Tunis University Revolutionizes Academic Offerings to Match Job Market Needs
Translated from French, summarized and contextualized by DistantNews.
At a glance
- The Faculty of Economics and Management of Tunis is introducing four new specialized programs for the 2026-2027 academic year.
- These new courses include economic intelligence, human resource management, and e-commerce, with an excellence program in Business and Economic Analytics taught in English.
- This academic reform aims to modernize programs and align them with evolving job market demands, as part of the university's accreditation process.
The Faculty of Economics and Management of Tunis is undergoing a significant transformation, introducing four new specialized programs designed to meet the demands of the modern job market. Starting in the 2026-2027 academic year, students will have the opportunity to specialize in economic intelligence and evaluation for economics, human resource management for management sciences, and e-commerce for management information technology.
Furthermore, the university will launch an "Business and Economic Analytics" excellence program. This pioneering bachelor's degree will be taught entirely in English, adhering to international standards and targeting the brightest high school graduates. This initiative is part of a broader university accreditation process.
The institution stated that this overhaul aims to globally modernize its teaching programs. The goal is to ensure a strong connection between academic advancements and the ever-changing requirements of the employment sector. Beyond these new fields, existing courses have also undergone a thorough review. This update integrates cutting-edge skills into strategic areas such as finance, banking, insurance, international trade, marketing, management, accounting, and decision support systems.
This approach aims to globally modernize its teaching programs to ensure perfect alignment between the evolution of academic sciences and the changing demands of the job market.
Originally published by La Presse in French. Translated, summarized, and contextualized by our editorial team with added local perspective. Read our editorial standards.