Teaching

Teaching (Instructor of Record)

Evolving Cognition - Deep Origins of Human Brain Adaptations (Fall 2022*, BIONB 1220, Cornell University) *Alternative funding acquired, position declined

*** I received alternative funding for the Fall 2022 semester and unfortunately had to turn down the opportunity to teach the third iteration of my FWS course. I hope to have the opportunity to teach this course sometime in the near future. For more information on Cornell's FWS courses offered through the Knight Institute, see here.***

Course Description: 

What are the neural bases of human thoughts, emotions, and cognition? How do natural selection and ecological challenges shape cognitive adaptations over deep evolutionary time, and can this knowledge be harnessed to better understand our own modern psychology? This writing course will introduce students to core concepts in neurobiology and evolution while developing critical writing and composition skills pertinent to communicating within the natural science disciplines. Using popular science readings and the primary literature, students will explore the bases of brain-behavior relationships and how certain human cognitive capacities may logically arise from ancient brain structures. Through written opinion and analyses of such topics, students will improve their ability to interpret and communicate scientific research while simultaneously learning to construct persuasive arguments in their own writing.

Course Rationale:

This course is designed to mature students’ skills as writers through engagement with questions surrounding the evolution of cognitive abilities. Considering humans from a comparative evolutionary perspective can help us to better understand the incremental emergence of cognition over deep evolutionary timescales. From the last universal common ancestor to the modern human brain, students will encounter a cast of characters both living and extinct to elucidate mental abilities shared across species. We will also investigate how technology intersects with modern human cognitive capacities, and will speculate on how that relationship may develop in the future. A major emphasis will be placed on teaching students about the relationship between data and writing in the scientific process, as well as on exposing students to the most prevalent forms of written communication within the STEM disciplines. Students will both read and produce various forms of scholarly writing, including but not limited to: cogent expository prose, descriptive natural history observations, research press releases, and academic literature reviews. Students will also learn to use existing academic literature to generate novel scientific questions, hypotheses, and predictions about a topic related to their personal scientific or career interests, which will be included in an original research grant proposal submitted at the end of the semester.

Course Units & Modules:


Social Neurobiology - Evolution of the Social Brain (Fall 2020, BIONB 1220, Cornell University)

*** This class was an extension and elaboration of my previous First Year Writing Seminar (FWS) course taught in Spring 2020. For more information on Cornell's FWS courses offered through the Knight Institute, see here.***

Course Description: 

What are the biological causes of cooperation and conflict in human and animal societies? How does an understanding of neurobiology and evolution help us to understand the mechanistic basis for anti- and pro-social behavior? This writing course introduces concepts in social and evolutionary neuroscience while developing literary skills most pertinent to writing in the natural science disciplines. The processes by which scientists qualitatively and quantitatively assess behavior are discussed, and material from studies in primate and rodent social behavior are integrated with foundational studies on the neuronal basis for reward and motivation. We will read and produce various forms of scholarly writing, including but not limited to: descriptive natural history observations, popular science articles, and academic literature reviews. 

Course Rationale:

The primary goal of this course is to mature your skills as a writer through exposure to core concepts in social neurobiology and practice in writing on issues surrounding these topics. A mechanistic understanding of the brain can help us better understand the motivations underlying human social behavior and how behaviors that encourage cooperation or conflict give rise to animal and human societies. You will engage with both creative and technical readings from authors, journalists, and practicing scientists as we explore the basics of evolutionary theory, social behavior in rodents and primates, cooperation and conflict in modern human societies, and the neurobiology of reward, motivation, social attachment, aggression and territoriality. 

Course Modules:


Social Neurobiology - From Circuits to Societies (Spring 2020, BIONB 1220, Cornell University)

*** My first teaching experience as the Primary Instructor of Record (i.e. I was solely responsible for the planning, execution, and generation of materials for the entire course). For more information on Cornell's FWS courses offered through the Knight Institute, see here.***

Course Description: 

What are the biological causes of cooperation and conflict in human and animal societies? How does an understanding of neurobiology and evolution help us to understand the mechanistic basis for anti- and pro-social behavior? This writing course introduces concepts in social and evolutionary neuroscience while developing literary skills most pertinent to writing in the natural science disciplines. The processes by which scientists qualitatively and quantitatively assess behavior are discussed, and material from studies in primate and rodent social behavior are integrated with foundational studies on the neuronal basis for reward and motivation. We will read and produce various forms of scholarly writing, including but not limited to: descriptive natural history observations, popular science articles, and academic literature reviews. 

Course Rationale:

The primary goal of this course is to mature your skills as a writer through exposure to core concepts in social neurobiology and practice in writing on issues surrounding these topics. A mechanistic understanding of the brain can help us better understand the motivations underlying human social behavior and how behaviors that encourage cooperation or conflict give rise to animal and human societies. You will engage with both creative and technical readings from authors, journalists, and practicing scientists as we explore the basics of evolutionary theory, social behavior in rodents and primates, cooperation and conflict in modern human societies, and the neurobiology of reward, motivation, social attachment, aggression and territoriality. 

Course Units:


Teaching (Graduate Teaching Assistant)

Principles of Neurophysiology (Spring 2022, BIONB 4910, Cornell University)

Course Description: Laboratory-oriented course designed to teach the concepts and tools of cellular neurophysiology through hands-on experience with extracellular and intracellular electrophysiological techniques, and computer acquisition and analysis of laboratory results. Students explore signal transmission in the nervous system by examining the cellular basis of resting and action potentials, and synaptic transmission and optogenetic control of behavior and physiology. Lecture time is used to review nervous system physiology, introduce laboratory exercises, discuss lab results and primary research papers, and for presentation of additional experimental preparations and methods. Invertebrate preparations are used as model systems.

Student Outcomes:

Selected Topics: 


Behavioral Ecology, Evolution and Genomics (Fall 2021, BIONB 3230, Cornell University)

Course Description: This course provides hands-on experience with modern methods for studying animal behavior both in the field and in the laboratory. Class projects will be complemented with a series of workshops and demonstrations of methods. Topics include: experimental design, animal tracking, animal color analysis, sound analysis, chemical analysis, capture/marking methods, determining relatedness, measuring social behavior, and behavioral statistics in R.

Student Outcomes:

Selected Topics: 

Introduction to Neurobiology (Spring 2019, BIONB 2220, Cornell University)

Course Description: An introduction to neuroscience: the structure and function of the nervous system of humans and other animals. Topics include the cellular and molecular basis for cell signaling, the functions of neurons in communication and in decision making; neuroanatomy, neurochemistry, sensory systems, motor systems, neural development, learning and memory, and other complex brain functions. The course will emphasize how the nervous system is built during development, how it changes with experiences during life, how it functions in normal behavior, and how it is disrupted by injury and disease. Discussion sections will include a dissection of a preserved sheep brain.

Student Outcomes:

Introduction to Behavior (Fall 2018, BIONB 2210, Cornell University)

Course Description: General introduction to the field of animal behavior. Topics include evolution and behavior, behavioral ecology, sociobiology, chemical ecology, communication, orientation and navigation.

Student Outcomes: