How To Prepare for College

When approaching a new journey or new experience we can find ourselves both excited and nervous at the same time. Nerves are a sign of passion and being nervous about change is a good thing as it represents your desire to enjoy the outcome of this change. However these nerves can sometimes be overwhelming and take the joy out of an experience and cause us to be a little apprehensive about what is to come.

As a first generation college student myself, I can echo these statements and also add that there is a sense of discomfort that is present when you are the first in your family to go on to high education. There may be family members and friends who express that so and so didn’t need college to be successful in life, or that it’s way too expensive to attend anyways. There is nothing easy about the idea of taking on a challenge that you’ve never seen someone in your family accomplish. Having a role model to guide you and help you is an advantage that first generation high school graduates just don’t get. This need of modeling is engrained in us as humans and carries on heavily in those early years of life. Toddlers model behaviors that they see and pick up on words that they hear. This behavior carries on into our adult years as well. We tend to model after our parents, or older siblings or cousins, so when there is no college student in a home representing this action of going to college, it feels a little impossible to imagine going yourself. This is the first barrier to higher education that occurs naturally for first gen students. Without a trail to follow the journey to college looks unattainable. The good thing is, that even without what it feels like everyone else may have, college is not unattainable and college is never NOT an option for someone and that is especially true with the help of community college. 

With the millions of dollars available for scholarships, student resources, multiple platforms to learn, numerous online options and certificates and careers to choose from, community colleges lay down a path to success for these first generation students and beyond. It’s almost as if community college is that “yellow brick road” leading to the Emerald City (a Bachelors or trade school career).

Even though community colleges do hold all of the tools necessary for students to be successful, it doesn’t mean the journey to and through community college isn’t as complicated as a four year university. There is still the same FASFA application process, there’s still the same class registration period and all of the other quite intimidating experiences that come along with college education journeys. There are a few steps to make before choosing to attend community college. These steps are not necessarily REQUIRED but do help to create a successful both high school and college experience. Basically, this is how to really maximize your college experience right before you attend, and during your first two years. 

1. Utilizing the high school years to be involved:
This can mean being involved in your community or school clubs or organizations. Of course this also comes from a place of privilege as not all students are able to be in clubs or sports for financial reasons or other reasons. But being involved in your community can be as simple as volunteering at an animal shelter or visiting a local homeless shelter. These actions can help you find a personal passion and help establish a resume to use while attending college.

2. Complete financial preparation: Community  colleges will provide a platform for assistance with the financial preparation required to attend college. There is a lot to fill out in FASFA that can be difficult to complete when you’re not familiar with a lot of the terminology. Because these actions are on a dedicated timeline, completing them sooner than later is always best practice and helps to streamline the entire registration process. 

3. Find Scholarships: A common misconception is that scholarships are only for smart students. While having academic success does set up students for certain scholarships, a high GPA is not the only way to find dollars to apply to college tuition. Many scholarships are essay based, or even connected to some other form of submission. With a quick google I found this “unusual scholarships site” with unique scholarship opportunities that are real ways to get cash for college. 

4. Research, Research, Research: Knowing what is to offer at a community college and what opportunities lie ahead is going to be important in the planning process and taking full advantage of the classes available. For many, the transfer program is going to offer the pathway to a bachelors degree at a four year university. With the help of an advisor who can assist in the required attention to detail and plenty of personal research, a transfer plan can be established early on so that each and ever class taken has the highest potential to transfer and apply to a degree at the University of choice. 

4. Register for Classes early: This tip is simple. There are registration deadlines for many reasons and classes in the first two years of college tend to fill up pretty quickly since the amount of students taking the courses is pretty high. The classes will be offered in multiple times of the days and weeks but if you need your schedule to cooperate with a work schedule, then registering for specific times will be very important. Create reminders around these deadlines so you aren’t left with 8ams on Fridays & 6-8pm classes (unless these sound like fun times for you). 

5. Take advantage of student resources: Advisers are not meant to be seen once a semester during registration periods, they can serve as the first point in communication with many other resources. They may direct you to the organization or club that assists with resume building. Advisors have the ability to provide help with more than just registration for classes, their goal is to get you to complete your degree and they are well aware that it takes more than just registering for classes to make that goal a reality. 

6. Attend office hours: Attending office hours is not a shameful experience and can actually show your professor that you care about your grade. Learning is unique to each and every student so hearing information in a form other than during a lecture with other student’s can be helpful and establish a healthy habit of not being afraid to ask for help. Having questions is not a representation of the lack of ability. Struggling to understand information is natural, and searching for the help is the unnatural part that requires a real strength, so definitely take advantage of office hours with professors.  

