What it's like to be a teacher
Several months into her role as a primary school teacher, we catch up with Sarah Wright, who completed her teacher training with LJMU, to find out what her first year has been like.
Several months into her role as a primary school teacher, we catch up with Sarah Wright, who completed her teacher training with LJMU, to find out what her first year has been like.
Our research aims to make positive changes to coach, teacher and practitioner development and inform policy and practice to improve people’s lives. We provide multidisciplinary approaches to our research with the aim of solving real world problems and pride ourselves in collaborating with industry partners.
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.
The Digital Health Interest Group within the Institute for Health Research are actively engaged with digital health research and aim to develop long-standing interventions to improve health care and pathways.
As a part of the Qualitative Analysis in Action project, you can explore qualitative research based on interviews with Nepali women.
Find out more about how AI and Drone Technology for Wildlife Conservation.
Find out more information about the Sport Psychology, Education and Coaching Research Group which aims to take a multidisciplinary approach to developing research in the areas of coaching and teacher education, pedagogical approaches to practice and issues linking to social justice and equality, diversity and inclusion.
Find out more about LJMU's commitment to develop cross-faculty research, to exchange knowledge, and to collaborate with external partners and organisations that focus on the Armed Forces community.
The research enquiry form allows you to submit an enquiry about opportunities for postgraduate research.
The Suicide and Self-Harm Research Group builds on existing areas of excellence in research and aligns with the national suicide prevention strategy (2019)