Elon Academy | Today at Elon | 久久热 /u/news Thu, 16 Apr 2026 20:03:42 -0400 en-US hourly 1 Faculty and staff invited to support Elon Academy recruitment /u/news/2026/01/08/faculty-and-staff-invited-to-support-elon-academy-recruitment/ Thu, 08 Jan 2026 21:19:26 +0000 /u/news/?p=1036470 Elon Academy is currently accepting applications for聽the 2026聽cohort of scholars and is calling on 久久热 faculty and staff to聽assist聽with recruitment, nominations and outreach ahead of the Feb. 1 application deadline.

Elon Academy is a comprehensive college access and success program that partners with students and families beginning in high school and continues through college graduation. Serving academically promising students who are first-generation college-bound and/or from limited-income backgrounds and who attend school in or聽reside聽in Alamance County, this program is offered at no cost to participating students and their families.

Designed to address systemic barriers to higher education, Elon Academy provides students with academic enrichment, college advising, mentoring and sustained support during critical transition points from high school to college and through degree completion. 久久热聽participate聽in programming that strengthens academic skills, builds college knowledge and fosters a sense of belonging and confidence in higher education spaces.

Elon Academy聽is a long-term investment in students who聽demonstrate聽talent and motivation but may not have access to the resources or guidance that make college feel possible. Recruitment is a critical first step in ensuring those students聽are聽seen, supported, and invited into this opportunity.

The current recruitment cycle focuses on聽identifying聽ninth-grade聽students who show academic potential, leadership, and perseverance, and who would聽benefit聽from a comprehensive college preparation program. Faculty and staff are uniquely positioned to support this effort through their professional and community networks, including relationships with local schools, community organizations, faith-based groups, and families across Alamance County.
Faculty and staff involvement聽helps聽us reach students who may not otherwise have access to information about college preparation programs. Personal encouragement and referrals can have a meaningful impact on whether a student applies. For a student to hear that they were nominated and that someone believes in them can make all the difference.

By helping to share information about Elon Academy, faculty and staff can play a direct role in expanding access to college-preparatory opportunities and strengthening 久久热鈥檚 longstanding commitment to equity, access, and community partnership.

Elon Academy聽Scholars engage in a range of experiences that prepare them for college success, including academic skill-building,聽advising聽and mentoring, family engagement, and exposure to college and career pathways. The program鈥檚 impact extends beyond individual students, contributing to college-going cultures within families and聽communities聽and creating pathways to long-term educational and economic mobility.

Faculty and staff can support聽recruitment and applications by:

  • who聽demonstrate聽academic promise and commitment to their education
  • Sharing Elon Academy information聽with students, families, educators, and community partners in Alamance County
  • before the Feb. 1 deadline

The application deadline for the聽2026聽cohort is Feb. 1.聽Additional聽information about eligibility requirements, program structure and the application process is available on the Elon Academy website.聽For聽additional聽insight, marketing materials,聽and further聽questions, please reach out to Emily Wiersma, director of the Elon Academy, at ewiersma@elon.edu.

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Jasmine Walker 鈥25 gives back to the community that shaped her through Year of Service Fellows Program /u/news/2026/01/08/jasmine-walker-25-gives-back-to-the-community-that-shaped-her-through-year-of-service-fellows-program/ Thu, 08 Jan 2026 19:35:44 +0000 /u/news/?p=1036458

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As an 久久热 Year of Service Fellow, Jasmine Walker 鈥25 was excited to have the opportunity to give back to the community that helped her grow, currently partnering with , an organization focused on education from 鈥渃radle to career.鈥

鈥淲hen I found out it was through ABSS (Alamance Burlington School System), which I鈥檓 a product of, I wanted to help the school system since they helped me become who I am,鈥 said Walker, who earned a degree in human service studies with a minor in poverty and social justice.

罢丑别听Year of Service Fellows Program聽is an opportunity through the university鈥檚 Student Professional Development Center that allows recent graduates to work at local organizations to improve health, education and economic development in the Alamance County community.