7. Don’t just “choose a major”: If you do just choose one and decide to change it, there is not a problem with that, but definitely feel like you are not just picking a major because it is “easy”. Students change majors around 3 times before finding the one they graduate with. I recommend really taking the time to learn what degrees your college has to offer before picking, even if you think you may know what you want to study. For first generation students this is especially important, because we are not usually familiar with all of the career opportunities available because we did not see these happen first hand around us. There are careers in topics that you wouldn’t expect, such as Game Design, and Aeronautics and Aviation Technology which are not as traditional as business or education. 

8. Ask for Help: Ultimately this piece of advice is going to provide the foundation for a successful college experience.

“Community colleges are certainly one of America’s best-kept secrets.” – Jill Biden

The information to be successful and to achieve even the biggest of dreams is out there for all to achieve. Even if there are quite a few barriers to your goals of higher education, there is always a way to get through them. College is for everyone, opportunities are for everyone. 

College isn’t for Everyone

Deciding on a career path at the age of 17 or 18 should not be a standard practice. At that age, young adults are not in a “10 years from now” mindset, and they really shouldn’t be.

There has been a roughly 3.1% decline in enrollment in the Fall of 2021 for undergraduate studies (Center, 2022). Gap years are becoming much more common than they used to be with students rejecting the idea of spending money for online classes that don’t deliver the substance of higher education that in person classes do and a number of additional logistical reasons. Our students are experiencing crisis after crisis with the pandemic, and the reality that is our American Economic environment. Students do not want to attend college and blatant burn out is another real problem as well.

Community College Comparison to Four Year UniveristyAfter years of public education or private education, it can feel overwhelming to then have to decide essentially what you may plan on doing for the rest of your life. There is an overwhelming pressure to “choose a major” or “choose a school”. These teens don’t know what to do or what to study, find themselves settling, and later realizing they have spent the past 3 years dedicated to a topic that is not actually what they really want to continue doing, and racked up a bill of 100K or more while doing it.

Community colleges can help students avoid these issues, and provide a bridge to the path of either a success in a traditional bachelors degree in business or engineering or a certificate within a trade such as welding or becoming a vet tech. Austin Community College alone has over 100 degrees and certificate paths for students to explore. When students are limited to the idea that a bachelors degree is all that will provide them success, opportunities are missed.

Students should know there are careers and opportunities within fields that can align with a certain passion they may have. The ACC Vet Tech Program for example would be a great opportunity for an animal lover. The digital media program would serve a wonderful platform for a student interested in graphic design. There is room for exploration and growth at a community college that is not accessible within a traditional four year university. With a combination of affordable prices and scholarships, students could better dedicate those younger “lost” years to exploration into a career that won’t leave them with regret and burn out in their mid twenties. When you aren’t paying about 75% more for each class you’re taking, there is a flexibility and power in taking control of the future.

A four year university is not the only way to go, and it’s not the best option or most “successful” pathway to a life in a rewarding career. College is not for everyone and that is more than okay for our students to hear from their teachers, and their life influencers. Bachelors degrees do not come printed with a promise of a high paying job. That is the reality that cannot be hidden from younger generations any longer and community colleges have the responsibility of speaking the truth.

A. (2021, April 16). ACC Vet Tech Program – “Adopt Our Pets” Spring 2021. YouTube. Retrieved February 7, 2022, from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=51fDb1Q416Y&feature=youtu.be

Center, N. R. (2022, January 13). Current Term Enrollment Estimates. National Student Clearinghouse Research Center. Retrieved February 7, 2022, from https://nscresearchcenter.org/current-term-enrollment-estimates/

Paying for College | Austin Community College District. (n.d.). Austin Community College District. Retrieved February 6, 2022, from https://www.austincc.edu/paying-for-college

 

Influencers, Social Media & Their Power

Everyone knows that social media and influencers rule the world now. Tiktoks, Instagram reels, Facebook stories, and beyond all seem to control what is “trending” in both the digital world and real world. Content creators can’t keep up and are always after what strategies are going to “beat the algorithm”. The second you find yourself participating in a trending audio on TikTok, the moment has passed. Fashion trends seem to have been affected by the increase in control of influencers and social media as well. Your “trendy jacket” quickly goes out of style before even shipping to your door. This kind of power that social media and influencers hold is both a blessing and a curse. Take for example the following tiktok, proving that Gen Z even has the power to lower Juilliard’s google rating.

Juilliard Google Reviews

This idea of trends ruling the world and dictating whats either “in or out” has always controlled the way younger generations feel about the idea of attending community college. Community colleges and influencers have not taken advantage of this kind of control.

