I have a very
strong commitment to teaching undergraduate and graduate level students.
My first experiences in teaching were in Taiwan, where I taught high
school students for four years. Although the content of those courses
was very different from what I teach now, it was there that I came
to appreciate and enjoy the teaching/learning process.
As a graduate
student at the University of Arizona, I taught a variety of courses,
including: Introduction to Psychology, Research Methods in Psychology,
Introduction to Linguistics and Meaning in Language. I also taught
a Psychology of Language course at Northeastern University in Boston.
While a post-doc
at Harvard, I worked with several graduate students in the Cognitive
Neuropsychology Lab on a range of different research projects.
Now here at MACCS, I am the
primary supervisor for two PhD students and am an associate supervisor
for two more. I have also supervised several Honours students (from
psychology) and interns (from all over the world) here at MACCS. I
have thoroughly enjoyed all of my teaching experiences and am always
enthusiastic for the opportunity to work with students who are interested
in learning how to do quality research in cognitive psychology.
practical
stats course for students in cognitive psychology