Graduation Luncheon Celebrates UC Law SF First Generation Scholars

Graduating law students who are the first generation in their families to go to law school were celebrated at a luncheon this spring.
UC Law SF held its first-ever First Generation graduation celebration, where students heard from law school administrators and new UC Law SF Board of Director member Andrew Houston 鈥07, who shared his experiences of being a first generation law student.
鈥淢y parents were from a humble background,鈥 he told the students. 鈥淲e were definitely a blue collar family. Nobody went to college, I didn鈥檛 have help with homework.鈥
Houston, who graduated from community college and UC Berkeley before entering Hastings, said he benefitted from the support of the LEOP program when he attended law school. Now, as a member of the Black Alumni Council and UC Law SF Board of Directors, he encouraged the soon-to-graduate law students to network with alumni, 鈥淭hey would love to interact with you, they want to see you do well.鈥
He also told the 3L students not to be deterred in their career when things don鈥檛 always go their way, 鈥淵ou鈥檝e got to go through the journey. Sometimes it goes well and sometimes it doesn鈥檛. . . You have to adapt and adjust to it.鈥
The UC Law SF First Generation program kicked off Feb. 1 and supports law students who are the first in their families to go to college. It offers students workshops, mentoring, alumni engagement and networking events. UC Law SF Chancellor & Dean David Faigman has praised the program, “We are not only proud to be the law school of such trailblazers, but we continue to work hard, and take pride, in serving the trailblazers of today and tomorrow, including current and future first generation students at UC Law SF.”
At the graduation event, LEOP Director Elizabeth McGriff also spoke to the students and reminded them that they possess resilience, drive, and adapting skills that not all lawyers have, 鈥淭his is the beginning of what will be storied careers.鈥 She encouraged them to hold true to their beliefs and to be true to themselves, 鈥淵our profession is full of power, privilege, and responsibility. Use that. Be a credit to yourself, to your profession and UC Law SF.鈥
Vice-Chancellor Jenny Kwon reminded the students that their diversity enriches UC Law SF and will enrich their future places of employment. She encouraged the students to be proud of themselves and enjoy their accomplishment of graduating from law school, 鈥淢ake something of it, make it worth whatever sacrifices helped you get here.鈥
Students also heard from two students, Jose Meneses and Denise Pritchard, both Class of 2022. Meneses said he hoped their success would set an example, 鈥淲e鈥檙e going to continue to open the door for other first generation people.鈥
Pritchard, who talked about growing up in foster care, acknowledged the 鈥渢oughness, grit and hard work鈥 of her fellow students, 鈥淲e all have this generational opportunity to transcend our lives and the law. We are not good, we are great.鈥
The event was organized and hosted by Mario Ernesto Lopez 鈥15, the Director of Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Initiatives, who oversees the UC Law SF First Generation program. He shared his story of being the first in his family to go to college and professional school. 鈥淎 global pandemic didn鈥檛 stop you from going to law school,鈥 he told the graduates. 鈥淚 speak to you now as a fellow alumni.鈥
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