Search

9814 results for: ‘global learning outcomes’

  • European Bodies in Prehistory and History

    Module code: AR3074 How do people understand their bodies? How does this change through time? Are bodies the product of particular kinds of historical worlds? How do these bodies play key roles in history? Drawing on research conducted by module...

  • Textiles, Dress and Identity in the Roman World

    Module code: AH3079 A lot of evidence survives for the study of Roman dress: fragmentary textiles, texts and iconography in a variety of media.

  • Walk with Women (W3)

    Our Walk with Women (W3) project celebrated and highlighted our female colleagues in leadership roles in the College of Life Sciences.

  • News Centre privacy notice

    Learn more about how your data is handled by Leicester regarding the News Centre.

  • Women’s History Advent Calendar

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on November 29, 2024 Starting on 1st December, a window to open every day till Christmas https://calendar.myadvent.net/?id=nt1kee5497mdo9efkzij7kqyil69xnum to learn about women’s history.

  • Cooking Inauthentically Part 2: An Experiment with Acarajé – University of Leicester

    Deborah Toner, the Project's PI, describes her first experience of making acarajé, the perils of taking shortcuts and the value of traditional recipes

  • The Story of Pulque Part 2: A Tangle of Origins – University of Leicester

    Overview of different pre-Columbian narratives about the origins or discovery of pulque, and the various political, historical, and cultural roles these narratives served particularly for the Mexica (Aztecs)

  • on not using tidymodels

    argument against using tidymodels when teaching data analysis

  • New community archaeology project in Market Bosworth receives Lottery funding

    Bosworth Links - a new community archaeology project that provides residents the opportunity to carry out excavations in order to learn more about their town’s history has received a grant of £29,000 by the Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF).

  • Pyramid of Geezers how to assemble a perfect human pyramid

    Physics students have calculated the formula for a perfect human pyramid – and have found that the best suited candidates to achieve maximum height are groups of men, women and children.

Back to top
MENU