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  • Research and Evaluation for Socially Engaged Museum and Gallery Practice

    Module code: MU7547 Research-led practice characterises socially engaged museum and gallery work.

  • Law in the Community: Pro Bono

    Module code: LW3294 “Tell me and I forget, teach me and I remember, involve me and I learn." This module, overseen by the Legal Advice Clinic, may be the most practical module on offer at the Law School.

  • Special Subject A

    Module code: HS3761 This module will introduce you to the history of southern Africa in the twentieth century.

  • Conservation, Heritage and the Urban Environment

    Module code: HS7511 During this module, you'll examine the environment of present-day towns and cities and how they are (or are not) conserved.

  • Conservation, Heritage and the Urban Environment

    Module code: HS7081 During this module, you'll examine the environment of present-day towns and cities and how they are (or are not) conserved.

  • The Victorian City: Past, Present and Future?

    Module code: HS7211 The Victorian era saw great changes in the cities of the United Kingdom. Fuelled by advances in technology, huge factories sprung up, and farmworkers made redundant by new technologies poured in to staff them.

  • Mathematics Fundamentals

    Module code: CO1103 The main purpose of this course is to teach the basic concepts from discrete mathematics that are needed in the study of computer science.

  • Live Sociology

    Module code: SY2091 Live sociology means going out into the field to experience sociology and practice sociology for yourselves, and Leicester is the perfect empirical crucible for this.

  • The Forensic, Archaeological and Geological Application of Microfossils

    Module code: GL3108 A human eye can just about discern the thickness of a hair. At this tiny scale, there is an incredible diversity of organisms. These were first seen through the 17th-century microscopes of Antonie van Leeuwenhoek and Robert Hooke.

  • Academic dress

    The wearing of academic robes can be traced back to medieval Europe, when all students were in clerical orders. Today, the robes worn by graduating students, academics and dignitaries form a distinctive element of the graduation regalia.

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