Get in to Teaching with LJMU
LJMU offers innovative approaches to initial teacher education, working with primary, secondary and other education providers across the North-West of England and beyond.
LJMU offers innovative approaches to initial teacher education, working with primary, secondary and other education providers across the North-West of England and beyond.
The Centre for the Port and Maritime History focuses on port cities and examines their relationship to maritime ventures and enterprise. Research examines: urban history, British merchant marine advertising, Liverpool and the British Empire in the eighteenth and twentieth centuries.
Self-employment can offer flexibility for disabled or neurodivergent students and graduates who prefer alternatives to traditional work environments.
The River Flow 2024 programme is subject to change and will be finalized soon. Registration will open from 8am, while sessions will run from 8.30am to 5.30pm, with lunch provided at 1pm.
Take a look at the resources to discover what’s on offer for Commuter students and how you can get involved.
Read the oration for Kim Cattrall on the award of their Honorary Fellowship from Liverpool John Moores University presented by Professor Frank Sanderson.
Read the oration for Karen Gallagher on the award of their Honorary Fellowship from Liverpool John Moores University presented by Dr Edward Harcourt.
Established in 2022, the Centre for Modern and Contemporary History (CMCH) supports the research of LJMU's historians, strengthens our partnerships with museums and historical societies and creates opportunities for new collaborations with researchers and historical institutions locally, nationally and internationally.
We deliver real-world solutions to the football community. Our areas of interest within football include: fitness and nutrition, psychology, match analysis, physical activity, skill acquistion and coaching, and performance analysis.
The National Teaching Fellowship (NTF) Scheme is an esteemed AdvanceHE award, accorded to around fifty educators every year since 2010.