I have teaching experience at both graduate and undergraduate levels. My expertise spans quantitative courses such as Microeconomics and Mathematical Finance, as well as discussion-oriented courses like Financial History.
History of Money: From Middle Ages to Modernity (Undergraduate-level)
Department of Economic History, LSE
I led discussion-based seminars on assigned readings. I used additional materials such as primary sources to enhance students' critical engagement with the material. Topics included:
How did state finance emerge?
What caused the Great Depression?
Why did the Gold Standard fail?
4.9/5.0
Evaluation 2023
History of Global Finance (Graduate-level)
Department of Economic History, LSE
I was a Teaching Assistant to Prof. Accominotti to help moderate class discussions, provide guidance on their group projects, and mark assignments.
Financial Markets and the Global Economy (Summer School)
Department of Economics, LSE
Over three weeks of daily seminars, I covered the material typically taught over a full semester.
4.5/5.0
Evaluation 2023
Microeconomics A (Undergraduate-level)
Department of Economics, Mannheim
Explained how to solve economic problems as mathematical optimization problems under constraints, including:
Derive demand and supply functions based on utility and production functions
Solve for an equilibrium using Edgeworth Boxes
4.6/5.0
Evaluation 2019*
Mathematics of Finance (Undergraduate-level)
Department of Business, Mannheim
Explained different interest models and how to calculate the valuations of assets and rate of returns
4.7/5.0
Evaluation 2018*
Quantitative Methods (Undergraduate-level)
Department of Business, Mannheim
Led seminars reinforcing fundamental concepts of linear algebra alongside the lecture
(Evaluated with the course above)
*converted from an ascending 1.0 to 5.0 scale (German-system)