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  • Issues around interviewing

    Discover the issues that may surround interviewing, such as: bias, rapport, reciprocation, cultural considerations and interpreters.

  • Student calculates which colour lightsaber would be most powerful

    Aspiring Jedi Knights will be happy to learn that the red lightsabers used by their enemies, the Sith, are likely the weakest type available on the futuristic arms market, while a purple lightsaber would be the strongest, based on calculations made by a student from our...

  • School-Centred Initial Teacher Training PGCE

    Find out more about SCITT providers offering the University of Leicester PGCE. School-Centred Initial Teacher Training (SCITT) providers are networks of schools approved by the government to run their own teacher training courses and award Qualified Teacher Status (QTS).

  • Our values

    At the heart of our institution are our values, teaching and research. Learn more about they make up the University of Leicester.

  • Our world is a work in progress

    We are proud to launch a new campaign to showcase just a snapshot of the world-changing research that has taken place at our University in recent years.

  • Crocus Sundays signal the arrival of spring alongside hedgehog display for children

    The springtime blooming of crocuses in the Botanic Garden will this year be accompanied by the unusual sight of thousands of salt-dough hedgehogs in March.

  • Free public open day at Bradgate Park

    Members of the public are invited to learn about the latest archaeological discoveries being made by the University of Leicester’s Archaeology Fieldschool at Bradgate Park in Leicestershire, during a FREE family Open Day on Sunday 2 July between 11.00am – 4.00pm.

  • Neil Harris

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  • Data protection

    The University's code of practice for data protection is maintained and supported by the Legal and Information and Assurance Service.

  • Astronomers see “warm” glow of Uranus’s rings

    The rings of Uranus are invisible to all but the largest telescopes — they weren’t even discovered until 1977 — and they stand out as surprisingly bright in new heat images of the planet taken by two large telescopes in the high deserts of Chile.

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