Teaching & Outreach
Teaching
During the course of my PhD, I teached for ~ 200 h across various subjects at the undergraduate level, in the Physics Department of Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1. I teached thermodynamics lab to first years, where we focused on building an experimental protocol and evaluating the uncertainties associated with each measurement. I teached general physics lab (optics, electromagnetism, dynamics…) in third year, with a focus on computer-assisted measurements and analysis, as well as scientific writing and oral communication of results. I finally teached a introductory course to astrophysics to second year students, mixing lecture materials with tutorials. The materials went from observational science (coordinate systems, magnitudes, impact of dust) to the physics of astronomical objects (dynamics of 2-body systems and galaxies, stellar evolution) and cosmology. This was a particularly pleasant course to teach as it allowed me to link it directly with my research.
In August 2026, I will also give two lectures on cosmology with Type Ia supernovae and the Hubble constant at the Rodolphe Clédassou Summer school, aimed at PhD students in cosmology.
Outreach
I also enjoy communicating my science with the broader public. I presented a broad overview of cosmology with Type Ia Supernovae at Astro on Tap, where astronomers present their work to the general public in a pub. When possible, I try to use outreach to highlight the often overlooked contribution of women scientists. As such, I did a small talk presenting my PhD subject to undergraduate students as part of the International Day of Women and Girls in Science. I also have been involved in the International Women’s Day Committee at the Institute of Astronomy, Cambridge, with a workshop for school students on spectroscopy, inspired by the work of Annie Jump Cannon, and a talk at the IoA Open Day on “Measuring distances in the Universe with Henrietta Swan Leavitt”.