Irene Montie

Irene Curran Montie (December 12, 1921 – December 23, 2018)[1] was an American statistician in the US government service who became president of the Caucus for Women in Statistics.

Early life and education

Montie was born in Tannersville, New York; her parents, Michael Edward Curran and Catherine Keogh Curran, were of Irish descent. She earned two associate degrees, two bachelor's degrees (from Upper Iowa University in 1973 and New York University in 1974), two master's degrees (from the University of Northern Colorado in 1974 and Central Michigan University in 1976), and a Ph.D., which she completed in 1976 at Walden University. Her dissertation was Application of Change Theory for Alleviation of Prejudicial Barriers to Career Advancement for Women: A Study in Two Federal Agencies, and was supervised by Harry Kranz.[1][2]

Career

Before joining the United States Census Bureau, Montie founded a childcare firm.[1] From 1969 to 1978 she was chief of the Sampling Procedures Branch of the Census Bureau.[3] In the early 1980s she was director of the Survey and Statistical Design Division in the Office of Energy Systems and Support, United States Department of Energy.[4] Afterwards, she also worked in the Office of Management and Budget.[1]

Service

Montie became president of the Caucus for Women in Statistics for the 1979 term.[5] She also served on the Information Resources Management Curriculum Advisory Committee of Graduate School USA.[6]

gollark: I'm trying and failing to design this new production area here nicely. I was going for splitting it into quarters with different types of wood in each, but as it turns out we don't actually have much different wood, and now I have no idea what to do with this.
gollark: This is boring.
gollark: Yes, it timed out, working now.
gollark: <@199529131224989696> mods.
gollark: Which mod is it?

References

  1. Tribute for Irene Curran Montie, Everly–Wheatley Funerals and Cremation, retrieved 2019-01-05
  2. Montie, Irene C. (1976), Application of Change Theory for Alleviation of Prejudicial Barriers to Career Advancement for Women: A Study in Two Federal Agencies, Walden University, retrieved 2019-01-05 via Education Resources Information Center
  3. 1970 census of population and housing: procedural history, United States Bureau of the Census, 1975, p. 1-49; 1980 Census of Population and Housing: History. Research, evaluation, and experimentation, United States Bureau of the Census, 1989, p. A-16
  4. Directory of energy data collection forms, 981, U.S. Department of Energy, Energy Information Administration, National Energy Information System, 1981
  5. Presidents 1971–2017 (PDF), Caucus for Women in Statistics, retrieved 2019-01-05
  6. Montie, Irene C. (June 1983), "Developing an information resources management curriculum", Bulletin of the American Society for Information Science, 9 (5): 12–17, retrieved 2019-01-05 via Education Resources Information Center
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