Teaching

Teaching Interests

Microeconomics, Behavioral and Experimental Economics, Political Economy, Program Evaluation, Development Economics (all at graduate or undergraduate level)

Teaching Experience

Lecturer at the Max Planck Summer School on the Political Economy of Conflict and Redistribution (PolEcCon) 2021

  • Lecture 1: Group biases and ethnic conflicts (slides)
  • Lecture 2: Nastiness in groups (slides)

Lecturer at Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität (LMU), München

  • Economics of Conflicts  – M.A. level course (Summer 2018, Summer 2019).
    Fully responsible for the design, preparation, teaching, and grading of an elective master’s course. Half of the course focuses on economic theory (taught by Marco Serena) and half on empirical economics (taught by Jana Cahlikova). The course syllabus is available here.

Lecturer at CERGE-EI, Prague

  • Development and Behavioral Economics  – M.A. level course (Spring 2019).
    Jointly taught by Michal Bauer (3/4 of the course) and Jana Cahlikova (1/4 of the course). Fully responsible for the design, preparation, teaching, and grading of 1/4 of an elective course within the Master in Applied Economics. The course syllabus is available upon request.
  • Behavioral and Experimental Economics – Ph.D. level course (Fall 2019, Spring 2021, Spring 2022).
    Guest Lecturer (4 lectures)

Lecturer at Anglo-American University, Prague

  • Political Economy – B.A. level course (Spring 2012, Fall 2012, Spring 2013, Fall 2014).
    Fully responsible for the design, preparation, teaching, and grading of an undergraduate course in Political Economy. The course syllabus is available upon request.
  • International Trade – M.A. level course (Fall 2012, Fall 2014).
    Fully responsible for the design, preparation, teaching, and grading of a graduate course in International Trade. The focus of the course is on trade policy. The course syllabus is available available upon request.

Teaching Assistant for graduate level courses at CERGE-EI, Prague

  • Econometrics IV (Spring 2013);
  • Microeconomics 0 (Summer 2012, Summer 2013, Summer 2014);
  • Microeconomics I (Fall 2010);
  • Microeconomics II (Spring 2011, Spring 2012)).