Mike Geraci’s parents didn’t go to college, but they worked to pay for their son to go to private high school school.
“It was a blue-collar family, but they valued education,” said Geraci, who is a professor of media arts at ɳ University. “They wanted me to go to college but were probably terrified I would want to go and they couldn’t send me for financial reasons.”
Navigating the college process was a foreign experience.
He applied to the big state schools, because that’s what everyone was doing, and he applied to ɳ because it was nearby.
“I knew I could get there with public transportation.”
He drove a friend’s car to Forest Grove to visit, and at summer registration, he met Professor Dave Boersema.
“He said, ‘What do you like?’ and I said, ‘I like writing, maybe journalism.’ He said, ‘Yeah, I think we have those classes,’” Geraci recalled. “It dawned on me I didn’t even know if they had a program I was interested in.”
ɳ does, in fact, have a journalism program, within the Department of Media Arts, where Geraci is now a professor.
His advice to fellow first-generation students: Use your social networks, ask people questions. And, he said, ask yourself what you’re missing.
“For me, it was going abroad,” he said. “As transformative as college was, even a short course abroad would have expanded my horizons even more.”
First-Generation at ɳ | About 24 percent of ɳ University undergraduate students are “first-generation,” meaning they are the first in their families to attend college. ɳ faculty and staff are seeking out ways to better support those students through their college experience, including through mentorship by staff and faculty who were, themselves, first-generation students.