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Academic Practice
https://le.ac.uk/modules/2025/mn7366
Module code: MN7366 This foundational module will give you the skills to excel in your human resource management and training course. You'll look at practical study skills such as time management, effective note-taking and reading for research.
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Organic Chemistry
https://le.ac.uk/modules/2025/ch2201
Module code: CH2201 In this module, you'll delve back into the world of organic materials and compounds, the basis for all life on earth, and build upon your knowledge of organic chemistry gained during your first year.
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Organic Chemistry
https://le.ac.uk/modules/2026/ch2201
Module code: CH2201 In this module, you'll delve back into the world of organic materials and compounds, the basis for all life on earth, and build upon your knowledge of organic chemistry gained during your first year.
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Education
https://le.ac.uk/botanic-garden/education
The Botanic Garden offers a range of primary and secondary programmes for schools, colleges and youth groups and can adapt these to fit particular curriculum or special needs.
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Angela Muir
https://le.ac.uk/people/angela-muir
The academic profile of Dr Angela Muir, Associate Professor in British Social and Cultural History & Director of the Centre for Regional and Local History
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Bill Grant
https://le.ac.uk/about/history/obituaries/2024/bill-grant
We have learned, with sadness, of the death of Professor William (Bill) Grant, Emeritus Professor in the former Department of Infection, Immunity and Inflammation.
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Cancer Studies
https://le.ac.uk/study/research-degrees/supervision/cancer-studies
Find your research degree supervisor in Cancer Studies at Leicester.
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Clare Anderson
https://staffblogs.le.ac.uk/carchipelago/author/clare_anderson/
I am a professor of history, with interests in colonialism and colonial societies across the British Empire. I am especially interested in the history of confinement.
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Unravelling the Minion genome
https://le.ac.uk/news/2015/july/unravelling-the-2018minion2019-genome
Based on what we know of the minions from the popular Despicable Me films – and the Minions movie current playing at cinemas – they could, in theory, have a complex genetic make-up similar to humans, according to Natural Sciences students Krisho Manoharan and Ruth Sang Jones.
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Mollusc invaders in the Thames – a mark of the Anthropocene
https://le.ac.uk/news/2019/october/14-thames-molluscs
In the last few decades, the life of London’s River Thames has been transformed.