
Teaching
Teaching has been an integral part of my path in science, and something I have truly enjoyed. Over the years, I have had the opportunity to teach physics at Universidad Católica Argentina, Universidad de Buenos Aires, and Johns Hopkins University, working with students from diverse academic backgrounds including physics, biology, geology, and engineering.
Teaching Experience#
| Institution | Course | Role | Hours | Enrollment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Johns Hopkins University | Biological Physics | Lecturer | 4 | 15–25 (Advanced UG/Grad) |
| Johns Hopkins University | Statistical Mechanics | Lecturer | 2 | 15–25 (Advanced UG/Grad) |
| Universidad de Buenos Aires | Physics II | Teaching Assistant | 192 | 50–70 |
| Universidad Católica Argentina | Physics I | Teaching Assistant | 128 | ~16 per section |
| Universidad Católica Argentina | Physics III | Teaching Assistant | 336 | ~16 per section |
| Universidad Católica Argentina | Physics I Laboratory | Lab Instructor | 816 | ~16 per section |
At Johns Hopkins, I delivered lectures on topics closely connected to my research, including diffusion, Brownian dynamics, and the Boltzmann distribution. At Universidad de Buenos Aires, I taught thermodynamics and optics to senior biology and geology students in large classes. At Universidad Católica Argentina, I taught mechanics, thermodynamics, and optics over seven semesters, led laboratory courses, and served as Laboratory Technical Advisor, where I helped modernize experimental infrastructure and introduce automated data acquisition systems.
Mentoring#
I have also enjoyed mentoring students at various levels:
- Mentored a Baltimore city high school student through the Johns Hopkins WISE program
- Co-mentored a senior undergraduate student for a research project
- Co-mentored a middle school student in the Ingenuity Project Baltimore
- Tutored students with learning disorders at the Cimarra Institute of Psychopedagogy in Argentina
There are no articles to list here yet.