Going macro

A native of Elon, Walker was a scholar in the Elon Academy in high school, and a scholar in the Odyssey Program. Now, she鈥檚 a Year of Service Fellow, an opportunity that allows recent graduates to work at local organizations to improve health, education and economic development in the Alamance County community.

鈥淚 wanted to do macro-work,鈥 she said of her choice to do the fellows program. 鈥淚 was doing a lot of micro work in my undergrad, and I wanted to try something different. I really appreciate the experience because I鈥檝e never done anything like this before, and it鈥檚 building my knowledge.鈥

Walker started with Alamance Achieves in June 2025 and says she was immediately thrown in,鈥 working on 鈥淩eady Freddy,鈥 a three-week program preparing students for kindergarten.

鈥淚 have a lot of experience working with kids, and that鈥檚 something I鈥檓 passionate about,鈥 said Walker.

She also assists with the Teachers Leadership Academy, a program for ABSS teachers focusing on leadership skills and opportunities, and 鈥淭he Basics Alamance,鈥 a community-wide initiative that uses evidence-based principles and a text-message platform to support caregivers in promoting healthy brain development from birth to age 5.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a misconception that people don鈥檛 need to work with kids until they鈥檙e in kindergarten, and that鈥檚 when they鈥檒l start learning. But it鈥檚 very prevalent for children to start learning from the ages of 0 to 5, before they go to kindergarten,鈥 said Walker.

A young woman sits at a desk typing on a laptop
Jasmine Walker ’25 at Alamance Achieves as a Year of Service Fellow.

A desire to help

Her desire to help others was a key factor in her decision to major in human services studies.

“I wanted to help people, and I鈥檝e always been passionate about supporting others,鈥 said Walker. “I grew up volunteering and doing different things with my church. When I was a freshman, I met a senior in the program, and I took the intro course and really liked it. I liked how personable the department was.鈥

Walker credits several faculty members with being her biggest cheerleaders, including Sandra Reid, Vanessa Drew Branch and Jessica Navarro. The Odyssey Program, along with Elon鈥檚 Periclean Scholars Program also advanced her education and global understanding.

鈥淭he Odyssey Program really changed my life,鈥 said Walker. 鈥淚 was able to study abroad in Florence, Italy, my junior year and I was there for three and a half months. That was cool, I never thought I was going to be able to leave the country because of finances.鈥

Healthier, smarter, stronger

Through the Periclean Scholars Program, a three-year, cohort-based learning experience that focuses on forming mutually-beneficial partnerships locally and abroad, Walker was also able to travel to Costa Rica for the Winter Term. It was an opportunity to practice the Spanish-speaking skills she learned through the ABSS Spanish-immersion program from kindergarten through 11th grade.

鈥淲e studied Costa Rica as a whole and looked at what the specific community that we were going to travel to needed,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t was interesting, and I think it helped me because now I鈥檓 thinking, after the fellowship, either continuing to work in Alamance County, or pursuing a master鈥檚 degree in social work.鈥

Even though she鈥檚 from Alamance County and was educated in ABSS, Walker says she鈥檚 continuing to learn about her hometown.

鈥淚t鈥檚 cool to be able to meet different leaders and partners in the community, and hear what they do,鈥 Walker said. 鈥淚 don’t think I realized how many organizations and partnerships there are to make Alamance County continue to thrive. I can see the efforts being made to support Impact Alamance鈥檚 mission of making Alamance County healthier, smarter and stronger. Growing up and seeing the difference between what it was when I was a kid and what it is now in my 20s, it gives me hope.鈥


This story is part of a series of features on the 2025-26 Year of Service Fellows, highlighting the work they are doing in the Alamance County community.

