C. Jean Thompson Explained

C. Jean Thompson should not be confused with Jean Helen Thompson.

C. Jean Thompson
Birth Date:1940
Occupation:Statistician, author
Employer:DSIR

C. Jean Thompson (born 1940) is a New Zealand statistician who was president of the New Zealand Statistical Association from 1991 to 1993.

Because she was a girl, Thompson was prevented from taking any mathematical subjects in high school until the sixth form, when she was the top of her school's physics class. At university, she wanted to study statistics, but there was no program in that subject, so she enrolled into a bachelor's degree in mathematics and physics. She worked in the Department of Scientific and Industrial Research in its Applied Mathematics Division. She learned statistics on the job, and used an Elliott 503, the first scientific computer in New Zealand, to perform her analyses.

As president of the NZSA, she took the opportunity of the 1993 Women's Suffrage Centenary Celebration to collect and display material about women in statistics in New Zealand that was later collected into a book, Women with Maths — Making a difference. The book tells the stories of 40 New Zealand women for whom a knowledge of statistics or mathematics had enabled a career or lifestyle.

Thompson's publications with the Applied Mathematics Division concerned topics ranging from earthquakes to horticulture. The division was eliminated in the restructuring of the Department of Scientific and Industrial Research in 1992. Later, she went to work for the New Zealand Council for Educational Research, where she became a co-author of several books on childhood education.

Recognition

In 2017, Thompson was selected as one of the Royal Society Te Apārangi's "150 women in 150 words", celebrating the contributions of women to knowledge in New Zealand.

Selected publications