National Technological Institute of Mexico
Tecnológico Nacional de México | |
![]() | |
| Type | Public |
|---|---|
| Established | 24 July 1948 |
| Budget | Mex$15,381,000,000 (2014) |
Officer in charge | Ramón Jiménez López |
| Students | 620,000 (2019) [1] |
| Location | , 19°25′39″N 99°08′55″W / 19.4275°N 99.1485°W |
| Campus | 263 across Mexico (2014)[2] |
| Website | tecnm |
The National Technological Institute of Mexico (in Spanish: Tecnológico Nacional de México, TNM) is a Mexican public university system created on 23 July 2014 by presidential decree.[3] At the time of its foundation, the Institute incorporated the 263 former Institutes of Technology that had been created since 1948; first under the patronage of the National Polytechnic Institute (IPN) and, since 1959, directly dependent of the Secretariat of Public Education (SEP).[2]
Campuses
The Institute has 264 campuses across Mexico including:
| Mexican state | Campus (date of foundation) |
|---|---|
| Aguascalientes | Aguascalientes, Pabellón de Arteaga, El Llano |
| Baja California | Ensenada (1997), Mexicali (1981), Tijuana |
| Baja California Sur | La Paz, Los Cabos |
| Campeche | Campeche, Chiná, Lerma |
| Chiapas | Comitán, Tapachula, Tuxtla Gutiérrez |
| Chihuahua | Chihuahua (1948), Chihuahua II, Ciudad Cuauhtemoc, Ciudad Juárez (1964), Ciudad Jiménez, Delicias, Parral |
| Coahuila | Saltillo (1951) La Laguna (1965) Instituto Tecnológico de Torreón |
| Colima | Colima |
| Durango | Durango (1948), El Salto, Valle del Guadiana |
| Guanajuato | Celaya (1958), Uriangato (1997) |
| Guerrero | Acapulco, Iguala, Chilpancingo, San Marcos |
| Michoacán | Morelia (1964), Jiquilpan (1976), Zamora (1994), Apatzingán (1994), Ciudad Hidalgo, Tacambaro (2002) |
| Nayarit | Bahía de Banderas, Nayarit North, Nayarit South, Tepic |
| Nuevo León | Linares, Nuevo León (1976) |
| San Luis Potosí | Ciudad Valles, Matehuala, San Luis Potosí, Rioverde |
| Oaxaca | Oaxaca (1968) |
| Puebla | Puebla (1972) |
| Querétaro | Querétaro (1967), San Juan del Río (1988) |
| Quintana Roo | Cancún |
| Sinaloa | Culiacán, Los Mochis, Mazatlán |
| Sonora | Agua Prieta, Guaymas, Huatabambo, Hermosillo, Nogales (1975), Valle del Yaqui |
| Tabasco | Villahermosa (1974) |
| Tamaulipas | Altamira, Mante, Ciudad Madero (1950), Ciudad Victoria, Matamoros, Nuevo Laredo, Reynosa |
| Estado de México | Toluca (1972) |
| Veracruz | Minatitlán, Boca del Rio, Orizaba, Xalapa |
| Zacatecas | Zacatecas |
Notes and references
- ^ https://www.tolucatecnm.mx/articulo/23147/el-ittoluca-del-tecnm-inicia-ciclo-escolar-2019-2020-con-mas-de-5-mil-500-estudiantes
- ^ a b "Breve Historia de los Institutos Tecnológicos de México" [Brief History of the National Technological Institute of Mexico] (in Spanish). Tecnológico Nacional de México. Retrieved 17 September 2019.
- ^ "Decreto que crea el Tecnológico Nacional de México" [Decree establishing the National Institute of Technology of Mexico] (in Spanish). Diario Oficial de la Federación. 23 July 2014. Retrieved 24 July 2014.
External links
Media related to Tecnológico Nacional de México at Wikimedia Commons
