Description:
This book examines how higher education institutions positively enhance the learning experiences of first-generation college students.
Review Quotes:
Reimagining higher education as a collaborative, inclusive space where belonging and strengths-based support drive institutional growth and student success, this groundbreaking anthology offers innovative pedagogies for globalized classrooms. An essential resource, it celebrates the insights and transformative potential of first-generation college students, inspiring meaningful change in teaching and learning. John Watzke, Ph.D., Dean and Professor of the School of Education and Graduate School, University of Portland
Taken together, these essays demonstrate a profound maturing of thought, first opened generations earlier by Paulo Freire and global collaborators in the immediate postcolonial era. In a dramatically different time marked by the post-pandemic reaction to globalization and diversity, we now have targeted strategies and deep theoretical grounding critical for a future where higher education can continue to thrive and grow by welcoming those who have all too often been actively unwelcomed in higher education. The net result will not only transform higher education but the societies of which they are a part. Highly recommended for all interested in innovative approaches to pedagogy in higher education that bring in learning strategies for first-generation students. Skills and approaches, such as the African Palaver pedagogy, promise to ultimately serve all throughout the global enterprise that is higher education today. Bryan Froehle, professor and director of the Ph.D. in practical theology, Palm Beach Atlantic University and co-author of Global Catholicism: Between Disruption and Encounter (Brill, 2025)
This volume masterfully infuses the conversation surrounding first-generation (FGEN) college students with a much-needed asset-based framing. Dr. Aihiokhai and his team make a significant contribution by broadening the discourse around FGEN students to include a global perspective. Readers will find liberation in three critical areas: first, challenging the perception of FGEN students as deficient in their abilities and knowledge of the world; second, overcoming the narrow, US-centric framing that has historically dominated discussions about first-gen experiences; and third, recognizing the urgent need to be informed and cultivate globalized spaces for learning. Byron R. Martin, Ph.D., is the Founder and CEO of Outlast Learning & Service