For the Fall of 2012, I lead three discussion sections for Linear Methods and Probability for Business. I continued in the Spring of 2013 to lead two more discussions. From the syllabus: Math 121 is a course in Finite Mathematics in which we investigate ways to solve real world problems using systems of equations, matrices, and linear programming. Sets, different counting techniques such as Venn and tree diagrams, and permutations and combinations are explored. Probability is then introduced, and various topics such as Bayes' Theorem, random variables, and binomial experiments are discussed.
As a graduate student teaching assistant, for the Fall of 2011 and Spring of 2012, I lead two discussion sections each of Elementary Statistics students. Topics covered were confidence interval estimates of a population parameter from a set of sample statistics, bivarate time series data analysis, basic hypothesis testing and more. My responsibilites included answering questions during discussion and my scheduled office hours, reviewing the required material during discussion, giving quzzes during discussion, and grading assignments as well as exams and quizzes.
As an undergraduate at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, I tutored in subjects such as thermodynamics and linear algebra in 2007 and 2008.