Search

13491 results for: ‘study studentlife profiles psychology’

  • Doctors, Disease and Pandemics: Patients and Practitioners

    Module code: HS7312 This module examines disease and the varieties of human response to it in society, from the sixteenth to the twenty-first centuries, taking a focused ‘case study’ approach.

  • Doctors, Disease and Pandemics: Patients and Practitioners

    Module code: HS7312 This module examines disease and the varieties of human response to it in society, from the sixteenth to the twenty-first centuries, taking a focused ‘case study’ approach.

  • People

    Meet the people who study, work and research in the School of Education at Leicester - including academic staff, the management team, professional services staff, partnerships and CPD+ staff and more.

  • Health Law LLM

    Explore topical legal, ethical and moral dilemmas that go to the heart of how we live and die, with a focus on addressing inequalities in health.

  • Feedback and Comments

    Provide comments and feedback about Information Hub, Centre for Academic Achievement, Resources, Research Services, Archives and Special Collections, Exhibitions, Spaces and group study, Facilities laptops, PCs, books and journals, IT Help.

  • Engelbert Humperdinck receives new Seat of Learning tribute

    Fans of Engelbert Humperdinck have honoured his 50 years in the music industry by sponsoring a reader's chair for the David Wilson Library.

  • Refugee Week: University of Leicester announces Sanctuary Scholarships

    Support for refugees and asylum seekers to access higher education is being extended by the University of Leicester.

  • Future of Work

    The future of work is the subject of intense debate. This debate is shaped by multiple, overlapping “megatrends” which are seen as driving the evolution of—or revolutionary ruptures in—the world of work and employment.

  • 100 years of Physics at Leicester

    2025 marks 100 years since the first students enrolled to study for a physics degree in Leicester. Anniversary celebration.

  • Women less likely to receive treatment for deadly heart condition

    Women, people from ethnic minority backgrounds, and those from the most deprived communities are less likely to receive treatment after a diagnosis of the heart valve disease aortic stenosis, according to research by experts from the University of Leicester.

Back to top
MENU