I strive to make economics intuitive and relevant for students.
This means two things: clearly conveying the “why” and “how” behind economic mechanisms, and connecting those mechanisms to past and current macroeconomic and financial developments. My courses incorporate active learning, data-driven exercises, and case-based discussions that link theory to real-world contexts, with the aim of developing students’ capacity for critical thinking and real-world economic reasoning.
Trinity University
Principles of Macroeconomics (ECON 1312): Fall 2023
Principles of Microeconomics (ECON 1311): Fall 2023
International Monetary Systems (ECON 3448): Spring 2024
International Trade (ECON 3447): Spring 2024
Bryn Mawr College
Money and Banking (ECON 207): Fall 2022, Spring 2023
Financial Economics (ECON 205): Fall 2022
International Trade (ECON 348): Spring 2023
Economic Development (ECON 225): Spring 2023