First generation college students , those whose parents did not complete a four year degree , enroll in college at lower rates than their peers, complete at lower rates, take longer to graduate when they do, and carry more debt relative to their resources. These patterns persist after controlling for academic preparation and financial resources, suggesting that the gaps are not purely a matter of readiness or money. Research points to a more specific mechanism: first generation students lack what sociologists call 'college knowledge' , the implicit understanding of how institutions work, what opportunities are available, how to navigate bureaucracies, and how to build the relationships with faculty and staff that facilitate success.
Institutional responses
Institutions that have made meaningful progress on first generation student success share several practices: they reach out proactively rather than waiting for students to seek help; they connect students explicitly to services, scholarships, and opportunities that continuing generation students learn about through family networks; they train faculty and staff to recognize the signs that a student may be struggling with navigation rather than academics; and they build community among first generation students themselves , peer networks that share knowledge and normalize the experience of feeling out of place in an institution designed around a different student profile. The most effective programs treat first generation students as a distinct population with distinct institutional needs, not as deficient versions of continuing generation students.
