-do not want to be a researcher like me. I believe that in spite of
-this unusual and challenging relationship, and \emph{because of it}, I
-can teach students in ways that suprise, connect, and enrich.
+will not become a researcher like me. I believe that in spite of this
+challenging relationship, and because of it, I can teach students in
+ways that surprise, connect, and enrich. In my teaching, I address
+this dynamic in three different ways.
+
+First, I strive to make my teaching material relevant to my students
+experiences and interests. I always seek to communicate why the
+material I teach is relevant and how it will be useful. I have taught
+identical material to engineers, MBAs, and executives and have worked
+to refine and tailor my message for each audience.
+
+Second, I attempt to involve students directly in learning. Even in
+large lectures, I engage students interactively in discussion of
+examples from their experience and adapt my teaching to emphasize
+relevant material. In assignments, I challenge students to integrate
+course concepts with their experience and interests.
+
+Third, and most importantly, I structure my teaching around an
+explicit mutual respect. Before each lecture, I reflect on the total
+student-hours my teaching will consume. I realize that in every class
+meeting, my students give me dozens, even hundreds, of hours of their
+attention. I strive to never waste it. I continually seek feedback
+from my students so that my teaching is more relevant, useful, and
+important to them.