First-Gen Chisme
According to the Education Advisory Board (EAB), 33% of first-generation and low-income students leave college within three years of starting. Some of the main reasons first-generation students leave are due to three main reasons: financial burdens, lack of support and inequitable access to resources. This issue continues to exist because there are not enough community-focused initiatives centered around supporting first-gen and low-income students within many Public Title I high schools. Title I schools identify students that are most in need of educational, academic and financial support. They are often located in low-income communities and education public school districts that do not have enough funding resources to support their student bodies. These factors are often contributed by the historical injustices and environmental displacement many communities of color have historically faced in the United States. As students continue their own paths in postsecondary education, it is apparent that institutions need to do a better job of developing built-in first-gen focused programs intended to support needed students throughout their education. We can not continue living in a world where education is only accessible to those that have the economic needs and privileges to pursue it. All students, regardless of their background, should have the opportunity and ability to graduate and get a degree that helps support their future. As I pursued my studies as a first-gen and low-income student myself, I realized the discrepancies many of us faced as we embarked on our college journeys. Especially within my hometown in Kansas City, KS, where there are hundreds of first-gen, low-income, and students of color ranging from all cultural backgrounds in the area. Many students also identify as being first-generation American where they come from family immigrant backgrounds, primarily from Latin America. This inspired the intersections of art/design, education, culture, and community to play a role in the way youth can feel empowered and represented.
First-Gen Chisme aims to provide community-focused solutions in supporting first-gen, low-, and students of color because it utilizes the intersections of design, culture, and education to create a much needed first-gen community both through ed-tech solutions and direct-community events. Students feel represented within the content and work that we produce because it follows our motto, "By First-Gen, For First-Gen". We focus on supporting student experiences by connecting them directly with the many stories, voices, and advice from current first-gen college graduates and students to build an engaging community. It follows a mentorship module that allows for personalization to occur throughout a community. Additionally, our web service allows for students to engage in nation and local-wide educational resources that are designed with culture in mind to encourage an engaging experience when learning about post-secondary education. Students love the vibrancy, fun, and creative tech-smart solutions we offer and continue coming back because they tell us personally that, "It's fun to see the graphics of an ice-cream I would get at the store and then learn about college at the same time". We use the first-gen cultural experience as a way to illustrate the educational resources needed within our first-generation community. Additionally, we hope to expand further on the potential partnerships that First-Gen Chisme can build across local communities, non-profits, and institutions that help support various first-gen focused work detailed to specific areas. Currently, our work is centered around supporting many Kansas City specific communities and we hope to use our work within our own community to showcase how this can be accomplished across the United States in many cities also populated by first-gen and low-income students.
The target customers within the venture are first-gen, low-income,
and students of color. Especially students with educational
backgrounds of attending a Title I high school that focuses on
helping disadvantaged students meet state academic content and
performance standards. Our organization specifically focuses on
high-school (juniors/seniors) and college students (all years).
Additionally, I am hoping to target first-generation high school/college
initiatives across predominately Hispanic serving institutions. We
hope to build partnerships with college-bound, first-generation
offices, faculty, and initiatives across the United States to help
support their student body and create collaborative programs
centered to focus on their local-needs within their communities. What
a first-gen student might need in California can be very different than
what a first-gen student in Missouri might need. We are hoping to
build upon these partnerships to build relationships across the
United States that helps personalize and locally focus on the needs
of first-gen students within their dedicated communities. The current community we are working with is located in Kansas City, KS. Many of these students come from Latinx and immigrant backgrounds. They are often the first of their family to be born and raised in the United States stemming from immigrant family members from Latin America. Our solution primarily serves the Latinx first-gen experience because it is one we are most focused in within our Hispanic-populated community. However, we often work across various student backgrounds to support non-Latinx students from marginalized backgrounds as well.
Being the eldest Latina daughter of immigrant and undocumented parents comes with its own pressures. I am the first in my family to attend college and I knew it was not going to be easy. As the eldest, I have my younger sibling and many younger cousins looking up to me and my own education journey. As I stepped foot into my first year of college, I realized how challenging it was to be a space where I did not feel represented and was not academically prepared for. I truly did not know what it meant to be 'first-gen' until I began my college career. I connected with many of my first-gen friends and realized that my experience was not alone, we were all not prepared and were emotionally, physically, and mentally drained. Even some of my closest friends in college dropped out because it became too much. This is when I had enough, I needed to find a way to support the upcoming generation of first-gen students within my community and beyond. I believe that there has to be better ways to provide needed resources across marginalized neighborhoods and school districts in America that suffer with the same educational inequalities. I began to utilize my arts/design and community organizing background to create a website that shares resources with my community in Kansas City. It began to grow and I had no idea it would lead me to be the non-profit I dream to make happen in the future. My background in Architecture helps support my community-driven work with First-Gen Chisme as I am passionate about advocating for a space that tends to the needs of marginalized communities. I enjoy being able to be a part of creative community-focused solutions that help establish programming, spaces, and designs that support marginalized individuals for the better. In my future as an aspiring Latina architect, I envision to establish First-Gen Chisme as a non-profit that can help merge my passions in architecture, community, culture and education within my community in Kansas City and working both locally and globally across various scales.
