Download our free guide for first-gen professionals!

    Being a first-generation student never leaves you

    That’s why we started The First-Generation Professionals Movement — an exclusive environment where first-gen professionals can get the support and community they need.

    The purpose of The First-Generation Professional Movement is to provide a safe space for first-generation professionals to ask questions, give advice, and find resources on how to succeed in the workplace. The movement was founded by Barrier Breakers®, Inc., a non-profit organization dedicated to helping first-generation and marginalized students and professionals succeed before, during, and after higher education.

    Our First-Generation Resources

    Private LinkedIn Group

    Our monitored, private LinkedIn group provides a space to ask your questions and network with fellow first-gen professionals.

    Free Downloadable Guide

    Created by a first-gen professional for first-gen professionals, this guide gives you need-to-know advice for advancing in the workplace.

    First-Gen Pride Badges

    As a member of our community, showcase your first-gen pride with badges for your LinkedIn page and email signature!

    Who “counts” as first-generation?

    There are a myriad of interpretations of first-generation, causing various researchers to site anywhere between 22% to 77% of students being first-gen. The traditional definition is a student whose parents did not complete a 4-year college or university degree.

    Our version of the definition is expanded to be: A student or professional who is the first of their generation to have a traditional four year college experience.

    This expansion allows us to include groups that are similarly under-resourced, such as:

    • Non-first-born-children whose siblings may have attended but parents didn’t

    • Children of parents who earned degrees later in life, therefore not going through the “traditional” admissions and student experience

    • Children of parents with degrees from non-American institutions

    • Foster children who may not know what degrees their parents obtained

    • And more!