Courses

Statistics for Lawyers (Harvard Law School, NYU Law School)

Policing and Incarceration: Paths to Reform (Harvard Law School)

Introductory Statistics (UC Berkeley Law School, for PhD students)

Criminal Justice in the U.S.: Policing, Mass Incarceration, and Paths to Reform (UC Berkeley, Legal Studies, for undergraduates)

Introduction to Quantitative Methods for Economics (Statistics 104, Harvard College) (teaching fellow)

Introduction to Theoretical Statistics (Statistics 111, Harvard College) (course assistant)

Senior thesis advising

Julia Fox, “Policing in the Age of Camera Consciousness: A Look into Officers' Perceptions of Body Worn Cameras.” (2019-20)

Elena Schwartz, “Mandatory Justice?: Judicial Discretion and Disparities under the Federal Sentencing Guidelines.” (2018-19)

Jazmine Phillips-Acie, "A Second Chance for Some: Racial Inequality in Placement and Performance in Massachusetts Drug Courts." (2017-18) (winner of the Kathryn Ann Huggins Prize for Most outstanding thesis relating to African American life, history, or culture.)

Megan Mers, "Why Women Win: The Crucial Role of Gender as a Voting Heuristic in Low-Information Judicial Elections." (2016-17)

Enioluwada Popoola, "Free to Vote: A Study of the Political Participation of Formerly Incarcerated Boston Residents." (2016-17)