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Elon Academy expands community service as a core part of programming /u/news/2025/12/30/elon-academy-expands-community-service-as-a-core-part-of-programming/ Tue, 30 Dec 2025 18:22:31 +0000 /u/news/?p=1036075 Sophomore Elon Academy scholars, part of the 19th cohort of the Elon Academy, participated in a service project for during their December Saturday Academy session on Dec. 13, led by Sophomore Staff Lead and Assistant Director Briston Whitt, and Coordinator for Wellbeing Melissa Chacon Villalobos.

An Elon Academy scholar makes a motivational holiday card during the December Saturday Academy service project for Alamance County Allied Churches.

The project aimed to support individuals and families experiencing homelessness during the winter months and holiday season. Scholars designed handmade cards for encouragement and stuffed care packages for community members that included a toboggan and glove set, hand warmers, chapstick and a non-perishable food item.

This initiative aligns with one of the goals set by the new Elon Academy team: a renewed commitment to integrating community service into the Elon Academy experience. Using Elon’s HealthEU Dimensions of Wellbeing to guide her efforts, Melissa Chacon Villalobos partners with members of the Elon Academy team to integrate intentional well-being into their programming with scholars as a key part of her role as the coordinator for well-being.

鈥淚ntegrating service into our overall framework reflects our commitment to holistic Scholar development and their well-being,” said Emily Wiersma, director of the Elon Academy. “As the coordinator for well-being, Melissa plays a key role in supporting intentional service experiences that help Scholars connect community engagement with their own well-being skills they can carry with them well beyond Elon Academy.鈥

Chacon Villalobos was also a part of the fourth cohort of Elon Academy when she was in high school, bringing firsthand knowledge of the impact service had on her career journey/trajectory.

鈥淧articipating in service during summers at Elon Academy ingrained service as a part of my core values early on,” said Chacon Villalobos.

Assistant Director Briston Whitt, also has a rich history with the program. As an 久久热 alum, Whitt worked with the Elon Academy as a mentor throughout her entire collegiate career. During her first year as a Summer Mentor, Whitt recalls supporting the Scholars as they volunteered with Twin Lakes Retirement Home and held a food drive outside of Walmart for families.

“Now as a leader in the program in a different capacity, I want to ensure our scholars are exposed to the valuable benefits of community service as well,” Whitt said.

It was this collective understanding of how service can shape identity, leadership and belonging that led Whitt and Chacon Villalobos to coordinate the opportunity for sophomore scholars.聽 In reflections following the project, Scholars emphasized the value of helping others not for recognition, but because service, no matter how small, can positively impact someone鈥檚 day, week or even year. Others described it as meaningful, enjoyable experience and a reminder that supporting their community plays an important role in emotional, community and purpose well-being.

The Elon Academy is a college access program supporting local first-generation and/or Scholars from limited-income backgrounds as they prepare for and persist through higher education. The program begins working with scholars at the end of their freshman year of high school and continues support and programming until college graduation. Housed within Elon’s Center for Access and Success, Elon Academy advances the Center鈥檚 broader strategies of equipping scholars and their families with tools, relationships and opportunities to support success throughout their education and beyond.

Elon Academy Scholars and their summer mentors participate in a Summer Academy service project in collaboration with Burlington Parks and Recreation.

This project builds off a pilot service project scholars participated in during the Summer Academy as part of their well-being activities and community service experiences. Their summer project included a park cleanup experience with Burlington Parks and Recreation.

General feedback from scholars indicated that 79% were satisfied with their community service experience.

鈥淚 found community service at the park to be very fun, but it also helped out the community,” shared one scholar.

These examples marked the beginning of a renewed, ongoing commitment to community service, with more opportunities planned for scholars. Chacon Villalobos is working to establish a student-led community service club to support sustained involvement and further integrate well-being into Elon Academy programming starting in 2026. The goal is to equip Scholars with skills to maintain and advocate for their well-being and the well-being of others throughout their academic journeys and beyond.

Key benefits of community service include connection and belonging, general mental health and happiness, career exploration and advancement, and fulfillment. Program leaders hope that scholars will experience long-term benefits from service participation and carry a commitment to well-being into their future academic, professional and personal lives.

