Search

24524 results for: ‘offices press think leicester arts and culture 2016 is peter tatchell good for you’

  • Leicester: On Demand

    Watch content from the University of Leicester anywhere, any time. Hear from our students and experts, catch up on events and presentations that you have missed, and view advice and guidance tailored to you.

  • PowerPoint doesn’t kill presentations – people do

    Posted by Stephen Walker in Leicester Learning Institute: Enhancing learning and teaching on March 6, 2017 Bent Meier Sørensen, a Professor in the Department of Management, Politics and Philosophy, Copenhagen University wrote an impressive article in The Independent last...

  • Nomination of examiners privacy notice

    Find out more about how your data is handled if you are nominated or hired as an external examiner at the University of Leicester.

  • Collections Management of the Championships

    Wimbledon Lawn Tennis Museum Solaris Sun Museum Studies

  • Ground-breaking research celebrates 10 years

    Some of the 11,000 people who’ve taken part in the ground-breaking Leicester research study, EXCEED, gathered at the University of Leicester’s Sir Bob Burgess building last week to celebrate 10 years of the study

  • ca270

    Schrödinger’s Cat and the Hidden Feelings Box: PSHE and RSHE Education in a Digital World Posted by ca270 in Soundings: criminology and sociology at the University of Leicester on July 14, 2025 Michelle O’Reilly, Diane Levine, Neil Sinclair, and Sarah Adams c What if...

  • The Irchester Field School

    The Irchester Field School Leicestershire

  • Teaching Opportunities

    View current Teaching and volunteering opportunities and Languages at Leicester

  • Developing literacy with children in key stage 2

    Undergraduate law students design, develop and deliver interactive workshops for schools. Each workshop was designed to develop children’s ‘legal literacy’.

  • Exploring the transient Universe

    A novel mission - to understand how the Universe began and what it is made of – involves Professor Paul O'Brien from our Department of Physics and Astronomy.

Back to top
MENU