Breaking
new
ground
is
never
easy,
but
each
year,
аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê
welcomes
dozens
of
students
seeking
to
become
the
first
in
their
families
to
earn
a
college
degree.
According to the National Association of Student Personnel Administrators (NASPA), a student is considered "first-generation" if their "parent(s) did not complete a four-year college or university degree, regardless of other family members' level of education."
Without first-hand, family experience, many first-generation college students face unique challenges on the road to earning a degree. But with support services designed to meet their needs and foster success, Baldwin Wallace University students are blazing trails to graduation every year.
This
fall,
one-quarter
of
аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê
first-year
students
were
"first-gen,"
and
Jamia
"Mia"
Basit-Hightower
'25
of
Bedford,
Ohio,
is
one
of
them.
The political science major, who aspires to be a policy analyst, juggles jobs on and off campus, activities and classes, and she is determined to finish her degree.
Being unafraid to ask for guidance is key. "Everyone at аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê has been very supportive. Whenever I ask a question, I get a lot of willingness to help," Basit-Hightower says. "I was drawn to that energy when I first visited campus and experienced the personal connections."
Now a campus tour guide herself and a member of the Yellow Jackets Marching Band, Voices of Praise Gospel Choir and Circle K service club, Basit-Hightower says she works "extra hard" to stay in balance. "I just make it happen," she says.
This
week,
аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê
is
marking
National
First-Generation
College
Student
Day
by
showcasing
and
celebrating
the
achievements
of
first-generation
students
and
graduates
at
аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê
and
beyond,
from
familiar
Yellow
Jackets
to
the
famous
from
first
lady
Michelle
Obama
to
renowned
Nobel
Prize-winning
physicist
Albert
Einstein.
The list of first-generation students and graduates runs deep and wide at аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê and includes many as well as who have walked in the shoes of first-gen students. Among them is аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê President Bob Helmer, who shared his story with first-gen students at a Tuesday event.
Helmer encouraged students to ask questions to help them navigate higher education, the very practice that is fueling Basit-Hightower's first-semester success.
"I bet I asked every question you have when I was a student," Helmer said. "Know that when you have questions, we are here to help."