faculty
Work Teachers College Hall (TEAC) 129
Lincoln NE 68588-0360
US
Work 402-472-3726 On campus, dial 2-3726
Dr. Elvira J. Abrica is a faculty member at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln (UNL) where she conducts research focused on increasing access to higher education for historically underrepresented groups across post-secondary institutional contexts. Specifically, her agenda centralizes race, ethnicity, and immigrant status in research across contexts of community colleges, science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields, and institutional research and assessment. Prior to arriving at UNL, Dr. Abrica served as a Postdoctoral Research Fellow for an action-research grant sponsored by The California State University Office of the Chancellor where she led a study on student success among Black and Latino males at California State University Fullerton (CSUF). Simultaneously, Dr. Abrica held a research position in an office of institutional research at a Southern California community college. Professionally, Dr. Abrica has worked in institutional research, assessment, and student affairs- across both 2-year and 4-year institutions- since 2009. Dr. Abrica received her B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). Currently, Dr. Abrica is conducting two grant-funded studies. One is a qualitative study of the vocational and transfer pathways of Black, Latino, and Asian American immigrant students within the Nebraska community college system, supported by the Council for the Study of Community Colleges. A second study is a quantitative investigation of how community college leaders expand and restrict the STEM transfer function, funded by the University of Nebraska Foundation. Dr. Abrica is a faculty affiliate of the Center for Research on Children, Youth, Families, and Schools (CYFS) at Nebraska and Project M.A.L.E.S at the University of Texas at Austin. Her work currently appears in the Journal of Applied Research in the Community College and Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis.

icon-academic-capEducation

  • Ph D, University of California, Los Angeles, 2015
  • MA, University of California, Los Angeles, 2009
  • BA, University of California, Los Angeles, 2008

icon-chat-userCourses

  • EDAD 995, Doctoral Seminar; Intermediate Quantitative Mthd, Fall 2016
  • EDAD 981, Intermediate Quantitative Methods for Educational Administration Research, Spring 2017
  • EDAD 981, Intermediate Quantitative Methods for Educational Administration Research, Fall 2017

icon-documentPublications and Other Intellectual Contributions

  • Observing Classroom Engagement in Community College, Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, December 2016
  • Strategies for navigating financial challenges by race, gender, and immigrant generation: Implications for persistence of Latino male community college students. , Journal of Applied Research in the Community College. , December 2016

icon-business-chartResearch & Grants

  • Immigrant Pathways in NE Comm Coll, Center for the Study of Community Colleges, April 2017
  • STEM Pathways in the Community College: An Empirical Examination of How Community Colleges Broaden or Restrict the STEM Transfer Function, Internal, May 2017

icon-bookmark-starAwards & Honors

  • Faculty Fellow, American Association of Hispanics in Higher Education (AAHHE), 2018

Have a correction?

If you'd like to correct your own entry, contact your departmental HR liaison. For corrections to another person's contact or department/unit information, use the form below.