Dr. Charles (Charlie) Little currently serves as Senior Lecturer in the School of Business at Texas A&M Commerce and Texas A&M College Station as well as a consultant to Computer Minds and Ingenium Resources. He previously served as Associate Dean and Director of the Graduate School of Business at Texas Wesleyan University and as Adjunct Graduate Professor in the Business School at both Texas Wesleyan and at Dallas Baptist University. Prior to that he served as Regional Director and Assistant Regional Administrator of the US General Services Administration. He also previously served as District Director of Investigations and as a Special Agent for the Interstate Commerce Commission. Charlie just published the book “Cases for Non Profit Marketing” and developed the curriculum for “Managing Work Groups and Teams” which is currently used in the graduate curriculum at Texas A&M Commerce in the College of Business and Technology as well as “Marketing in Non Profit Organizations” which is currently in use in the Non Profit Certificate Program in the George Bush School of Government and Public Service at Texas A&M University. He previously developed course work on “Project Management” for Gatlin Education, on “High Performance Work Teams” for Dallas Baptist University, and on “Strategic Management and Decision Making” for Texas Wesleyan University. Charlie serves on the Board of the Fort Worth Chapters of the Lighthouse for the Blind and the I Have a Dream Foundation. He was also appointed by Congressman Michael Burgess to serve on the East Side Development and Planning Committee and on the Fort Worth Quality Workforce Development Committee. He is also a Certified Mediator for Mediation and Conflict Resolution. Charlie is a graduate of the Federal Executive Institute of the US Office of Personnel Management and holds a BS in Business Management and Labor Relations from the University of Tennessee, as well as an MBA in Physical Distribution Management and Logistics from the University of Tennessee, and a Ph.D. from the University of North Texas in Organization Theory and Policy, with a minor in Public Administration.
