Libraries Highlight 2025 National First-Generation Celebration Week

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Oct. 31, 2025, noon
Libraries are celebrating our first-generation students through the National First-Generation Celebration Week (November 3-11) with a table book display.
national first generation celebration banner

by the Kessler Scholars Program & Michelle Mitchell, Reference & Instruction Librarian

Syracuse University Libraries are celebrating our first-generation students through the National First-Generation Celebration Week (November 3-11) with a table book display which highlights the history of the first-generation identity in higher education and the diverse definitions of “first-generation.” Visit Bird Library’s first floor to peruse the display around the staircase and be sure to check out the online research guide. The display and the University’s celebrations will continue through November 12, 2025.

First-Generation College Celebration (FGCC) is celebrated annually on November 8 to commemorate the signing of the Higher Education Act (“HEA”) of 1965 by then-President Lyndon B. Johnson. This act created federal financial aid programs to fund students’ educations and made key investments in colleges and universities. Many of the HEA’s programs, particularly the Federal TRIO programs, promote postsecondary access, retention and completion for today’s limited-income, first-generation college students.

FGCC strives to celebrate first-gen students’ contributions to their communities and to occasion systemic social change by dismantling barriers to first-generation student success. Through this intentional advocacy focus, FGCC engages key constituencies in building upon the work left unfinished by the HEA.

First-Generation College Celebration (FGCC) is an annual opportunity to raise awareness of the first-generation college student identity by advancing an asset-based, national narrative of these students’ experiences and outcomes.

Since the Council for Opportunity in Education (COE) and FirstGen Forward (FGF, formerly the Center for First-generation Student Success) hosted the inaugural celebration in 2017, hundreds of higher education institutions, corporations, government officials, non-profits and K-12 schools have joined together in recognizing the achievements of the first-generation community on and around November 8.

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