LJMU students learn to drive with virtual reality driving lessons
Students from Liverpool John Moores University are trialling cutting edge technology that will enable them to learn to drive without the use of a car.
Students from Liverpool John Moores University are trialling cutting edge technology that will enable them to learn to drive without the use of a car.
The increasing popularity and rapid growth of electronic cigarettes has raised considerable concern about their impact on children and young people.
LJMU has been awarded £44,000 to expand an innovative chemistry outreach scheme to encourage young people from 11 schools across deprived areas of Liverpool City Region, to become the scientists of the future.
Wearable tech project to improve outcomes for patients at Clatterbridge hospital
New governors join Board on fact-finding trip to Byrom Street
The festival returns for its third edition, featuring 42 films from across the globe that showcase the work of the best and brightest emerging student filmmakers.
At the beginning of July, nearly 100 Year 12 students from Northern Ireland, Wales and across the rest of England took part in a three-day residential visit to LJMU to experience all that the university has to offer.
Enterprising Jade Smith, from St Helens on Merseyside, says the pre-braille method is already being used by youngsters in Liverpool, Lancashire, London, Wales and even in Missouri, in the US.
Around 40 students will exhibit their ideas from MA courses in Fine Art, Graphic Art and Illustration, Art in Science, Fashion Innovation and Realisation and Exhibition Studies.
A business support scheme to connect digital and creative firms with academic and sector experts has received glowing feedback.