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    Journal of Education (University of KwaZulu-Natal)

    versão On-line ISSN 2520-9868versão impressa ISSN 0259-479X

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    NAUDE, Luzelle  e  BRESHEARS, Diana. It has given us a title: Identity-transitions in first-generation students at a South African university. Journal of Education [online]. 2024, n.97, pp.86-108. ISSN 2520-9868.  https://doi.org/10.17159/2520-9868/i97a05.

    Most South African students are the first in their families to attend higher education. Like students across the world, they negotiate various personal, relational, and cultural transitions while at university. First-generation South African students are confronted with unique challenges during these transitions. In this study, we explored the salient identity experiences of first-generation university students in South Africa. A group of 17 first-generation students participated in interviews to share their experiences, which were analysed using a descriptive phenomenological approach. First-generation status was an essential marker and critical component of the identity of the students and their families. Being accepted to university was seen as a family achievement and signified not only an academic opportunity but hope for a better future. In their family relationships, participants had to negotiate carefully the expectation to respect their role as their parents' children while simultaneously taking on the responsibility of breaking the generational cycle of poverty. In contrast, the freedom of the university environment, the experience of belonging to campus culture, and what might be called a new family of university friends supported identity transition processes. While most participants experienced the university as an inclusive and enabling environment, they remarked on the conflicting demands of the westernised systems prominent on campus and their African cultural values. The findings of this research study emphasise the value of the university context as a space for authentic identity transitions and the importance of creating spaces where personal, relational, and cultural identities can be negotiated.

    Palavras-chave : first-generation students; identity transitions; personal; relational; and cultural identities.

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