Salters’ Festival of Chemistry
Inspiring future generations of scientists
Inspiring future generations of scientists
Come along from midday on Wednesday, October 13
Our Student Futures: Careers, Employability and Enterprise team has a range of careers support over December and the festive break.
A 4.4 million-year-old skeleton could show how early humans moved and began to walk upright, according to new research.
LJMUs Positive Action Trainees were celebrated at an event this week after almost a year of working at the university, in key professional and technical roles.
Liverpool John Moores University has been awarded Bronze status by Advance HE's Race Equality Charter (REC)
For the past year, teachers from eight primary schools across the Liverpool City region and South Sefton area have participated in a CPD programme, led by experts at LJMU, to increase confidence and self-efficacy in the teaching of science
They are most-commonly associated with a blocked nose and headaches but the humble sinuses could hold an important key to the evolution of the human face.
Liverpool John Moores University has reaffirmed its commitment to enhancing social mobility, as Universities UK (UUK) publishes a report by the Social Mobility Taskforce, which makes national recommendations for boosting access to higher education.
With younger generations finding it increasingly difficult to relate to the World Wars, LJMU is working to secure the future of Remembrance Day through two innovative, nationally-funded, research projects.