Toolkit Library/

I was a low-income college student. Classes weren’t the hard part.

First-generation college students can feel out of place when they first arrive on campus, where there may be norms and cultural expectations with which they are unfamiliar. Rather than expecting students to figure this out on their own, what can colleges and universities do to understand the culture and context that these students are coming from and create more inclusive environments? In this thought-provoking article from the New York Times, sociologist and Harvard Graduate School of Education professor Anthony Abraham Jack draws on his personal experiences as well as on his research to discuss the challenges that low-income students often face in these situations.

Blue abstract painting

   Article

   10 minutes

   By: New York Times

   Educator-prep | K-12 educators


Making connections:

Principled Innovation asks us to work with others and recognize the limits of our own knowledge so that we can better understand and tackle the complex issues our communities face.

More on this topic:

Why diversity is hard (and why it’s worth it)

  Video

  2 minutes

  By: Columbia Business School, Katherine Phillips

Book excerpt: how to close the critical thinking gap for all students

  Article

  12 minutes

  By: Colin Seale

How to design deliberative democratic assemblies in an inclusive way: a recommendation for policy-makers

  Article

  15 minutes

  By: Democratic Audit, Marta Wojciechowska

Just thinking about cooperation can make you less prejudiced

  Article

  10 minutes

  By: Greater Good Science Center, Jill Suttie

Courage manifestos

  Tool

  15 minutes

  By: Leadology

Access our collection of +200 learning materials

PI toolkit library