Larry Boone, Ph.D.

Associate Professor of Management and Director of the Executive-In-Residence Program (EIRP)

“Teaching allows me the opportunity to plant seeds,” says Larry Boone, Ph.D., the Associate Professor of Management and Director of The Executive-in-Residence Program for The Tobin College of Business. “I know those seeds will grow and flourish everywhere St. John’s students may travel - even though I may never know exactly where or how. It’s a good feeling to have.”

One of the things that makes professors at St. John’s the most proud, is their ability to inspire students to give back to the communities they came from, “Over the last three years our MBA and undergraduate Executive-in-Residence students have completed strategy for some of the most effective not-for-profits in New York City like Goodwill Industries, Covenant House, Catholic Medical Mission Board and United Cerebral Palsy-Suffolk, just to name a few,” says Dr. Boone.

Dr. Boone was recently awarded with the 2009 Vincentian Mission Award for his dedication to the University’s mission in his personal as well as professional life. In addition to his teaching responsibilities, Dr. Boone is in charge of overseeing the Executive-In-Residence program, which provides both undergraduate and graduate students in-school opportunities to engage in real-world business consulting with businesses and non-profit organizations.

This past fall, six undergraduate Executive-In-Residence students volunteered to work with Junior Achievement, the world’s largest non-profit organization dedicated to educating students about workforce readiness, entrepreneurship and financial literacy. The students from the Executive-In-Residence program helped teach a group of ninth grade students in a Brooklyn public school all about financial literacy.

“I like to think that I help my students develop the ability to make things happen, says Dr. Boone. “This requires good critical thinking skills and a high degree of self-confidence. Structuring challenging projects and supporting students as they work through them is a good way to develop both.”

Dr. Boone is currently teaching courses in Business Management – Strategy, Entrepreneurship, Organizational Behavior and Leadership and says it’s his daily interactions with positive students who possess a desire to learn that has kept him engaged in the teaching field for the past 22 years:

“Teaching at St. John’s has enabled me to realize a high degree of personal fulfillment.  I enjoy having the opportunity to work with young people who truly want to learn and improve themselves through higher education. At the end of each day I feel that I have made a small contribution to the learning, judgment, and ethics that will help future leaders of our society achieve great things.”