#types/meta These are notes I've taken in a variety of classes, transcribed into markdown and occasionally rendered to PDF. It's a habit I acquired sometime in college - I find it's a great tool for synthesizing what I have learned, and testing my own understanding. I think of it as writing a very rough draft of a textbook. As Feynman said, "If you want to master something, teach it."
- Econ 1123, Harvard Introductory Econometrics. The fundamentals are complete; missing discussion of specific topics like diff-in-diff, panel data. I probably won't update this
- Gov 2001, Harvard Quantitative Methods I. Overview of quantitative methods. Largely complete.
- Linear Algebra 3B1B: Introduction to Linear Algebra by 3Blue1Brown on Youtube. A high-level but thoughtful coverage of the topic. I recommend it as a companion to an LA class. Mostly complete.
- Gov 2002, Harvard Quantitative Methods II. Mid-level econometrics class with Gov focus. In progress
- 18.06, MIT Linear Algebra. Taught by Gilbert Strang, available on OpenCourseWare. In progress
- ECON 500: Yale Microeconomic Theory Pt 1 (Larry Samuelson: Consumer choice, Johannes Horner: General Equilibrium)
- ECON 550: Yale Econometrics Pt 1 (Don Andrews)
To be added: Econ 1011a, Honors Microeconomic Theory, once I find it. Real Analysis.
The markdown is all made with Obsidian, which I thoroughly endorse for simplicity, portability, and extensibility. Should you decide to set up your own Obsidian vault(s), feel free to include these, or potentially reference them by submodule etc.
I mostly write these as notes to a theoretical future myself. They tend to be slightly less terse than the average lecture slides: I use more words and work through proofs, exercises etc. a little more slowly. Sometimes I go on long tangents. I try to put these in different files, or enclose them with colored boxes.