She was affiliated with the department of statistics at Colorado State University beginning in the early 1970s,[5] and became an instructor for their introductory statistics courses in the 1970s and 1980s, also teaching in mechanical engineering and business.[2] Returning to graduate study, she completed a doctorate in mechanical engineering from Colorado State University in 1986, with a dissertation applying statistical quality measures to solar power.[1] She became the first woman at Colorado State to earn this degree.[1][2] After completing her doctorate, she became a statistical consultant,[1][2] naming her firm Boardman Associates.[1]
She survived a bout of breast cancer in 2004, and died on October 11, 2018, of pancreatic cancer.[1]
^Membership listing(PDF), American Statistical Association, p. 29, retrieved 2022-05-02 – via Duke University
^Author affiliation as listed in Thomas, J.; Boardman, Eileen C. (October 1972), "ASA 1971 Publications Survey—Summary of Findings", The American Statistician, 26 (4): 17–22, doi:10.1080/00031305.1972.10477357, JSTOR2683201