Search

9440 results for: ‘教育app/专业软件/源码交付/快速上线✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.UrJHXBXdewOul’

  • Positive impact

    Explore our research and teaching for positive change

  • Tan Yue: Three years after graduation, I found my way home

    Tan Yue graduated with an MA in Art Museum and Gallery Studies in 2013 and has taken her experience and knowledge back to her home country and started her career in Guangdong Times Museum.

  • About the meeting

    Find more about the meeting of the UK Medical Schools Equality Diversity and Inclusion Network

  • Previous Brixworth Lectures

    Browse our archive of previous Brixworth Lectures, which are organised by the University of Leicester's Medieval Research Centre alongside The Friends of All Saints Church in Brixworth.

  • Projects

    The Centre for English Local History is involved with a number of projects, funded by councils and trusts such as the AHRC and Leverhulme Trust. Learn more about the variety of projects we are working on.

  • Sole2Soul: Narrate, Curate, Rejuvenate

    Sole2Soul promotes meaningful intergenerational exchange between “silver champions” (project participants aged over 55) and teenagers about artefacts from the Boot and Shoe exhibit at Harborough Museum.

  • HumanKind

    We are looking afresh at Calke Abbey’s past, reassessing the stories told about this place and exploring their potential to foster more meaningful connections.

  • Reimagining workforce planning and staff retention through AI and data analytics powered OSI model

    The NHS staff shortage has been at the front and centre of the 2024 elections. However, simply hiring new staff is insufficient, given the lengthy training pathways and the limited pool of international recruits.

  • What does the election result mean for the future of British politics?

    Tor Clark Associate Professor in Journalism dissects the general election results.

  • New DNA analysis helps bust 200-year-old royal conspiracy theory

    DNA analysis carried out at University of Leicester refutes the theory that Kaspar Hauser was a ‘lost prince’ of the House of Baden.

Back to top
MENU