First-gen at WSU: Called to care
The WSU College of Nursing has the highest percentage of first-gen students at the university.

An interesting fact surfaced in Washington State University’s recent Economic Impact Report: the College of Nursing has the highest percentage of first-generation students among WSU colleges. More than 37% of WSU Nursing students are from families where the parents or guardians don’t have a bachelor’s degree.
WSU has long had a strong institutional commitment to first-gen students, a group that makes up nearly a third of student enrollment across the university. But what is it about the College of Nursing that attracts such a large percentage of first-gen students?
For many, it’s the chance to serve.
I want to go into nursing because I grew up in a rural town and a lot of people there are farm workers. I saw the barriers to health care and I wanted to be able to address those barriers.
Jorge Gaytan Garcia

WSU offers significant programs for first-gen students, including help navigating financial aid, tutoring, and academic and personal counseling. First-gen students at WSU aren’t a niche; they’re centered in the university’s structures and operations.
Garcia and his family took part in a Spanish-language orientation that helped his parents, both migrant farmworkers, feel comfortable sending him to WSU.
“WSU definitely does help first-gen students a lot,” he said.


Torres, who attended WSU Tri-Cities for her undergraduate degree, relied on the TRIO Student Support center there.
“I realized there were a lot of people like me, and they provided so many amazing services,” she said. “If you need help in any regard or you’re feeling a certain way – homesick, even – just reach out and they’ll be more than willing to help you.”
Garcia said WSU gave him the confidence to embark on his nursing journey.
“Since I was the first in my family to go to university I had no idea what the system was like, how to apply for a dorm, how to move in,” he said. “But I met my community. I’ll be the first in my family to graduate with a bachelor’s degree. It’s a great honor and a great responsibility, but hopefully I’m not the last one, either.”
Explore WSU News to learn more about how WSU’s impact goes beyond the numbers.
