981, as Instituto Tecnológico de Saltillo.

In 1951, the objective of the institution was to provide students technical degrees suitable for the industry; however, due to expansion, it later offered high school, engineering and graduate degrees. By 1951, enrollment consisted of barely 314 students, but after 55 years of existence, it currently amounts to 7,016 students: (6,963 at the undergraduate level and 53 at the postgraduate level) in addition to the school staff (4 directors, 23 department heads, 424 professors, 16 researchers, 357 administrative staff and 74 service staff).

The institute campus is made up of 35 buildings, 153 classrooms, 20 laboratories and 4 auditoriums.

Academics

Nowadays ITS offers the following degrees:

Undergraduate

Graduate

List of directors

Its directors have been:

External links