Career Prep Tip: Provide Resources for Undocumented Learners

Colleges and universities provide personalized support for undocumented students as they prepare for their lives after college.

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Undocumented students face unique challenges in postgraduate career planning. College career professionals can help provide skill-building experiences.

For college students, finding a job or an interview can be a stressful experience. A 2024 Student Voice survey by Inside Higher Ed and Generation Lab found 68 percent of students are extremely or somewhat stressed about their plans for life after college. For undocumented learners who face additional difficulties related to finding employment, this can be magnified.

Around 408,000 students in U.S. higher education are undocumented, representing around 1.9 percent of all learners, according to 2023 data from the Presidents’ Alliance on Higher Education and the American Immigration Council. These students face unique barriers in receiving payment for internships, disclosing residency or gaining work experience in general.

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To equitably support students in their career preparation journeys, many colleges and universities provide support and experiential learning opportunities that are inclusive of students without documentation to help them build career skills and be confident navigating the job market.

Who Are Undocumented Students?

The number of undocumented students in higher ed has declined since 2019, which is tied to both enrollment dips nationally and factors that impede undocumented individuals specifically, like legal challenges to Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, according to 2021 data from the American Community Survey.

The greatest share of undocumented students are Hispanic (46 percent), 27 percent are Asian American/Pacific Islander, around 14 percent are Black and 10 percent are white. The remaining 3 percent are biracial and multiracial students or otherwise classified as “other.”

Undocumented learners enrolled in public and private institutions of higher education in undergraduate and graduate-level programs are both immigrant youth and adults.

Opportunities for support: Higher education institutions and professionals can invest in undocumented students’ career success in the following ways:

Scholarship opportunities both from the institution and from outside partners can remove financial barriers to participation in work-based learning. Northwestern University, for example, offers the Northwestern Career Advancement Summer Internship Grant program to fund unpaid internship experiences, which undocumented students are eligible for.

Networking is also an important tool for students, regardless of immigration status, which can help provide guidance beyond next steps after college.

Do you have a career prep tip that might help others encourage student success? Tell us about it.

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