Previously taught courses
During my graduate studies at UC Irvine, I have successfully taught 8 distinct courses including basic and intermediate economics and advanced field courses such as labor economics and health economics. I am prepared to teach the following undergraduate courses. I would also be eager to teach public economics and applied econometric methods. Full sets of teaching evaluations are available upon request.
BASIC ECONOMICS I (Fall19, Spring20, Summer20, Fall21) The fundamentals of microeconomics. The behavior of firms and consumers: markets, supply/demand, utility maximization, and efficiency. |
BASIC ECONOMICS II (Winter18, Fall18, Winter19, Winter21) The fundamentals of macroeconomics. Government behavior: monetary and fiscal policy, inflation, and unemployment. |
MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS (Fall17) How the tools of microeconomics, game theory, and industrial organization theory, can be used to make better managerial decisions. |
ECONOMICS OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS (Spring18) Economic issues in the international business arena: trade theory, foreign direct investment, foreign exchange market, and strategy of international business. |
INTERMEDIATE ECONOMICS II (Spring19) Determinants of supply and demand; operation of competitive and monopolistic markets. |
INTERMEDIATE ECONOMICS III (Summer19) Imperfections of the market system, explanations of unemployment, inflation, recessions; public policy for macroeconomic problems. |
LABOR ECONOMICS & HUMAN RESOURCES (Winter20) Markets of labor, labor demand, labor supply, human capital, personnel economics, and other topics. Empirical methods to study labor market issues. |
HEALTH ECONOMICS (Spring21) Apply concepts that were taught in introductory and intermediate microeconomics to problems that are faced in health and medical care. |
Economics of Development (Winter22) Considers the process of economic development across the globe and why some countries are rich and others poor. Discusses education, capital formation, and international trade. |