- Provide access to improved civic action learning in a wide range of contexts: with educator support for classroom-based approaches, and community-building opportunities for out of school, community-based approaches.
- United States
- Growth: An organization with an established product, service, or business model that is rolled out in one or more communities
The problem my venture is solving is the the inequitable access of post-secondary education resources that many first-generation, low-income, and student of colors face upon graduation from high school. When students from marginalized communities attend college they are more likely to drop out because of the inability to find community, struggling with finances, academic issues, and other conflicts. These are created as a result of not having the college readiness that many of their non first-gen peers did have in high school. Nationally in the United States, there is a 89% of first-gen and low-income students that drop out of college within five years without a degree. This issue continues to exist because there is not enough focused support on first-gen students within many public Title I high schools. Many college - especially private - need better built in first-gen focused programs support these students through their education. We can not continue living in a world where education is only accessible to those that have the economic needs and privileges to pursue it. All students, regardless of their background, should have the opportunity and ability to graduate and get a degree that helps support their future.
- Financial (e.g. accounting practices, pitching to investors)
- Monitoring & Evaluation (e.g. collecting/using data, measuring impact)
- Technology (e.g. software or hardware, web development/design)
The problem my venture is solving is the the inequitable access of
post-secondary education resources that many first-generation, low-
income, and student of colors face upon graduation from high
school. When students from marginalized communities attend
college they are more likely to drop out because of the inability to find
community, struggling with finances, academic issues, and other
conflicts. These are created as a result of not having the college
readiness that many of their non first-gen peers did have in high
school. Nationally in the United States, there is a 89% of first-gen and
low-income students that drop out of college within five years without
a degree. This issue continues to exist because there is not enough
focused support on first-gen students within many public Title I high
schools. Many college - especially private - need better built in first-
gen focused programs support these students through their
education. We can not continue living in a world where education is
only accessible to those that have the economic needs and
privileges to pursue it. All students, regardless of their background,
should have the opportunity and ability to graduate and get a degree
that helps support their future.
One of my many impact goals for First-Gen Chisme is to be able to reach and connect with amazing mentors who understand our mission and vision. It is essential for us to stay connected with professionals who truly believe in our work and our dedicated in helping us build a meaningful and impactful mentee and mentor exchange. Additionally, I hope to continue in elevating our content both in English and Spanish to get people excited about the possibilities of how our services greatly benefit the first-gen community both in terms of engagement and care as well. Creativity and culture are essential, especially within the Latinx community, which is why I hope to continue in getting our content to reach levels that speak to the hard work and dedication we put into our craft. I also hope to build a strong foundation on how our solutions are meaningful and easily translatable both in design, language, and in business. Everyday we continue to learn how to best describe our work to various individuals and we hope to really elevate our pitch and build a strong foundation to continue in applying to opportunities like these that can help us grow.
- 4. Quality Education
- 10. Reduced Inequalities
- 11. Sustainable Cities and Communities
- 16. Peace, Justice, and Strong Institutions
One of my many impact goals for First-Gen Chisme is to be able to reach and connect with amazing mentors who understand our mission and vision. It is essential for us to stay connected with professionals who truly believe in our work and our dedicated in helping us build a meaningful and impactful mentee and mentor exchange. Additionally, I hope to continue in elevating our content both in English and Spanish to get people excited about the possibilities of how our services greatly benefit the first-gen community both in terms of engagement and care as well. Creativity and culture are essential, especially within the Latinx community, which is why I hope to continue in getting our content to reach levels that speak to the hard work and dedication we put into our craft. I also hope to build a strong foundation on how our solutions are meaningful and easily translatable both in design, language, and in business. Everyday we continue to learn how to best describe our work to various individuals and we hope to really elevate our pitch and build a strong foundation to continue in applying to opportunities like these that can help us grow.
First-Gen Chisme is a community organization that is dedicated to creating humanized experiences within the intersections of culture, education and architecture, to empower marginalized communities within Kansas City. By embracing the stories and narratives of communities, it helps create design processes that respond positively to the needs and concerns of voices often rendered invisible in the field. Our methods engage in community-focused architecture to positively impact vacant ‘public’ spaces and the people and communities who inhabit them. We are located in Kansas City, Kansas. We work directly within our community with diverse identities not limited to being: first-gen, Latinx, Black, Brown, Immigrant, Undocumented, etc. Currently our work is centered in Central Avenue to support the Mexican, immigrant, undocumented, and first-gen community. In 2020, First-Gen Chisme was founded and started as a website educational resource for first-gen students! Supporting the first-gen community has always and continues to be our first priority. Our work eventually grew into a start-up venture engaging in various community public service events in Kansas City. First-Gen Chisme was first founded to support first-gen and low-income students from under-resourced communities with academic resources to feel empowered and help achieve their post-secondary educational goals. Our goal within our work has always been to connect personally with our community to create opportunities that reflect their needs and aspirations.
