Firstgeneration college students, those for whom neither parent holds a bachelor's degree, arrive on campus with a particular set of strengths and a particular set of gaps. The strengths are often underappreciated: they tend to be highly motivated, resourceful, and practiced at navigating unfamiliar situations with limited support. The gaps are real and consequential: they often lack familiarity with the unwritten rules of academic culture, have fewer professional networks to draw on, and carry financial pressures that their continuinggeneration peers typically don't.
Institutions that serve these students well don't focus only on academic preparation. They understand that the challenge is partly cultural, that the academy has its own norms, expectations, and social codes that are invisible to those who grew up around them and opaque to those who didn't.
What actually helps
The research on firstgeneration student success points to a consistent set of institutional factors: proactive advising (waiting for students to seek help is not sufficient), belonging interventions (addressing the sense of not fitting in that many firstgeneration students report), financial support that addresses the full cost of attendance, and faculty mentorship that goes beyond the transactional.
Peer mentorship from slightly older firstgeneration students, people who have navigated the same cultural translation, is among the highestleverage interventions. The value is not just informational. It is the visible proof that someone like you has done this successfully.
