I am an energetic and experienced instructor, having independently taught seven self-designed graduate and undergraduate courses at MIT, Indiana University, and at the Norfolk and Framingham Correctional Institutions through Boston University's Prison Education Program. Additionally, I taught as an associate instructor of political science and economics for nine semesters. I have syllabi prepared, tested, and ready to go for courses on political philosophies of justice, graduate-level statistics, theories of the policymaking process, the evolution of the American presidency, and the economic theories and political realities of environmental sustainability. Student reviews of these courses are exemplary, as are their reviews of my performance as a teacher. You can read about my teaching philosophy here, and you can see recent student evaluations here.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Political Science Department and Department of Urban Studies and Planning
Making Public Policy (11.002J / 17.30J), 2015
Boston University
Metropolitan College and Prison Education Program
Politics and Philosophy: Theories of Justice (PH155), 2016
American University in Cairo
School of Global Affairs and Public Policy (GAPP)
Concepts & Applications for Social & Environmental Policy (PPAD 5132), 2017
The Role of Government in a Market Economy (PPAD 5232), 2017
Master of Global Affairs Capstone Course (PPAD 5293), 2017
The Political Economy of the Near East (PPAD 5199), 2017
Applied Quantitative Analysis (PPAD 5212), 2017
Policy Analysis and Program Evaluation (PPAD 5202), 2016
Masters Thesis Research Seminar (PPAD 5298), 2016
Indiana University
School of Public and Environmental Affairs (SPEA)
Statistical Analysis for Effective Decision-making (V506), 2013
Department of Political Science
Introduction to American Politics (Y103), 2009, '12
The Politics of Sustainability (Y200), 2010-'12
Analyzing Politics (Y205), 2010
The Holocaust and Politics (Y352), 2009
The Politics of Gender and Sexuality (Y353), 2008
The American Presidency (Y380), 2011
Introduction to Microeconomics (E201), 2005-'07