Programme keeps teenage girls active in lockdown
A programme to keep teenage girls active during lockdown has found it significantly boosted their strength, fitness, motivation and body image.
A programme to keep teenage girls active during lockdown has found it significantly boosted their strength, fitness, motivation and body image.
This article by Vicky Fallon, Lecturer in Health Psychology at the University of Liverpool, Sergio A. Silverio, Kings College London and Siân Macleod Davies, Liverpool John Moores University was first published by `The Conversation.
LJMU is set to strengthen its reputation for promoting sport-for-all and physical activity in its communities.
Journalism graduate Niamh Green propelled to success by staff in the School of Journalism
“Find something you care about, then focus on the mastery of it” was the message for the Class of 2026 from LJMU’s new honorary fellows.
LJMU is taking part in No Mow May for a third year as part of our commitment to enhancing biodiversity on our estate.
We’re paying the entry fee for 10 teams to take part in the fundraiser this September.
Liverpool Business School opens fifth year of free training for local business and individuals
IT Services is changing the way permission levels are set in Office 365 to make file sharing more secure.
We’ve partnered with IT development company Primed Talent to boost our Microsoft skills.