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9834 results for: ‘global learning outcomes’

  • Andrew Dunn: Page 213

    Academic Librarian.

  • Economics

    Find your research degree supervisor in Economics at Leicester.

  • The Oxford Group

    Our two-year Leverhulme-funded research project examines the contribution made to the emergence (or rather re-emergence) of the idea of animal rights made by a group of young people - mainly postgraduate philosophy students - who congregated in Oxford for a few short years -...

  • Improvement Science Fellowship

    SAPPHIRE’s Natalie Armstrong has recently been awarded a Health Foundation Improvement Science Fellowship, in this blog she reflects on her experiences so far and what she’ll be getting up to over the next three years.

  • Simon Dixon

    I am Archives and Special Collections Manager within the University Library. My role is to manage and develop the Library's and other University research collections and exploit digital technologies to reach new audiences for these collections.

  • Code Worker Commodification and the Productivity Paradox: Views on Artificial Intelligence in the wo

    Posted by hconnolly in School of Business Blog on September 17, 2019 Dr Phoebe V Moore was invited to speak on a panel organised by the German Commission for Occupational Health and Safety and Standardization (KAN) at the Human Computer Interaction conference 26 – 31 July 2019.

  • Commercial Law: Domestic Sale of Goods and Agency

    Module code: LW3311 In simple terms, this module examines the mechanics of domestic sale of goods contracts under the law in England and Wales.    When studying this module, you will learn all about the ins and outs of legal transactions involving goods.

  • Live Sociology

    Module code: SY2091 Live sociology means going out into the field to experience sociology and practice sociology for yourselves, and Leicester is the perfect empirical crucible for this.

  • Stable Isotopes in the Environment

    Module code: GY3434 This module will focus entirely on stable isotopes in the environment.

  • The Forensic, Archaeological and Geological Application of Microfossils

    Module code: GL3108 A human eye can just about discern the thickness of a hair. At this tiny scale, there is an incredible diversity of organisms. These were first seen through the 17th-century microscopes of Antonie van Leeuwenhoek and Robert Hooke.

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