I have served as course instructor in a variety of classroom settings—from large undergraduate lectures with 150 students, to small, intensive Ph.D. math camp with 10 students. I have also been a teaching assistant for seven different undergraduate and Ph.D. courses.
I enjoy teaching as much as I enjoy doing research.
The math course for incoming Ph.D. Students in Economics. Covers real analysis, linear algebra, and probability theory.
Syllabus: link here
My lecture notes:
Sets and logic: link here
Proof strategies: link here
Functions: link here
Limits: link here
Continuity and Differentiability: link here
Topology on Metric Space: link here
Multivariate Derivatives: link here
Integrals: link here
Optimization: link here
ODE: link here
Problem sets:
Problem set 1: link here
Problem set 2: link here
The statistics course for pre-major students aiming to pursue the economics major. Covers fundamental probabilities and statistical inference. The course includes in-class activities, lectures, and excel projects. 150-200 students per semester.
I hold weekly TA sections for problem sets and material review. If you are a current student at UCSB and interested in my section slides, feel free to send me an email.
I hold weekly TA sections for problem sets and material review. If you are a current student at UCSB and interested in my section slides, feel free to send me an email.