
Undergraduate Teaching
Comparative Government is a core course of the Politics Philosophy and Economics (PPE) undergraduate degree, which introduces students to key concepts of comparative politics such as electoral systems, political parties, executives, legislatures, and much more. I have taught this course to students from St. Anne’s College, Jesus College, and Lady Margaret Hall, all part of the University of Oxford.
This third year PPE course touches upon the historical and contemporary comparative study of European nations. In doing so it discusses topics such as European party competition, coalition formation and governance, as well as the role of parliaments, to name a few. I have taught this course at Lady Margaret Hall, University of Oxford
Politics of the European Union is a third year course of the PPE programme. It is aimed at dissecting and explaining the sometimes complex history, institutional design, and functioning of the EU. In doing so, it also considers the contemporary challenges the Union faces, such as Brexit and the future of European integration. I have taught this course at Lady Margaret Hall.
Postgraduate Teaching
This course is part of the MSc in Social Data Science, at the Oxford Internet Institute. It builds on the Introduction to Python course, by elaborating on different data types, storage, and wrangling techniques used in social data science. I taught this course in Hilary Term 2021.
This course is part of the MSc in Social Data Science, at the Oxford Internet Institute. It covers practices of data scraping, storing, and wrangling in Python. I taught this course in Michaelmas term 2022.
This course is an elective course I have developed for the MSc in Digitial Scholarship. It will be taught in the upcoming academic year (2023-24). It provides an introductory overview to Machine learning and AI for the humanities covering a wide range of topics including classification, dimensionality reduction, and natural language processing. In doing so, students will gain the skills required to continue learning and applying these methods in their own research.