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  • Research aims to improve reading for older people

    A University of Leicester project examining how the effects of ageing impact on our ability to read has received £200K funding

  • Alex Young

    We have learned, with sadness, of the death of Dr Alex Young, who taught Engineering at Leicester in the 1960s and 1970s. Dr Young, who was an expert in the use of concrete in civil engineering, passed away in Cambridge on 23 October 2024.

  • University marks World Prematurity Day

    The University of Leicester will mark World Prematurity Day (17 November) by lighting up the Attenborough Tower in purple to reflect solidarity

  • Differences between larks and owls clocked by geneticists

    A new study by researchers from the Department of Genetics has for the first time identified the genetic clues behind what makes you a ‘lark’ or an ‘owl’.

  • Introducing students to what lectures are for (and not for)

    Posted by Steve Rooney in Leicester Learning Institute: Enhancing learning and teaching on September 18, 2019 This is a draft preview version of a resource currently in production.

  • Portugal

    We welcome students from Portugal. Find out about entry requirements, the Portuguese student community and other country-specific information.

  • First-hand accounts of premature baby loss inspires new resource

    A new resource has been launched based on the first-hand experiences of parents whose baby died before, during or shortly after birth at 20 to 24 weeks of pregnancy. The resource aims to support parents, loved ones and health professionals.

  • Engineering

    Find your research degree supervisor in Engineering at Leicester.

  • A team of UK scientists have been monitoring the devastating smoke plume in Canada and North America

    A team of scientists from the National Centre for Earth Observation, based at the University of Leicester, has been monitoring the devastating plume of smoke which has travelled from Canada to parts of the North American east coast.

  • Skin swabs could detect COVID-19

    COVID-19 could be detected through non-invasive skin swab samples, new research published by the Universities of Leicester, Surrey and Manchester has revealed today.

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