Student Applications Now Open for First-Generation Mentoring Program

Julio Martinez (left), biomedical engineering student, and Timothy Muldoon (right), professor of biomedical engineering. "Meeting with Dr. Muldoon has been a turning point in my university journey, making it both manageable and memorable. His guidance and advice have been a pillar of support, not just academically but also emotionally."
Are you the first in your family to go to college? You are not alone! First-generation college students make up almost 25% of the total U of A undergraduate population, and many faculty and administrators are also first in their family to attend college.
The First-Generation Mentoring Program, sponsored by the Honors College, was developed to help first-generation freshman and sophomore students navigate life on campus by pairing them with caring faculty.
Julio Martinez, current Path Scholar from Van Buren, is one of the first in his family to get a college education. His faculty mentor, Tim Muldoon, professor of biomedical engineering, connected Martinez with opportunities to engage in research while on campus.
Not all student-mentor pairs lead to research — and students do not need to be in honors to participate. For other first-gen students, the relationship with a faculty mentor may focus on how to manage your time, bounce back from a low test score or map out future plans.
Through at least two meetings a semester, faculty mentors can help students learn more about topics such as the following:
- Becoming more involved on campus
- Navigating a career path
- Exploring study abroad opportunities
- Becoming an honors student, if interested
- Finding an honors research mentor
- Balancing family/school/work
- Learning more about community engagement
This program is open to all freshmen and sophomores — both honors and non-honors students. Students can apply using the First-Generation Mentoring Program application. This form can also be accessed on the First-Generation Mentoring Program web page. The deadline is Friday, Sept. 12, or when all spaces are filled, whichever comes first.
Students and faculty will be informed of their matches by email.
The Honors College will provide recommendations on when/how to meet you with your mentor and some guiding questions for the first conversation.
Signing up is easy — do it today! For more information, contact Xochitl Delgado Solorzano (xdelgad@uark.edu), assistant dean of the Honors College.
Faculty members interested in participating may learn more and sign up to volunteer by visiting the First-Generation Mentoring Program web page.
Contacts
Shelby Gill, director of communications
Honors College
479-575-2024, segill@uark.edu