First-Gen Week event highlights resilience, belonging, and legacy-building
小猪视频 honored its community of first-generation college students during the annual聽Presby First+ Pinning Ceremony聽on Nov. 10 in Kuhne Auditorium, marking a defining moment in the college鈥檚 celebration of聽First-Gen Week.听
The ceremony recognized the achievements, challenges, and contributions of students who are among the first in their families to attend college.
This year鈥檚 event also acknowledged the聽60th anniversary of the , landmark legislation that opened the doors of higher education to broader communities and laid the groundwork for expanding access and opportunity across the United States.
A Community Built on Strength and Purpose
In her welcome,聽Tomeika Bennett, director of the Presby First+ program, emphasized that the ceremony is more than a recognition鈥攊t is a celebration of shared identity and the determination that brings students to PC.
鈥淭he Presby First+ pin represents a community connected by a common goal,鈥 Bennett said. 鈥淭onight is a reminder that you can do hard things, that you can navigate unfamiliar territory, because your being here already is a testament to the strength that you possess.鈥
Bennett also highlighted the significance of first-generation students on campus and across the state.
鈥淚n South Carolina, nearly 50 percent of undergraduate students are first-gen. At PC, one in three students is first-gen,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou all represent an incredible community of diverse learners whose lived experiences contribute to the vibrancy of 小猪视频.鈥
鈥榊ou Deserve This Space鈥
Dr. Selena Blair, Rogers-Ingram Vice President for Justice and Community Wellbeing, offered words of encouragement rooted in her own experience as a first-generation student. For Blair, the pin symbolizes more than attendance鈥攊t symbolizes聽identity, pride, and perseverance.
鈥淚 want you to look at this pin as a sign of resilience. It鈥檚 a sign of determination. It鈥檚 a sign of fighting,鈥 Blair said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a sign of breaking barriers and starting new legacies.鈥
Blair shared that she still experiences moments where she questions whether she belongs in professional spaces鈥攂ut she reminds herself of the same truth she offered to students.
鈥淵ou didn鈥檛 get here by happenstance,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou worked hard for it. You earned it. And most importantly, you deserve this space.鈥
She encouraged students to wear the pin with pride鈥攏ot just today but on difficult days when doubt reappears.
鈥淥ur first-gen identity is not something to be ashamed of,鈥 Blair said. 鈥淚t signifies to the world that justice lives on in everything we do.鈥

From the Block to the Blueprint
The ceremony鈥檚 keynote address was delivered by聽Roderick Houston, director of student involvement at PC, who shared his journey from a young boy with big dreams to a college graduate of Lander University and higher education professional.
As a child, Houston said he once imagined only two careers for himself: a garbage truck driver and a preacher. The characters he saw on television鈥攕trong, hardworking Black men鈥攚ere his role models.
鈥淏ecause when you don鈥檛 see yourself represented, you start to wonder if maybe your dreams don鈥檛 belong in certain spaces either,鈥 he said.
Houston told students that being first-generation means stepping into rooms where no one in their family has been before.
鈥淏eing a first-gen student means you are building the GPS while you鈥檙e already driving,鈥 he said. 鈥淲here you start isn鈥檛 where you鈥檙e meant to stay.鈥
He then asked students to raise their hands if they were first in their family to go to college. Dozens of hands lifted across the auditorium.
鈥淓very hand you see in the air鈥攖hat鈥檚 not just a student,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 a legacy in motion.鈥
Houston went on to describe two backpacks: one filled with books, laptops, and assignments鈥攖he everyday work of college鈥攁nd a second backpack filled with metaphorical bricks representing family pressure, financial stress, self-doubt, and the weight of future expectations.
But the message was not about the burden.
鈥淵ou can take this backpack off and hold it as a reminder鈥攏ot of pressure, but of purpose,鈥 he said.
He reminded students that they are not meant to carry the weight alone. Faculty, staff, friends, mentors鈥攅ach is there to help.
鈥淥ne day,鈥 he said, 鈥測ou will hand that backpack to someone else in your family a little lighter than you found it.鈥
Houston ended with a declaration that echoed throughout the room:
鈥淵ou are the blueprint.鈥

Carrying Legacy Forward
The pinning ceremony concluded with students receiving their Presby First+ pins鈥攕mall symbols of strength with lifelong meaning.
As Blair encouraged: 鈥淲ear it with pride. Because the story you are writing will change your family for generations.鈥
