First generation students attending the University of New Hampshire benefit from a growing trove of campus resources to ensure their success.
The school was recently selected to join the FirstGen Forward Network, which helps create campus environments that improve the academic and social experiences of these students – all of whom are the first in their families to attend higher education.
Donna Perez, executive director of UHS’s Institute for Student Success, said many first gen students are navigating college on their own.
“Some of that social capital, or networking or familiarity with a college campus that continuing generation students might have,” said Perez, “some first gen students don’t have that when they get here.”
Perez said inclusion in the FirstGen Forward Network is a boon for UNH, connecting it to peer institutions nationwide also working to improve first gen student outcomes.
Research shows that once on campus, first gen students are less likely to complete a degree.
Twenty percent of undergraduate students on the UNH Durham campus are first gen. That number jumps to more than 40% in Manchester, and nearly 70% in the College of Professional Studies Online.
Perez said staff routinely work with these students to build confidence in engaging with campus organizations or even attending a professor’s office hours.
She said it helps when they see a “proud first gen” sticker on their instructor’s door.
“So, we’re trying to build an identity that we have not previously had on the campus for what being a first-gen student is,” said Perez, “and we’re lucky to have lots of our administrators, faculty, and staff who were first-gen themselves.”
Perez said that includes the Dean of the College of Engineering and Physical Sciences, and even the president of UNH herself.
Cover Photo: The University of New Hampshire joins 429 higher education institutions that have joined the FirstGen Forward Network, representing 49 states and the District of Columbia. (Canva)
Publisher’s Notes: UNH works to make ‘first gen’ students feel right at home was first published by Public News Service, and republished with permission. NH Latino News amplifies stories that center Hispanic, Latino voices to provide greater visibility the communities we serve.