'It felt like I was coming home' – Sport Scholar returns to teach at LJMU
Meet Nicola Robinson – pentathlete, Sport Scholar alumna and Programme Leader in Sports Coaching at LJMU.
Meet Nicola Robinson – pentathlete, Sport Scholar alumna and Programme Leader in Sports Coaching at LJMU.
The Teaching and Learning Academy aim to ensure our Collaborative partners are fully supported in their use of Canvas.
This Continuing Professional Development (CPD) course will develop the knowledge and skills required for delivering education and training sessions to healthcare professionals and encourage you to reflect on your approach to teaching.
The Projects, Operations and Workplace Management Research Group develops solutions for the ever-growing challenges in projects, operations and workplace management and suggests alternative ways to improve organisational performance. Our aim is to really make a difference to how organisations are managed in the future.
Read the full oration for Mark Lawler on the Award of their Honorary Fellowship from Liverpool John Moores University.
Find out more about Trailblazers, a Liverpool University Press open access monograph initiative.
You will be able to use an eVisa to travel to the UK. You will not need to carry a physical document, except for your passport, which must be registered to your UKVI account. You must keep your passport details up to date in your UKVI account.
The Suicide and Self-Harm Research Group builds on existing areas of excellence in research and aligns with the national suicide prevention strategy (2019)
Research suggests that autistic people are at a higher risk of suicide than non-autistic people. Figures show that up to 66% of autistic adults had thought about suicide during their lifetime (compared to 20% of non-autistic adults), and up to 35% had planned or attempted suicide.
Led by LJMU’s School of Pharmacy and Biomolecular Sciences (in affiliation with the Institute of Health Research), in collaboration with the University of Liverpool and supported by Alopecia UK, this research invites UK adults (18+) with lived experience of alopecia to participate in an anonymous online survey.