In all honesty, our technology is very basic. We are currently using an online website platform that allows us to creatively control our content in both Spanish and English. We hope to expand further into the ed-tech mobile app technology that we often test, sketch, and design using our web browser and online app functions. We participated in using this type of technology during our participation of the Brown University B-Lab Accelerator and are hoping to continue in working upon it. Our big plan too within this academic year, and thanks to the MIT Solv[ed] micro-grant, we are hoping to move our content to an html/css web browser such as cargo.site, that can help elevate our content and create a more engaging data source for our community to enjoy. These are essential to our mobile and web-tech online services. In terms of technology through architecture, we use Rhino and various 3D-modeling and rendering software's to help us re-imagine the possibilities of First-Gen Chisme. Especially as we help integrate architecture and design more within our work, it has become essential to the way we build community and help others learn about the field as well.
- A new business model or process that relies on technology to be successful
- Software and Mobile Applications
- United States
- United States
- Nonprofit
We are located in Kansas City, Kansas. We work directly within our community with diverse identities not limited to being: first-gen, Latinx, Black, Brown, Immigrant, Undocumented, etc. Currently our work is centered in Central Avenue to support the Mexican, immigrant, undocumented, and first-gen community.
In present day, the Mexican immigrant community in Kansas City continues to grow exponentially. Unfortunately, in Wyandotte County, the most diverse county in Kansas with predominantly Black and Brown communities, is largely disinvested and marginalized compared to its neighboring predominantly white counties.
Central Avenue, a commercial corridor with Black and Latinx owned businesses, has been home for many Mexican and Latinx immigrants for generations. It is in close location to many affordable housing properties and commercial businesses representative of the Mexican community. Unfortunately, its governmental disinvestment has left many properties vacant and abandoned. Which has eventually perpetuated to the violence, unsafety and poor educational environments within the community. Our goals is to revitalize and explore responsible and creative ways to create installations, pop-ups, and accessible green spaces that encourage our educational work across the community. While creating opportunities for design-build after school programming for students.
Currently we are not making revenue from our organization as it
currently all of our resources and events are free to use and attend.
However, we are hoping to working upon developing a sustainable
business model within the fellowship that helps support our vision. We do have ideas on our business model that is rooted in support
from institutional partnerships, educational grants, and merchandise
earnings. Through our work, we hope to connect with institutions
both in high schools and colleges that can help support our work
within various communities in the United States. These partnerships
will create an understanding of the localized needs of a community
that First-Gen Chisme can help support with through collaborations,
content, peer-to-peer mentors and more. There will be a service fee
that institutions will have to provide for our venture with to financially
support our employees and artists upon our work. Additionally, there
will be web and mobile-tech services that students can access that
can generate ad revenues when possible. And finally, although we
love community organizing and are passionate about education, we
are also artists and designers! We hope to create merchandise,
stickers, journals, and other materials that can generate revenue for
our organization and share our visuals throughout the community.
- Individual consumers or stakeholders (B2C)
Our market strategy starts off with working upon driving efficiency
within our ed-tech web and mobile solutions. We want to make sure
that the content that we are currently producing and the partnerships
we are working on and have worked on are documented and shared
to communicate the impacts we have had and continue to have.
Second is building upon our team of dedicated individuals
passionate for first-gen education support. This team will consist of
educators, students, and designers that can help with the growth of
this venture. Next is, thinking through our business model with clarity
through a deep analysis of our competitors and ways that they have
succeeded and failed working within first-gen communities. Next, is
working upon establishing a business model based off this research
that can help create our our business model of our future potential
partnerships with high schools and institutions and how it can utilize
various revenue growth based off different packages, outcomes, etc.
Education is supported by data and statistics, which will be important
to recognize as it will be essential to create a structure that illustrates
the impact our organization has had to develop a marketing strategy
to outreach institutions at a larger scale. Additionally, thinking about
the roles needed in order to make this happen and how this can
occur at both a local and larger scale throughout the work that we do.
I do hope to work upon this within the fellowship and learning more
ways to improve it further.
Hansy Better Barraza Support 2021 $250
RISD Maharam Fellowship 01/2021 $5,000
Brown University B-Lab Accelerator 01/2021 $2,500
MIT Micro-Fund 2023 $600
RISD E-Ship Accelerator 2023 $500
Own profits: $1500, selling merchandise
Total $8,850
We continue to apply to funds that support our work throughout the basis of our work while also supporting our community.

Founder of First-Gen Chisme