Title: |
Dorothy C. Adkins papers |
Repository: |
Drs. Nicholas and Dorothy Cummings Center for the History of Psychology
Phone: 330-972-7285 http://www.uakron.edu/chp |
Creator: |
Adkins, Dorothy Christina, 1912- |
Dates: |
1925-1975 |
Quantity: |
6.27 linear feet |
Abstract: |
The Dorothy C. Adkins papers include personal notes, data, formulas, and test results of major testing projects throughout
Adkins' career. Also present in the collection are various articles and correspondence regarding testing and
measurements as well as some personal correspondence and materials. View finding aid for the Dorothy C. Adkins papers. |
Identification: |
p15960coll10/id/1350 |
Location: |
Boxes M4027-M4045; M101 |
Language: |
The records are in English |
Dorothy Adkins was born on April 6, 1912 in Atlanta Georgia. She attended The Ohio State University for her B.S. (1931) and PhD (1937). Her dissertation under Herbert Toops was entitled A Comparative Study of Methods of Selecting Test Items.
Beginning in 1936, Adkins worked as a psychometrics assistant examiner under L.L. Thurstone at the University of Chicago. In 1938 she was promoted to research associate. From 1940-1944, Adkins took a position as chief research and test constructor for the United States Social Security Board. From 1944-48 she moved on to work for the United States Civil Service Commission as chief of social sciences administration testing, policy consultant, and chief test developer.
In 1948, Adkins entered the academic sphere as a psychology professor at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill. She remained there until 1965 and was Department Chair from 1950-1961. At the time, she was the only female department head at the university, and only one of a few coeducational departments throughout the United States. In 1966, Adkins took a position as an educational psychology professor and researcher at the University of Hawaii's Center for Research in Early Childhood Education until her retirement in 1973.
Adkins' training at Ohio State under Thurstone made her a measurement expert publishing many articles on the subject. She
utilized the new statistical technique of factor analysis to study educational curriculum, program evaluation, and affect
in children. With Bonnie Baliff, she published the "Gumpgookies" method of assessing child motivation to achieve in school.
In this method, a child had to choose which of two imaginary Gumpgooky characters he or she identified with. Her well known
book is:
Test Construction: Development and Interpretation of Achievement Tests (1960).
Adkins was a member of the American Psychological Association as well as the Psychometric Society, of which she was President in 1949. Dorothy Adkins passed away in 1976.
The Dorothy C. Adkins papers largely include notes, data, formulas, and test results of major testing projects throughout Adkins' career. Professional papers written by colleagues in the field of testing and referenced in her research are included in Adkins' papers as well.
The researcher assumes full responsibility for observing all copyright, property, and libel laws as they apply.
There are no access restrictions on the materials for research purposes, and the collection is open to the public.
Separated Material: Separated MaterialAdkins doctoral hood has been transferred to Box M101 in the oversized materials shelving
The following terms have been used to index the description of this collection in the library's online public access catalog.
Cite as: [identification of item], [folder number, box number], Archives of the History of American Psychology, The Drs. Nicholas and Dorothy Cummings Center for the History of Psychology - The University of Akron
Updated by Samantha Hurst, October 2021.