In these introductory lectures, we review the theoretical tools used in
constructing supersymmetric field theories and their application to physical
models. We first introduce the technology of two-component spinors, which is
convenient for describing spin-1/2 fermions. After motivating why a theory of
nature may be supersymmetric at the TeV energy scale, we show how supersymmetry
(SUSY) arises as an extension of the Poincar\'e algebra of spacetime
symmetries. We then obtain the representations of the SUSY algebra and discuss
its simplest realization in the Wess-Zumino model. In order to have a
systematic approach for obtaining supersymmetric Lagrangians, we introduce the
formalism of superspace and superfields and recover the Wess-Zumino Lagrangian.
These methods are then extended to encompass supersymmetric abelian and
non-abelian gauge theories coupled to supermatter. Since supersymmetry is not
an exact symmetry of nature, it must ultimately be broken. We discuss several
mechanisms of SUSY-breaking (both spontaneous and explicit) and briefly survey
various proposals for realizing SUSY-breaking in nature. Finally, we construct
the the Minimal Supersymmetric extension of the Standard Model (MSSM), and
consider the implications for the future of SUSY in particle physics.Comment: Lecture notes, TASI 2016. 144 pages, typographical errors correcte