![]() John Flynn |
John Flynn is an Emeritus Professor at the University of Connecticut. During his tenure at the university he developed and administered the graduate school psychology program. He served as a faculty advisor for Masters and Ph.D. students in the graduate school in Measurement and Evaluation, School Psychology, Statistics, Research and several specialties in Special Education. This provided him with the opportunity to direct theses and dissertations of graduate students. He also had a comprehensive research program at the university and received several state and federal awards. He has published several texts and numerous research articles during his tenure at the University of Connecticut. Dr. Flynn presently serves as an adjunct professor of psychology at Capella University. He has been a member of the faculty for approximately seven years. He teaches courses in research methods, tests and measurements and inferential statistics. He has served as major advisor to several doctoral students and supervised their doctoral dissertations. He served as an adjunct professor of psychology at Walden University for approximately ten years where he taught courses in research methods, tests and measurements and inferential statistics. He served as major advisor to several doctoral students and supervised their doctoral dissertations. Dr. Flynn taught graduate and undergraduate students in a variety of technical courses and seminars at Indiana University, the University of Wisconsin, the State University of New York and the University of Connecticut in areas such as developmental psychology, special education, program evaluation, school psychology, personality assessment, test validation models, computer assisted tailored testing, item response theoretical models, research design and analysis, univariate and multivariate statistics, industrial and organizational psychology, and educational and psychological tests and measurement. |