|
First Generation Challenges
The history of American higher education is full
of stories of students who succeeded even though their parents
never had much of an education: the freed slaves and their
children and grandchildren who enrolled at historically black
colleges, the immigrants and their children who enrolled at City
College in New York City, the World War II veterans who used the
GI Bill to pay for educations in the Ivy League institutions and
top public universities.
More recently, as colleges have faced criticism
over affirmative action, many have pledged to reach out to
“first generation” students — those whose parents never went to
college.
But for all the history and all the talk,
a report Tuesday by the National Center for Education
Statistics suggests that first generation students are at a
disadvantage throughout their time at colleges and universities.
They enter without as much preparation, they get lower grades,
and they are more likely to drop out. The report also notes
significant differences in the choices of majors of students
whose parents did and did not go to college.
The study was based on a long-term research
project examining the educational records of people who were
12th graders in 1992. Most of the data focus on the subset of
those students who went on to higher education, but a comparison
of all of those 12th graders and those who continued their
educations yields the first difference between those whose
parents did and did not have a college education: Of the entire
1992 cohort, 28 percent did not have parents who had gone to
college, but only 22 percent of the cohort that had any higher
education between 1992 and 2000 were such students.
Once in college, the attrition continues. More
first generation students in the pool left college without any
degree by 2000 (43 percent) than earned a bachelor’s degree (24
percent). Of those whose parents were college graduates, 68
percent had completed a bachelor’s degree and 20 percent had
left without a degree.
Differences between first generation and other
students were also apparent with regard to remedial education.
More than half of first generation students took some remedial
courses, compared to only 27 percent for those with parents who
had at least a bachelor’s degree. The need for remediation was
especially high in mathematics, in effect limiting many students
from considering certain majors. And the need for remediation
slowed down the first generation students on earning credits in
their first year — a key fact since students who are on track
after their first year are much more likely to graduate.
In general, students with a strong sense of
direction are more likely to do well in higher education, and
here again, first generation students lagged. A third of first
generation students entered college without an intended major,
compared to only 13 percent of students whose parents had a
bachelor’s degree.
When students picked majors, first generation
students were more likely than other students to pick business
or vocational fields, and were less likely to end up in the
sciences or the humanities. The following table indicates the
percentage of students in various categories who majored in
particular areas (numbers do not add up to 100 because small
categories and “other” are excluded):
|
Major
|
First Generation
|
Parents With Some College
|
Parents With Bachelor’s Degrees
|
|
Business
|
14.2%
|
13.9%
|
11.9%
|
|
Education/social work
|
4.7%
|
5.5%
|
6.0%
|
|
Science
|
3.4%
|
5.0%
|
8.4%
|
|
Engineering/architecture
|
3.9%
|
4.1%
|
6.9%
|
|
Computer science
|
1.1%
|
2.7%
|
1.8%
|
|
Mathematics
|
0.1%
|
0.7%
|
1.1%
|
|
Humanities
|
1.6%
|
2.3%
|
6.7%
|
|
Arts/applied arts
|
2.2%
|
3.5%
|
6.0%
|
|
Social sciences
|
7.3%
|
9.9%
|
14.1%
|
|
Health science/services
|
8.0%
|
5.9%
|
6.2%
|
|
Journalism/communications
|
1.8%
|
2.4%
|
4.3%
|
|
Human/protective services
|
2.6%
|
2.7%
|
3.0%
|
|
Vocational/technical
|
6.2%
|
3.6%
|
2.4%
|
One reason some educators have been interested
in first generation students is as a possible alternative to
affirmative action based on race or ethnicity. The theory goes
that critics of affirmative action would not have legal grounds
to challenge preferences for first generation students, but such
preferences would end up helping many minority students.
The data in the study suggest that this theory
is true only to a point. First generation students are less
likely to be white than are students whose parents have
bachelor’s degrees. But nearly two-thirds of first generation
students are white.
The following is the race/gender breakdown for
the students in the study:
|
Race/ethnicity
|
First Generation
|
Parents With Some College
|
Parents With Bachelor’s Degrees
|
|
American Indian
|
0.6%
|
0.6%
|
0.4%
|
|
Asian
|
4.7%
|
3.9%
|
6.5%
|
|
Black
|
13.7%
|
13.6%
|
5.3%
|
|
White
|
64.0%
|
73.6%
|
84.0%
|
|
Hispanic
|
16.9%
|
8.3%
|
3.8%
|
—
Scott Jaschik
Copyright 2005 Inside Higher Ed
|