Skip to main content

New College associate professor wins prestigious national award

Erika Camacho named the Outstanding Latino/a Faculty in Higher Education: Research/Teaching


Erika Camacho od the New College of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences.

March 16, 2018

Erika Camacho, associate professor of mathematics at the New College of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences, continues to add to her long list of awards.

This month, Camacho was named the Outstanding Latino/a Faculty in Higher Education: Research/Teaching by the American Association of Hispanics in Higher Education (AAHHE). Camacho was honored at the 13th annual conference in Irvine, California on March 10.

"I am honored to be recognized by an organization whose mission is to promote the causes that are so dear to me," said Camacho.

The annual award is selected by a panel of experts in higher education for faculty that demonstrate excellence in research and teaching.

"Dr. Camacho is recognized by her contemporaries as a scholar and leader. She has a strong record for pushing boundaries and initiatives that impact educational outcomes," said Loui Olivas, president of the AAHHE.

Camacho conducts research at the interface of mathematical applications to biology and sociology. Some of her projects include mathematically modeling the transcription network in yeast, the interactions of photoreceptors, social networks, and fungal resistance under selective pressure.

In 2017, Camacho was honored with ASU's Outstanding Achievement and Contribution Award, given out by the Commission on the Status of Women for recognition of her outstanding achievements toward advancing the status of women at ASU. In 2016, she was honored by the Victoria Foundation  for her impact in higher education among the Latino community. During Hispanic Heritage Month, the American Mathematical Society also honored Camacho with their Lathisms (Latin@s and Hispanic in the Mathematical Sciences) project. She was featured among 31 other Hispanic or Latino mathematicians.

More Science and technology

 

A group of people posing around the Arizona State University sign on the ASU Tempe campus with Old Main building in the background

ASU expands hands-on lab opportunities for online biochemistry students

As a New York City autopsy research coordinator, Stephanie McQuillan saw her continued education as a gateway for career…

May 16, 2024
Headshot of Petr Sulc

Blueprints of self-assembly: New design technique advances nanotechnology

Many biological structures of impressive beauty and sophistication arise through processes of self-assembly. Indeed, the natural…

May 16, 2024
Three people sit at a table signing documents

ASU assists Panamanian microelectronics development efforts

Arizona State University continues to expand its efforts to support the development of the semiconductor workforce and supply…

May 15, 2024