Faculty/Staff
Clinton Daniel

Associate Professor of Instruction
cedanie2@usf.edu
Room: CIS 2008
Phone: (813) 974-6765
Clinton Daniel is an associate professor of instruction in the School of Information Systems teaching undergraduate and graduate level courses in application development for analytics, database design and administration, business data communications, managing information resources, case method publications, systems analysis and design, and cybersecurity. Additionally, Daniel teaches special topic courses promoted by USF business partners in cybersecurity, healthcare information systems and analytics, and computational problem solving.
Daniel was the Primary Investigator for a $630,000 Florida Department of Education grant (Cybersecurity/IT Educational Pathways) through a joint endeavor with the Florida Center for Cybersecurity titled 鈥淭he Modernization of Digital Information Technology鈥. This grant was designed to modernize an introductory eighth 鈥 12th grade State of Florida course titled, 鈥淒igital Information Technology鈥 with updated concepts in information technology, cybersecurity, and other skills needed in today鈥檚 high-tech business environment. This project is hosted on the USF Digital Commons platform: https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/dit/
Before joining the USF faculty in 2014, Daniel worked in several information technology roles for the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, including managing a data warehouse for seven VA medical centers, developing business intelligence solutions, and managing the deployment of enterprise applications across the agency to service the VA and its customers. He had a prior career in physical therapy, both in private practice and in the U.S. Army as a combat medic and physical therapy specialist.
Daniel earned a Doctor of Business Administration degree in 2018 and a master's degree in Management Information Systems in 2006. Both degrees were awarded from the University of South Florida. His current research interests include cybersecurity, case research, and design science research.