Lycée privé Sainte-Geneviève

48°48′13″N 2°09′19″E / 48.80361°N 2.15528°E / 48.80361; 2.15528

Lycée Sainte-Geneviève
MottoServir
(French)
Motto in English
To Serve
TypePrivate, Catholic
Established1854 (1854)
AffiliationJesuit
Location,
France
WebsiteBGinette.com

Lycée Sainte-Geneviève (French pronunciation: [lise sɛ̃t ʒənvjɛv]), often referred to as Ginette or BJ (short for Boîte à Jèzes), is a private Catholic preparatory school located in Versailles, France. Founded in 1854 by the Jesuits in Paris and relocated to Versailles in 1913, the institution is best known for its classes préparatoires aux grandes écoles (CPGE), preparing students for admission to France’s most prestigious higher education institutions.

Reputation

Lycée Sainte-Geneviève has long played a central role in forming the intellectual, scientific, military, and political elite of France. Its preparatory classes (MP, PC, PSI, PT, BCPST, ECG) consistently rank among the top nationwide. In 2025, Ginette's MP, PC, and BCPST tracks ranked first in the country, while its ECG stream led HEC Paris and ESSEC Business School admissions both in terms of volume and success rate.

The school is widely recognized for its rigorous academic standards, its Jesuit values centered on service ("Servir"), and its commitment to developing both intellect and character. Ginette also maintains one of the strongest alumni networks in France, with over 26,000 members supporting former and current students.

In 2016, Nobel Prize laureate in Physics Serge Haroche gave a lecture at Ginette, exemplifying the school’s continued ties to the academic and scientific elite.

Academics

Ginette provides PC/PC*, MP/MP*, PT/PT*, PSI*, ECG and BCPST classes.

Notable alumni

Military

CEOs

Politicians

  • Jean-François Deniau (1928–2007), statesman, diplomat, essayist and novelist ; member of the Académie française
  • Laurent Touvet (born 1962), conseiller d'État, directeur des libertés publiques et des affaires juridiques au ministère de l'Intérieur
  • Valérie Pécresse (born 1967), Minister for Higher Education and Research
  • Emmanuelle Mignon (born 1968), civil servant and chief of staff of President Nicolas Sarkozy

Scientists

Others

See also

References