Take part in a focus group with the Careers Team and get a £10 Amazon voucher
The Careers Team would really like to hear your views on the careers services offered by the Careers Team to final year students and graduates.
The Careers Team would really like to hear your views on the careers services offered by the Careers Team to final year students and graduates.
Update: P60s now available on Staff Infobase
Most exams in April and May 2022 will be held online. There are a small number of examinations which will be held in-person due to specific requirements of the professional body.
Diwali is the famous festival of lights, when families and friends get together to feast and celebrate. The five day festival begins on Sunday 27th October 2019; each day has its own individual meaning and associated celebration. The third day of Diwali is regarded as the most important day. Diwali literally means a ‘row of Lights’. It is a celebration of light! It is a time filled with light and love. The festival does not follow the Gregorian but rather the Hindu calendar known as ‘Tithi,’ which is a lunar calendar. We would like to wish all our students and staff community who celebrate this festival a very happy Diwali!
Liverpool John Moores University (LJMU), invites you to join our first ever VIRTUAL, Disability History Month Event.
Meet the Student Union's new Vice-President (Community and Wellbeing).
LJMU's Equality, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) Team reached out to a number of inspirational women-academics across the institution and asked them to share their personal journeys...here is what they had to say.
Assessments will be taking place from 6 to 17 January 2020. The full timetable and the link to your personalised timetable is available here
It was only a relatively short time ago - in March this year - that the World Health Organisation declared Covid-19 a pandemic. We know now that it is likely to be many, many months before the UK pronounces its outbreak over; and certainly years before it is over globally.
Footprints from birds bear remarkable similarity with those of dinosaurs from 200 million years ago, according to a new international study.