TEACHING

University Teaching

Teaching Philosophy

My guiding principle in my teaching and classroom design is to foster independent, critical thinking and content mastery that ultimately inspires self-directed discovery and knowledge generation beyond the course. In order to achieve this, I believe students learn best when they are engaged, enthusiastic, and perceive the material to be relevant to their music making. My style of teaching is student-centered, in which I modulate my teaching methods from week to week, quarter to quarter according to classroom dynamics, student understanding, and feedback. I draw from a range of innovative and evidence-based delivery methods—including small-group focus activities, flipped classroom strategies, activities to embody abstract theoretical concepts, and interactive lecture-style teaching—to cater to the demographics and needs of each class. I implement principles of the Transparency in Learning and Teaching (TILT) strategy to help students become aware of and invested in their learning process. With my pedagogical strategies that aim to foster hands-on, critical, and open-ended engagement with musical practices and scholarship, I aim to help my students become thinking musicians that can shape today’s cultural landscape.

Teaching Experience

2016-2023 Assistant Professor of Performance Studies, UCLA

 
Courses Taught at UCLA
Post-graduate performance major seminars:
  • MUS 261D Performance Practice in the Classical Era
  • MUS 202 Analysis for Performers
Large Undergraduate 200-student GE class:
  • M15 Art of Listening
Practical teaching:
  • Camarades chamber music coaching
  • Flux New Music Ensemble coaching

My courses that span music theory, performance practice, and general education have all been developed with anti-racist goals and initiatives to diversify and decenter Western music and their theoretical systems. In MUS 202 Analysis for Performers, students critique analyses of vastly different musics throughout the quarter, including analyses of hip hop, pop music videos, works by East-Asian composers in Western musical tradition, groove and improvisation in jazz, amongst others. I encourage students to pursue for their final projects music within their listening habits, not necessarily from the Western musical tradition. As such, analytical projects have more often than not been outside of classical music tradition. Likewise, in MUS261D Classical Era Performance Practice, students focused their final projects on composers of diversity, to create a diverse and enriching understanding of the Classical Era that departs from a narrow, canonic understanding of historically-informed performance. The decentering of the white male canon not only gave students an opportunity to study undervalued music; without the baggage of common practice for canonic composers, it also gave students the scholarly (and creative) license to openly experiment with historically-informed performance on these mostly unrecorded works.

 

At the undergraduate level, I taught a 200-student GE course M15, “Art of Listening,” where I invited weekly guest artists and collaborated with colleagues across the Departments of Ethnomusicology and Music to discuss different listening frameworks and create an inclusive listening experience. During these visits, I, as the host, engage in live conversations with my guests about various frameworks of listening. In this course, I used an interactive, energetic style of lecturing, employing strategies such as think-pair-share and asking students move or clap in large groups within the lecture hall to illustrate cross-rhythms, for instance. I provided weekly mentoring to my 5 teaching assistants, guiding  them on effective peer-learning and flipped classroom strategies for course content delivery in their sections.

Other duties at UCLA include: supervision of doctoral dissertations; serving on the Graduate Committee overseeing all academic matters related to Master’s and Doctoral performance students, including grading placement exams, student admissions, approving graduate students’ degree recital programs, reviewing doctoral proposals and annotated bibliographies, setting and grading doctoral exams; serving as member of Faculty advisory boards for UCLA Center for Music Innovation and UCLA Center for Musical Humanities.

 

2014-2016 Adjunct Professor of Music Theory, Adelphi University

 
Courses Taught at Adelphi University

Core theory music sequence:

MUA 111 Theory and Harmony II

MUA 210 Theory and Harmony III III,

MUA 310 Form and Analysis 


MUA 410 Composition

MUA 104 Basic Keyboard Skills

 

My goal as a music theory pedagogue is to equip students with a diverse array of analytical tools, research methodologies, and critical thinking skills, enabling them to approach any piece of music with analytical ears throughout their careers. While teaching the core theory sequence, my aspiration goes beyond imparting analytical competency. I aim to help students develop an embodied, affective understanding of the material, seamlessly integrating theoretical concepts with their practice-based learning techniques. In the realm of composition, I am committed to cultivating a nurturing and exploratory environment that empowers students to develop their unique voices. My approach is personalized, drawing on a diverse range of repertoire examples tailored to each student’s needs, fostering creative freedom, and promoting self-reflective understanding of their compositional processes.

Practical Teaching

Teaching Philosophy

My teaching style as a piano teacher and chamber music coach is open-minded, explorative, enthusiastic and positive. Developing a student’s expressive voice intersects many things at once: refining sensitive musicianship and technical mastery, mastering different listening foci, expanding historical knowledge, honing aural and theoretical skills, and drawing on meaningful personal experiences and insights. I aim to give my piano students clear, precise instruction to foster a robust technique as well as the imagination for great music-making. Another goal in my teaching is to nurture musicians who are independently minded and performers with conviction. Rather than having a purely didactic approach to musicality, I constantly discuss with my students possible conceptions of the piece, bringing into light musical analysis, historical and sociocultural discussions at the appropriate level. Through critical inquiry, I cultivate in my students an open-minded approach to the multiplicities of meaning and execution. This style of teaching, whereby I guide the student in their musical exploration of ideas under given constraints, allows them to arrive at musically interesting conclusions that they have critically listened for and executed with my assistance. In this way, my students develop into intelligent as well as intuitive musicians.

Practical Teaching Experience

  • UCLA – Camarades chamber music coach and Flux new music ensemble coach for undergraduate and postgraduate majors;

  • Stony Brook University – Undergraduate piano instructor;

  • Adelphi University – Beginning Keyboard Skills classroom instructor;

  • Private piano studio teaching at all levels, 6 years to adult – 25+ years experience

Selected masterclasses and school outreach at:

Glenfern, Team of Pianists, Melbourne; University of Queensland, Brisbane; Stiegel School, Manneheim Central Middle and High Schools, Guest artist workshop; St George Girls’ High School

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