Please Note:
This profile was automatically generated using 10 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 10 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
View all 10 references Web References
-
1. Demographics News
www.ethnicmajority.com/demogra - [Cached]Published on: 6/5/2002 Last Visited: 5/15/2003
Census Bureau data-services specialist Linda Clark said she had not heard of the discrepancy before the report.
"I'm surprised by it, and there's been nothing that's crossed my desk about this," Clark said. -
2. Marin Nexus - Workshops
www.marinnexus.org/non_profit/ - [Cached]Published on: 9/9/2001 Last Visited: 6/20/2002
Linda Clark
...
Linda Clark: Linda Clark is a Partnership and Data Services Specialist for the Seattle Region of the Census Bureau. As the area manager for San Francisco, Alameda, and San Mateo counties during Census 2000, she oversaw all the field operations with a staff of 14,000. She has combined jobs in the public sector with non-profit management positions, and was executive director of Temple Isaiah in Lafayette for six years.
Click to Register (pdf document)
back to top -
3. Kenai Peninsula Online - Alaska NewspaperCensus finds Alaska grandparents parenting again 05/14/02
www.peninsulaclarion.com/stori - [Cached]Published on: 5/15/2002 Last Visited: 5/15/2002
To make sure that Native Alaskans were adequately represented, every other household in rural Alaska received the long form as opposed to one in six households elsewhere, said Linda Clark, the Census Bureau's data specialist for Alaska. The short form did not contain the grandparent questions.
...
Clark agreed the question is "subject to interpretation," but said the Census Bureau tries to pose questions as neutrally as possible.
"If we start telling people what we mean we are already coloring the question," Clark said.
...
Feedback on how well the grandparent questions work will be used to perhaps improve the question when the Census is taken again in 10 years, Clark said.
E-mail this Story a friend E-mail a message to the editor Read our paper

