Teaching

Every aspect of my teaching and mentoring practice is informed by the conviction that the classroom is one of the most important places I can make an impact as a critical-cultural and media studies scholar. This conviction is connected to my research agenda, which takes seriously forms of culture and creative practices that are often dismissed as benign, inconsequential, or merely commercial to understand their centrality to broader struggles over power. 

In my role as a teacher, I facilitate critical thinking about often taken-for-granted media and technologies, preparing students to be more informed and engaged citizens, community members, and consumers and producers. I foster horizontal learning environments where my students are co-creators of knowledge and feel empowered to take ownership of their learning process; provide them with tools and theories that give them new ways to describe, analyze, and critique their everyday realities and encounters with media and technology to deconstruct power in its many forms; and encourage them to apply these perspectives to their own lives even after their time in my classroom ends. 

My pedagogical approach necessarily includes not only teaching students about how power operates in the world around them, but also finding ways to mitigate its uneven impacts in my own classroom environment. This pedagogical approach requires finding ways to support students who are structurally disadvantaged within the university, particularly first-generation students and students from marginalized backgrounds. 

Courses

Social Media

MEDI 255

An overview of the relationship between society and emerging communication technologies known as “social media,” including Instagram, YouTube, TikTok, and more.

Media Law & Ethics

MEDI 240

A practical introduction to the legal restraints placed upon media communicators and the ethical concerns raised by various forms of media communication.

AI Literacy

MEDI 275

Critically examines the meteoric rise of AI and its intended and unintended consequences. Focuses on the stories we tell ourselves about technology (and who these stories ultimately benefit).