Publication | Closed Access
Is First-Gen an Identity? How First-Generation College Students Make Meaning of Institutional and Familial Constructions of Self
23
Citations
23
References
2020
Year
EthnicityEducationSocial SciencesIdentity Studies (Intersectionality Studies)Stem EducationFocus GroupsCultural IdentityPersonal IdentityStudent CultureInclusive EducationCollege PipelineIdentity IssueSocial IdentityFamilial ConstructionsFirst-generation CategorizationsStudent SuccessFirst-generation StatusHigher EducationCultureSociology
Institutions increasingly use first-generation categorizations to provide support to students. In this study, we sought to understand how students make meaning of their first-generation status by conducting a series of focus groups with 54 participants. Our findings reveal that students saw first-generation status as an organizational and familial identity rather than social identities. This status was connected to alterity and social distance that was most salient in comparison to continuing-generation peers. Our recommendations include reexamining the role of first-generation-specific programming on campus, creating opportunities for meaning-making, supporting students within changing family dynamics, and exploring the interaction between first-generation status and other marginalized identities.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1