Naomi D. Rothwell

Naomi Doniger "Donny" Rothwell (August 18, 1917 – July 12, 2000)[1][2] was the chief of the Center for Survey Methods Research for the United States Census Bureau, where in the mid-1960s she began the use of behavioral research to understand census response rates.[3] She was also the co-author of The Psychiatric Halfway House: A Case Study (with Joan M. Doniger, C. C. Thomas, 1966).[4]

Education and career

Naomi Doniger graduated in 1939 from Cornell University with a bachelor's degree in agriculture,[2][5] married George James Rothwell, and soon afterwards began working for the federal government in the State Department, Army, and Department of Agriculture.[2] In 1946 she was working in Moscow for the United States Foreign Service.[6] She became a Board Member of Woodley House, a halfway house in Washington, DC, founded by her sister Joan Doniger. She and her sister recorded their experiences in their book.[2]

By 1960, she was working at the Census Bureau, where she "had a major role in the enumerator training program" for the 1960 census.[7] She worked at the bureau for 31 years before retiring.[2] She also served as secretary-treasurer of the American Association for Public Opinion Research.[8]

Recognition

She was a recipient of the Department of Commerce Gold Medal.[2] In 1981 she was elected as a Fellow of the American Statistical Association.[9]

References

  1. "Naomi D Rothwell". Social Security Death Index. Retrieved February 7, 2020.
  2. "Naomi D. 'Donny' Rothwell, Census Official", Obituaries, The Washington Post, 15 July 2000
  3. Keane, John G. (1988), "Counting the hard-to-enumerate population", Proceedings of the Annual Research Conference, Volume 4, U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, 1988, pp. 9–13 See in particular p. 12.
  4. Reviews of The Psychiatric Halfway House:
    • Martin, Eugene V. (June 1967), The American Journal of Nursing, 67 (6): 1301–1302, doi:10.2307/3420678, JSTOR 3420678CS1 maint: untitled periodical (link)
    • Edwards, Griffith (December 1967), Psychiatric Services, 18 (12): 382, doi:10.1176/ps.18.12.382CS1 maint: untitled periodical (link)
  5. "The Graduates of the Class of 1939", Cornell Daily Sun, p. 8, 16 June 1939
  6. "Visitors" (PDF), The American Foreign Service Journal, 23 (1): 67, January 1946
  7. U.S. Bureau of the Census (1963), "Acknowledgements", U.S. Census of Housing: 1960, Vol. II, Metropolitan Housing, Part 1, United States and Divisions (PDF), U.S. Government Printing Office, p. iii
  8. "American Association for Public Opinion Research Thirty-Fourth Annual Conference", The Public Opinion Quarterly, 43 (3): 419–434, Autumn 1979, doi:10.1086/268536, JSTOR 2748239
  9. ASA Fellows list, American Statistical Association, archived from the original on 1 December 2017, retrieved 17 November 2017
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