Graduation review: Wednesday 20 November 2019
Here are some highlights of what happened at the first two graduation ceremonies of the week.
Here are some highlights of what happened at the first two graduation ceremonies of the week.
Local foodbanks and schools are among the organisations benefiting from recycled computer equipment donated by Liverpool John Moores University.
LJMU welcomed almost five hundred Year 11 pupils to its Future Focus Days as part of the Universitys sustained widening access programme, giving young people an insight into the opportunities Higher Education can offer.
High-profile event for Liverpool Centre for Advanced Policing Studies
Throughout the academic year more than 120 undergraduate, MA and PhD students from a range of disciplines across the Liverpool School of Art and Design have learnt a variety of traditional skills from leatherwork to weaving.
LJMU Library has developed a new children's reading corner, providing access to a collection of children's books. This new space provides a fun and relaxed reading area for use by students, staff, local teachers and school children.
The Liverpool School of Art and Design has welcomed a new lecturer to its ranks, art critic, historian, and curator Christine Eyene. As well as taking up a new post here at LJMU, she will also play an important role in deciding the winner of one of the best-known prizes for visual art, the Turner Prize 2022, as she has been selected to sit on this years jury.
LJMU films of how fast rising sea levels impact island communities will be shown to delegates at Glasgow COP26 next week.
The first exhibition of wholly Jamaican art to be displayed in North-West England will find its home in Liverpool this spring. The exhibition has been curated by Dr Emma Roberts, Associate Dean for Global Engagement for the Faculty of Arts, Professional and Social Studies at LJMU.
A group of student teachers are working with families seeking asylum in Liverpool to provide education sessions for children without a place at school.