Courses - School of Public and Allied Health
The School of Public and Allied Health has a wide range of courses at undergraduate, postgraduate and CPD level.
The School of Public and Allied Health has a wide range of courses at undergraduate, postgraduate and CPD level.
Find out more about the School of Humanities and Social Science's facilities, including rhe John Foster Building, Aldham Robarts Library and the Special Collections and Archives.
Take a look at the Research Institute for Sport and Exercise Sciences recent research publications. We publish in high impact sport science related journals.
Do you want to learn high-level mathematics and understand how it can be applied to a range of problems in industry and beyond? Explore our mathematics courses.
Start your journey in Computer Science and Mathematics with LJMU's BBC Microbit challenge. Learn programming, practical skills, and theoretical foundations.
The School of Biological and Environmental Sciences provides excellent teaching and extensive research across the biological sciences and geography and environmental sciences.
The state-of-the-art laboratories, equipment and technologies within the School of Sport and Exercise Science are world-class. With a sleep research unit, respiratory clinic and acclimation chamber, eye tracking and motion capture, various image processing and microscopy suites and much more available to students and researchers.
The school of Public and Allied Health brings together disciplines from across the spectrum of health and social care, from high-level, wide-reaching policy perspectives, through to those professions delivering personalised patient care.
Celebrate the 40th anniversary of sports science at Liverpool John Moores University with a host of events. Share your memories and mementos.
The School of Humanities and Social Science's research sits within the following research groups: The Centre for the Study of Crime, Criminalisation and Social Exclusion, the Research Centre for Literature and Cultural History, History and the Centre for Port and Maritime History.