A combined presentation from the Office of Undergraduate Education, First Generation Scholarly Learning Community, and the UK College of Education’s P20 Education &

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Transcript A combined presentation from the Office of Undergraduate Education, First Generation Scholarly Learning Community, and the UK College of Education’s P20 Education &

A combined presentation from the Office of
Undergraduate Education, First Generation Scholarly
Learning Community, and the UK College of
Education’s P20 Education & Policy Law Lab
Acknowledgements
PRESENTERS:
 Matthew Deffendall
 Director, First Scholars Program at UK

Nikki Knutson
 Assistant Provost, Undergraduate Education
CONTRIBUTORS:
 Neal Hutchens
 Wayne Lewis
 Mike Peabody
 David Sacks
 Roger Sugarman
Overview

Characteristics of First-Generation College
Students (FGCS)

Institutional profile of FGCS and peers

Overview of national literature

Promising Practices and Benchmarks

Initiatives at UK

Recommendations
Why FGCS?
Retention strategies and programs
designed for first-generation college
students have an impact on the general
campus population but the reverse is not
necessarily true.
Thayer, P. (2000). Retention of Students from First Generation and Low Income Backgrounds.
Journal of the Council for Opportunity in Education, May 2000, 3-9.
Terminology

First-Generation College Student (FGCS)
“A student whose parents never
completed a four-year college degree.”
U.S. Department of Education

Continuing-generation and non-FGCS
“A student with at least one parent who
has completed a four-year college
degree.”
Characteristics of FGCS

Often low-income

More likely to be ethnic minority

Generally older than non-FGCS

More likely to be non-native English speakers

More likely to live at home or off-campus

Often take fewer credits or enroll part-time

Often work full-time
Characteristics of FGCS

Less academically prepared

Take more remedial classes

Low educational and degree aspirations

Less likely to apply to graduate school

Less likely to integrate into campus culture

Less likely to perceive faculty as caring and
approachable
Institutional Profile

17% 2009 cohort are FGCS

Lower high school GPA’s

Lower ACT scores

Lower first semester college GPAs

Gap widens over time

Tend to enroll initially in Undergraduate
Studies or Arts & Sciences
National Literature

24% FGCS vs. 68% CG enroll in college
and graduate
Chen, X., & Carroll, D. (2005). First-generation Students in Postsecondary Education. A look at their College Transcripts. Washington, DC: US
Department of Education, National Center for Educational Statistics.

Cumulative pattern
Lucas, S. R. (2001) Effectively Maintained Inequality: Education Transitions, Track Mobility, and Social Background Effects. American Journal of
Sociology. 106 (6), 1642-90.

Imposter phenomenon
Davis, J. (2010). The First-generation Student Experience: Implications for Campus Practice, and Strategies for Improving
Persistence and Success. Sterling, VA: Stylus Publishing.

Pull from home
Ramos-Sanchez, L. & Nichols, L. (2007). Self-efficacy of First-generation and Non-First-generation College Students: The Relationship with Academic
Performance and College Adjustment. Journal of College Counseling. 10 (1), 6-18.
Promising Practices

Peer mentoring

Faculty mentoring

Freshman seminar

Career counseling

Summer bridge

Parent programs

Student organizations

Living-learning communities
Benchmarks

Most target FGCS through TRiO programs
like Student Support Services

Michigan and Virginia offer no institution
wide support for FGCS on their main
campuses

Models exist at Arizona and Michigan
State
Initiatives at UK

Student Support Services
 Federally funded TRiO program serving low-income,
first-generation, and/or individuals with
documented disabilities
 Funded for 166 students annually

Robinson Scholars Program
 Full scholarship for eight semesters
 29 counties in Eastern Kentucky

First Scholars Program
 Grant funded program for 20 students each year
 Holistic program that provides $5,000 scholarship
Recommendations

Explore early interventions (i.e. summer
bridge)

Encourage FGCS to enroll in UK 101

Identify high impact areas (UGS and A&S)

Increase campus collaborations

Comprehensive program
Recommendations

Peer mentoring

Additional advisors for FGCS

Database of faculty and staff

Continue to expand research and data
collection

Pursue funding opportunities (i.e. McNair)
Recent Developments

Enhanced data collection and reporting

Application updates in 2011

Student organization

“1G Stories” project

Living-Learning Community

Expansion of UK 101

“First-generation” status added to the profile
sheet for 2011 advising conferences