As a Graduate Student Instructor in UC Berkeley’s Ph.D. microeconomics sequence, I have independently designed and led discussion sections on decision theory, general equilibrium, game theory, and mechanism design. My teaching focuses on clarity, intuition, and linking theoretical concepts to research applications. I was recognized with the Outstanding Graduate Student Instructor Award for my first year of teaching.
Econ 201A: Decision Theory, Fall 2025
Ph.D. level, University of California, Berkeley
Preferences, beliefs, and rationality. Topics include expected utility, uncertainty, and behavioral models of choice.
Econ 201B: Mechanism Design, Spring 2025
Ph.D. level, University of California, Berkeley
Incentive compatibility, social choice, and auction theory. Applications of mechanism design in market allocation and contract theory.
Econ 201A: General Equilibrium, Fall 2023
Ph.D. level, University of California, Berkeley
Structure of markets, welfare theorems, and efficiency analysis. Covered competitive equilibrium and market design foundations.
Econ 201B: Game Theory, Spring 2023-2024
Ph.D. level, University of California, Berkeley
Static and dynamic games, Nash equilibrium, subgame perfection, and applications of strategic reasoning to economics.
Full teaching dossier and course evaluations available upon request.