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First Generation Students

First Generation Students. Standing in the Doorway of Success. Why Study First Generation Students?. At Risk Population Growing Segment of the College Bound Population Key to Enrollment Success for Many Institutions. Welcome to My House. The Doorway Cultural Differences

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First Generation Students

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  1. First Generation Students Standing in the Doorway of Success

  2. Why Study First Generation Students? • At Risk Population • Growing Segment of the College Bound Population • Key to Enrollment Success for Many Institutions

  3. Welcome to My House • The Doorway • Cultural Differences • Who’s Values Will be Embraced? “Education is not about learning more, it’s about behaving differently.” - Ruskin

  4. Studying First Generation Students in the VSC system Studied Freshmen vs Sophomores Residential campuses/students only 41-question survey using 5-point Likert scale Broke down freshmen Pre-registered from not returning Purpose – to determine if there were differences in how these groups responded to questions

  5. Findings of Interest • Family • 86% of all students maintained weekly contact • Importance of Financial Aid • 57% of Freshmen vs 73% of Sophomores • 24% of Freshmen did not know their debt level • Maintaining a Job • 59% of Freshmen employed vs 75% of Sophomores • Outside Influence • 50% of Freshmen had someone outside the family influence their decision to attend college

  6. Statistically Significant Findings • Family & Friends • Work • Connection to Faculty/Campus • Academic Preparation • Career Counseling/Relevance

  7. Influencers • Family and Friends • Over 90% of all students reported their families were supportive of them attending college • Over 90% reported their families continued to be supportive of attending college • Sophomores more likely to have HS friends still enrolled in college (83% vs 64%) • Work • 80% of all respondents worked • Sophomores more likely to work only on campus (44% vs 27%)

  8. Influencers – Continued • Connection to Faculty & Campus • PR freshmen were more likely to believe their faculty advisor was concerned about their success • More likely to believe most faculty were interested in their success • More likely to think of themselves as campus citizens vs customers • Academic Preparation • PR freshmen felt more academically prepared for college • Once Enrolled PR freshmen gained confidence in their academic skills • NR Freshmen confidence levels remained the same

  9. Influencers – Continued • Career Counseling & Relevancy • PR Freshmen were more likely to be enrolled in a major that suited their career goals • More likely to understand the relevance of a college education to the real world

  10. What Did We Learn? • First generation students remain close to family and friends in the first year • Work is important • We must build stronger connections with these students • Student issues are not one-dimensional • Academic skills and confidence are important • We must connect relevance of a college education

  11. What are the Answers? • We must understand the cultural transition • Connect appropriate advisors • Connect curriculum to real world relevance • Develop academic confidence

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