Search

7856 results for: ‘健康网门户网站织梦内核✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.yDhztLfbJXOIyMD’

  • ‘One of the most remarkable men in the entire history of archaeology’

    Posted by Margaret Maclean in Library Special Collections on August 1, 2017 Two hundred years ago, on 1 August 1817, the adventurer-Egyptologist Giovanni Belzoni, described by Howard Carter, with good reason, as ‘one of the most remarkable men in the entire history of...

  • Upriver to Mazaruni Prison (Guyana)

    Posted by Clare Anderson in Carceral Archipelago on April 4, 2017   One of the wonderful things about ‘blue skies’ research is the element of surprise that it can throw up.

  • Assessment as dialogue

    Posted by Steve Rooney in Leicester Learning Institute: Enhancing learning and teaching on September 19, 2016 The following is a brief summary of a session on assessment as dialogue. The session ran on Wednesday, 14 th September, as part of the LLI’s Focus On… activities .

  • Two more national teaching fellowship awards for Leicester

    Our University provides excellent teaching – this has been recognised again by two more awards by the Higher Education Academy, bringing our total number of National Teaching Fellows (NTF) to 16.

  • Attenborough Arts Centre Presents: Arcadia for All? Rethinking Landscape Painting Now

    Attenborough Art Centre’s latest exhibition challenges expectations of landscape painting and invites visitors to ‘think outside the box’.

  • Student involvement in patient carer educator sessions

    Takunda Nhiwatiwa gives a student' perspective of leading a patient educator session

  • Leicester Institute for Advanced Studies explores interdisciplinary research one step at a time through the power of walking

    A new University of Leicester project hopes to explore the ‘power of walking’ and how it impacts academics’ research processes.

  • Modern Classics: A Frost in May (14th)

    Meeting details for the Modern Classics Book Group's discussion of A Frost in May

  • Ghoulish practice of gibbeting corpses haunted public of the eighteenth century

    Today, a typical Halloween night might include people dressing up as ghosts, ghouls and a creepy clown or two in order to frighten passers-by. But some of the disturbing practices from history might be more harrowing than a modern audience is used to encountering.

  • Study sheds light on the genetics of stopping smoking

    The effectiveness of a common drug to quit smoking could be down to people’s genes, according to a study from the University of Leicester.

Back to top
MENU