Education
After graduation as an external student of a boy"s secondary school, she studied mathematics, political, and social science at the universities in Berlin and Heidelberg, graduating in 1916 with honors.
After graduation as an external student of a boy"s secondary school, she studied mathematics, political, and social science at the universities in Berlin and Heidelberg, graduating in 1916 with honors.
She was a pioneer of social work. She had the customary education for girls of her class. The theme of her dissertation was "The organization of Jewish youth in Germany: a contribution to the classification of youth care and the youth movement." From 1919 she worked for the municipal government in Berlin-Schöneberg, and from 1910-1924 served as a deputy with the Association of Jewish Youth Clubs, for whom she later served as Business Manager and Executive Director in Heidelberg.
There she lectured on the theme "The Social Clerk in the Municipality" in 1918.
In 1919 she became a civil servant in the Economics Ministry, becoming a councillor in 1923 and of the leaders of the economics office in 1923. In 1927 she went to London as a consultant to the economic department of the German Embassy.
In 1930 she became a Professor of Economics at the Business Teaching Institute in Berlin. There, she pushed for the establishment of an institution for training (Jewish) kindergarten teachers.
She also pushed for social reform and for social work as an academic discipline, in the model of Alice Salomon.
On 26 June 1942, together with other employees of the Reichsvereinigung, she was deported to Minsk. Little is known of her last days, but she was most likely murdered in the Maly Trostinez extermination camp. A memorial stone commemorates her life at the Jewish Cemetery in Hannover.
Some of her papers are included in the Ida-Seele-Archive.
A street near the holocaust memorial in Berlin-Mitte is named after her, as is a footpath between the Hannover Opera house and the Hannover Holocaust memorial.
In 1933 she lost her position in the civil service and became a compulsory member of the Reichsvereinigung der Juden in Deutschland, where she became the head of the department of emigration, a supervisor for teacher education, and deputy chairman of the Jewish Women"s Federation.