Public engagement – with Sport and Exercise Sciences
Find out about upcoming and past public engagement events for Sports Science.
Find out about upcoming and past public engagement events for Sports Science.
The Research Institute for Sport and Exercise Science areas of expertise are organised into research groups and exchanges which focus on the following: biomechanics, cardiovascular health, exercise metabolism, brain and behaviour, physical activity, sport psychology and football-related research.
The Liverpool Early Number Skills Project investigates the influence of the home learning environment, language and cognitive abilities on children's early number skills. Find out more about this project.
View the communications and publications from the Liverpool Early Number Skills Project.
The School of Sport and Exercise Sciences is at the forefront of innovation and development in sport science. We're ranked the second highest for research in the UK and have world-class facilities. Find out about our research, who we work with, our fantastic facilities and the courses and career options available to our students.
Browse LJMU's A-Z of educational technologies for staff including Canvas, Panopto, Vevox, Turnitin and more.
97% of our research activity is rated world-leading or internationally excellent within RISES. Find out about our Biomechanics, Brain and Behaviour, Cardiovascular Health Sciences, Exercise Metabolism and Adaptation, Psychology and Development research groups and our exchanges: the Physical Activity Exchange and the Football Exchange.
The educational technology team have lots of guidance and help resources to help you get started with Canvas, Turnitin, Panopto, Vevox and much more.
Within the Research Centre for Brain and Behaviour we are involved in research which looks at perception, attention, emotion, learning and memory, sensory and motor processes, and includes animal models of neurobehavioral research. We investigate cognitive and brain mechanisms in psychologically and neurologically intact animals and humans, and the disruption of these processes caused by drugs, brain damage, ageing or atypical development.
Find out more about education related courses including undergraduate and postgraduate routes into teaching (PGDE with QTS, School Direct).