Graduating from High School and attending the local Community College is not the most trendy thing to do as an 18 year old. Over the years community college has always received a bad rep and been aligned with students who maybe weren’t “smart enough” to go to a larger four year university. During my time as a senior in 2014, my High School would post senior students photos with the list of college acceptances underneath in the hallway for the entire school to see. Faculty and staff were not boasting about the students who got into the community college, it was the larger universities such as The University of Texas, or Rice that stood out amongst the crowd. How is it that even the “influencers” of higher education seem to also contribute to the stigma that surrounds community college?

Establishing that younger generations think highly of their influencers and allow for their opinions to dictate their decisions, makes it easy to understand that being judged for attending community college is a huge barrier that students face. 

So how do we fix this? How do we change the current sentiment around community college?

We show our students that community college is trendy. Saving your money on core college classes is trendy. Making wise decisions to take control of your future is trendy. Planning for success in accomplishing a bachelors or career in a technical trade is trendy. We relay these messages on social platforms and through social influencers that are already in front of younger generations and filling their social media newsfeeds.  Community colleges open the doors to careers and achievements that initially may seem out of reach for a high school grad. It is understanding that social media has the power to initiate this change and streamline the process of removing the stigma that holds students victim to missing out on the benefits of community colleges.

Community Colleges hold so much power in setting students up for success. The community colleges themselves need to improve their marketing and branding and establish themselves as more than the “affordable option” and extend their social channels into the current trending styles of content that our younger generations are vibing with. Students need to understand the potential of choosing a transfer program. It’s not clear to them that their degrees don’t get printed with a special note citing their years at a community college, that they are printed and sealed with the University they graduate from. The idea community college is not a back up plan must be adopted by High School faculty and staff, influencers in the homes, and the Higher Education institutes themselves.

It’s time to stop gatekeeping higher education and make community college a first choice college.

Accessibility needs to be a common practice

It’s worth noting that a lot of the higher education journeys that students go through are over complicated and oftentimes feel nearly impossible to navigate. The applytexas website has application instructions that are 87 pages long (ApplyTexas, n.d.). This kind of process is deeply overwhelming. The “academic advisors” students come across don’t simplify the journey either. The reality is that what you don’t know will indeed kill you when it comes to getting into college.

Community College Tips

I came across a tiktok by “communitycollegetips” highlighting this very concern. Why is the process so complicated? Why are there so many steps to even understanding how to sign up for community college classes? Why do advisors not know how to help? Why aren’t the right tools available for students?

First generation students rely heavily on outside influencers to inform them of their options for continuing education. The secret to success in advising and college planning is not accessible for those who need it most. The advice that is given to these students instead comes from a place of privilege. The following are a few key points that students need to know.

  • Your first two years of college are generally your basics
  • Community colleges also offer sponsorship opportunities
  • University professors often teach at the local Community College

Essentially students who don’t understand the top three statements end up going into debt for the first two years of University that could have best been spent at a local community college or don’t continue their education journey at all after High School. The courses at the local community college in Austin support that their cost is about 74% lower than that of the tuition in central Texas (Austin Community College District | Start Here. Get There., n.d.). There is nothing stigmatized about saving money however access to this information is found nowhere and we are often hearing that marketing community college as cheap does not always invite students in.

What are some things you wish you would’ve known about community college?

 

Community College is not Plan C


When I was discussing college and what my plans were for after high school not once was I given the idea to attend our local community college. I personally being a first generation graduate did not know much about the college journey in general I just knew that I was not ready for my education journey to end with a High School Diploma. In many Texas High Schools you will find programs like AVID (Advancement Via Individual Determination) where their goal is to help first generation students continue their education with assistance registering for SAT’s or ACT’s, waiving college application fees. The purpose of these programs is solely to get students on track for a college education (What AVID Is / College & Career Readiness – Explore AVID Students by Grade Level, n.d.). This kind of assistance may be the difference between a student continuing their education or not. Unfortunately relying on these programs alone to assist the students who would best benefit from them is not and should not be the extent of support these students receive. When High School counselors or other influencers discuss post high school education options, it seems to be that community college is always the “back up plan” when in reality it should be the foundation and “initial plan” for a successful post High School education journey. The truth is that community college is the path to greatness and the door to many other doors for students like me. However, because no one was able to communicate that value to me either through a high school programs or regular community college marketing, I didn’t know it was an option. My life influencers failed to advise me to attend community college, as well as the community college itself. When an education is purely marketed as “affordable” it does not necessarily shine as a desired pathway compared to other colleges. I’d like to discuss how community college education is more than just affordable and that it should no longer be marketed as the “cheap option” or “plan c” but is the actual start to true success.

What AVID Is / College & Career Readiness – Explore AVID Students by Grade Level. (n.d.). AVID. Retrieved January 19, 2022, from https://www.avid.org/what-avid-is