National Teaching Fellows (NTF)
The National Teaching Fellowship (NTF) Scheme is an esteemed AdvanceHE award, accorded to around fifty educators every year since 2010.
The National Teaching Fellowship (NTF) Scheme is an esteemed AdvanceHE award, accorded to around fifty educators every year since 2010.
Member of Board of Governors
Read the oration for Brian Corfe on the award of their Honorary Fellowship from Liverpool John Moores University presented by Professor Frank Sanderson.
The Senior Leaders Apprenticeships are designed to transform participants into confident and strategic leaders. They focus on the practice of leadership and management, have a real-world focus and are delivered by Liverpool Business School academic staff who are respected experts, researchers, consultants and business practitioners.
Learn more about the Corporate governance and insolvency conference 2020.
By interrogating data from coroner, primary care and A&E records, health psychologist Dr Pooja Saini identified a recurring theme; a lack of support and services for people in suicidal crisis, particularly within community settings.
Phil has worked at LJMU for over 16 years. He’s currently the Student Inclusion Lead within the Student Advice and Wellbeing Team and has recently started a new role as Diversity and Inclusion Associate Dean for Professional Services. Since 2010, Phil has also led on organising and representing LJMU at the annual Liverpool Pride March.
Lucy is an alumnus of our MBA programme and is now the strategic relations lead for place with Liverpool City Council. Alongside her studies, Lucy was part of the team that supported the mayoral campaign for Joanne Anderson, who became the first directly elected Black woman to take on the position, while overcoming personal challenges to still gain a first-class degree.
At Liverpool Business School we are proud to provide a first-rate teaching and learning environment backed by research and scholarship which is central to the School ethos, as is delivering practical business solutions to local, national and international businesses.
Maureen is a member of staff with the Faculty of Business and Law, and part of the first cohort of employees with the Positive Action Programme. Described by her son as ‘half human, half cyborg’, she says that technology has changed her life since she lost her hearing after contracting malaria in 2010.