Search

10272 results for: ‘global learning outcomes’

  • Research and teaching staff

    Browse a list of Health Sciences at Leicester's research and teaching staff. View our team's research interests and find out how to get in touch.

  • The ‘Forbidden Planet’ has been found in the Neptunian Desert

    New research by an international group of researchers, including Dr Matt Burleigh and Dr Emma Longstaff of the Department of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Leicester, has identified a rogue planet.

  • Student awards and prizes

    The University of Leicester Geology students have been very successful in winning prizes and awards for their scientific work. Our students travel worldwide to conferences and field areas, and are in the vanguard of many research areas. Read here about some recent successes.

  • Instruments

    Get more information on the instruments and equipment available as part of the Flow Cytometry facility at Leicester.

  • Discovery of Ancient Super-eruptions Suggests the Yellowstone Hotspot May Be Waning

    Posted by in University of Leicester Staff Blogs on July 8, 2020 Spectacular deformation (folding) within the Grey’s Landing Ignimbrite.

  • Lucy

    View the alumni profile of Lucy, who graduated with a BA in Sociology at the University of Leicester.

  • Our team

    Contact details for the Leicester Clinical Trials Unit. You can get in touch with us by email and telephone.

  • Leicester scientists discover ‘Star Wars’ planet

    Scientists from the University of Leicester has revealed for the first time that groups of stars can tear apart their planet-forming disc, leaving it warped and with tilted rings - similar to the planet Tatooine in Star Wars.

  • Experts from Space Park Leicester to join colleagues at UK Space Conference in Belfast

    Engineers, scientists and space policy experts from the University of Leicester will represent its vibrant academic and industrial space community at the 2023 UK Space Conference in Belfast.

  • Researchers identify how multiple genes impact vision development and result in rare sight disorder

    An international team of health researchers have, for the first time, described how genetic defects influence the spectrum of vision development and cause problems in developing babies’ eyes.

Back to top
MENU