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Congrats! You’re the first in your family to get into college. Now what?

Cameron Russell’s academic journey took him from a small town in Louisiana to Ann Arbor, Michigan, and the 50,000 students at the state’s flagship university.

Mr. Russell’s mother, a rural mail carrier, and father, a crawfish farmer, always pushed him toward college, even though they didn’t have degrees. But his family’s encouragement could only go so far.

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As more attention is paid to first-generation college students, more is known about how to support them – and about how to help people successfully access and graduate from college.

“As a first-generation student, where do you start? What do you do? How do you prepare for college when no one in your family’s been before?” Mr. Russell says. 

He found answers – and financial and academic support – from a relatively recent initiative, the Kessler Scholars Collaborative, aimed at buoying first-generation students.

Undergraduates who are the first in their family to attend college often need help navigating campuses, financial aid forms, and the pressures of cultural change. To aid them – and to broaden the number of people who have access to college – organizations are honing their support to focus on everything that’s needed to achieve a degree. 

“Kessler gave me the opportunity to come into my own as a first-generation college student,” says Mr. Russell, who graduated in April and is now enrolled in a Ph.D. program in biochemistry at Emory University in Atlanta. “It really shaped me.” 

Huanying Yeh’s academic ambition began in 2016 when her family moved to Sacramento, California, from Taiwan. She started high school barely able to speak English.

Her parents would write words from the dictionary on flashcards “and encourage me to join them for a study session,” she remembers. 

In 2020, Ms. Yeh was accepted at highly selective Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, which her family couldn’t afford. She hoped she would qualify for need-based financial aid. 

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

As more attention is paid to first-generation college students, more is known about how to support them – and about how to help people successfully access and graduate from college.

That year, the university joined the Kessler Scholars Collaborative, an initiative designed to assist first-generation students academically and financially. Ms. Yeh, whose parents never finished college in Taiwan, became one of the school’s first recipients.

As educators wrestle with the best way to combat declining interest from Generation Z students in attending college, many agree that exorbitant cost is a big factor. For first-generation college students in particular, hurdles can also include not knowing how to navigate campuses, financial aid forms, and the pressures of cultural change as they carry the hopes of their families. To help these undergraduates – and to broaden the number of people who have access to college – organizations are honing their support to focus on everything that’s needed to achieve a degree. 

“It’s not just the money that makes it difficult for first-gen students to go to college,” says Katharine Meyer, an educational policy scholar and a fellow at the Brookings Institution. “It’s the college knowledge that’s necessary to go to and through an institution that can be really hard to navigate.”

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