Menu Close

Liverpool John Moores University

The Liverpool Mechanics Institute was founded in 1823 by people of power and influence who recognised the transformative effects of education and the impact that learning and aspiration could have on individuals, communities and society. It was the first such institution to be founded in England.

This small, pioneering movement was followed by the establishment of the Liverpool Institute and School of Art and the Liverpool Nautical College, and in 1900 Irene Mabel Marsh opened the IM Marsh campus. These organisations together laid the foundations for Liverpool John Moores University, an institution that has grown and flourished and continues to provide opportunities for all.

The university’s ethos – dream, plan, achieve – comes from a statement made by its namesake Sir John Moores, the founder of the Littlewoods empire and a beacon of equal opportunities in Liverpool, “…if you want to enough, you can achieve anything”.

Today, the university has a vibrant community of 25,000 students from over 100 countries world-wide, 2,500 staff and 250 degree courses.

Links

Displaying 181 - 200 of 298 articles

El jugador del FC Barcelona Jordi Alba se abraza a Messi después de marcar en el partido de Liga contra el SD Huesca en septiembre de 2018. EPA-EFE/MARTA PEREZ

Detrás del “modelo Barça” hay mucha ciencia

No todo es tiki-taka. Una filosofía única, un excelente entrenamiento y una ciencia deportiva de vanguardia ayudan al FC Barcelona a obtener lo mejor de sus jugadores.
FC Barcelona’s Jordi Alba celebrates with his teammates after scoring in the La Liga match against SD Huesca in September, 2018. EPA-EFE/MARTA PEREZ

FC Barcelona: how our new research helped unlock the ‘Barca way’

It’s not all about tiki-taka football. Our new research revealed how a unique philosophy, excellent coaching and cutting edge sports science help FC Barcelona get the best from its players.
Orang utan Sumatra jantan di Taman Nasional Gunung Leuser, Sumatra. Don Mammoser/Shutterstock

Orang utan telah beradaptasi dengan manusia selama 70 ribu tahun

Orang utan di Asia Tenggara dan Cina mengalami penurunan drastis sekitar 20.000 tahun yang lalu, mengakibatkan penyebaran mereka yang terbatas.

Authors

More Authors