Plays
Different plays I have written
Different plays I have written
Different skits I have written that have been performed.
Standup Performances
Plays I have Acted in
Published in Journal 1, 2009
This paper is about the number 1. The number 2 is left for future work.
Recommended citation: Your Name, You. (2009). "Paper Title Number 1." Journal 1. 1(1).
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Published in Journal 1, 2010
This paper is about the number 2. The number 3 is left for future work.
Recommended citation: Your Name, You. (2010). "Paper Title Number 2." Journal 1. 1(2).
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Published in Journal 1, 2015
This paper is about the number 3. The number 4 is left for future work.
Recommended citation: Your Name, You. (2015). "Paper Title Number 3." Journal 1. 1(3).
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Published in GitHub Journal of Bugs, 2024
This paper is about fixing template issue #693.
Recommended citation: Your Name, You. (2024). "Paper Title Number 3." GitHub Journal of Bugs. 1(3).
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Published:
This is a description of your talk, which is a markdown file that can be all markdown-ified like any other post. Yay markdown!
Published:
This is a description of your conference proceedings talk, note the different field in type. You can put anything in this field.
Reciations, Stony Brook University, Economics Department, 2023
These are recitations for my Introduction to Machine Learning for Economists alongside code and slides. My hope is to make it easier for economists to delve into machine learning topics. Recitation Code Repository
Undergraduate course, Stony Brook University, Economics Department, 2023
These are my slides for Economics and Sustainability. I taught the course in Spring 2022 and Fall 2023. It is an interdisciplinary course focused on the economics of sustainable systems. It provides an introduction to environmental economics at a less mathematical level and is directed at practitioners in the field of sustainability. The textbooks are Introduction to Sustainable Development by Peter Rogers, Kazi F. Jalal , and John A. Boyd and Environmental Economics An Introduction by Barry C. Field and Martha K. Field.
Undergraduate course, Stony Brook University, Department of Economics, 2025
The course Environmental and Natural Resource Economics is broken up into two sections. The first focuses on environmental economics and looks at externalities, cost-benefit analysis, non-market valuation, and geographic information systems. The second takes on the topic of natural resource economics with a focus on energy markets and deep dives into commodity market derivatives, capacity markets, and the economics of nuclear power.