Mark A. Martin
0610 SW Nevada St Apt H, Portland, OR 97219
Summary
During the first three years of my graduate education, I was responsible for all aspects of mathematics courses, teaching as many as 100 students a term. Later, at the University of Washington, I received high marks from the students and faculty as a teaching assistant for calculus in the mathematics department and assisted with most of the graduate and undergraduate level courses taught in the applied mathematics department. In addition, I assisted with undergraduate physics labs and ocassionally gave guest lectures at high schools when I was an undergraduate at the University of Colorado.
Philosophy
I believe that the key to effective teaching is to get students to actively participate in their education inside and outside of the classroom. The role of the instructor is to enliven the material, to provide sufficient and appropriate practice, to lead students to ask the proper questions and guide their search for the answers, and to identify and help students overcome obstacles to understanding.
Experience
Teaching Assistant
Department of Applied Mathematics, University of Washington
Most quarters from Fall 1990 - Winter 1995
Undergraduate level:
Teaching Assistant
Mathematics Department, University of Washington
Fall 1989 - Spring 1990
A review that I received as a Teaching Assistant is available here as
a text file and as a PNG image straight off the
scanner.
Teaching Assistant
University of Colorado in Denver
Fall 1988
Teaching Assistant
University of Arizona
Fall 1986 - Spring 1988
Student Assistant
University of Colorado in Boulder
1984 - 1985
Graduate level:
Last modified: Thu Jul 4 19:13:47 CDT 2002