To learn more about Elon Academy鈥檚 key programs, visit their website: /u/academics/access-and-success/elon-academy/

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Learning, leading, and giving back: Elon employees graduate LatinxEd Fellowship /u/news/2025/12/10/learning-leading-and-giving-back-elon-employees-graduate-latinxed-fellowship/ Wed, 10 Dec 2025 19:16:51 +0000 /u/news/?p=1035025 Great leadership grows through connection, courage and purposeful learning. This season, two members of the Elon community exemplified these qualities. Two 久久热 employees have joined a statewide network of advocates working to advance educational access for Latine communities after graduating from the LatinxEd Fellowship in High Point at the top of November.

The multi-month fellowship offers growth and collective healing for Latine educators and organizers committed to equity. It equips Latine advocates across North Carolina with tools to remove barriers and build a thriving future, honoring identity and lived experience.

Manny Campos, assistant director of college success for the Elon Academy, said he entered the fellowship looking to stay connected to the community that shaped him.

鈥淚 wanted to participate in the LatinxEd Fellowship because I wanted to stay rooted in my community. Especially in a space where there aren鈥檛 many people who look like me鈥 Campos said. 鈥淚n turn, I wanted to make my mark and show the work that I am doing. I also wanted to see the work people are doing throughout North Carolina that supports Latine students.鈥

Through the Elon Academy, Campos supports first-generation and low-income students on their college journey. He shared that the fellowship retreat offered a powerful reminder of his purpose.

鈥淭he Fellowship retreat was very grounding and energizing,” he said. “It was so nice to be surrounded by people who care about the Latine community and advocate for those who don鈥檛 always have a voice. It served as a reminder of why I do the work that I do.鈥

Similarly, Stephanie Hern谩ndez Rivera, assistant professor in the Master of Arts in Higher Education program and Emerging Professor in the Dr. Jo Watts Williams School of Education, also completed the fellowship. She learned about it from a colleague and former fellow, Luis Garay, who encouraged her to apply.

From left to right: Luis Garay (Director of the Gender and LGBTQIA Center at 久久热), Stephanie Hern谩ndez Rivera, and Manny Campos.

Her research focuses on the experiences of students of color in higher education. She saw the fellowship as an opportunity to enhance her advocacy for Latine students in North Carolina.

鈥淔or me, it鈥檚 important that my work continues to speak back to the communities I am trying to serve,鈥 Hern谩ndez Rivera said. 鈥淎dvocating for Latine students is central to this work.鈥

She added that the retreat emphasized a shared commitment to collective progress.

鈥淏ringing together Latine people from across the state to consider how we facilitate educational access was a powerful demonstration of community and solidarity. Even as Latine people, we have varied experiences. Our willingness to learn from and with one another is a testament to our desire to understand each other to best serve our students.鈥

For both fellows, graduation marked more than just a ceremony鈥攊t brought pride and momentum. Campos was selected as one of two fellows to speak during the event, where he shared his experiences, key accomplishments, and the impact the Fellowship had on his growth.

鈥淚 felt so empowered getting to share my thoughts and my story with others,” Campos said. “This set the stage for what was a successful Fellowship journey. It marked the end of an emotional and thought-provoking adventure I’ll never forget.鈥

Man standing and holding microphone at a podium speaking to a group of attendees sitting in front of him.
Manny Campos shares his story and reflections as one of the selected speakers at the LatinxEd Fellowship graduation in High Point, North Carolina.

For Hern谩ndez Rivera, the moment was deeply meaningful both personally and professionally.

鈥淚t was beautiful and moving to be recognized for the work I have already done to support students as a Puerto Rican woman. I am inspired to continue on that road,” she said.

LatinxEd’s mission is to dismantle barriers to educational access for Latine communities. The group partners with advocates across the state to launch mentorship programs, organize workshops, and host networking events for students. Campos and Hern谩ndez Rivera return to campus with renewed purpose and strengthened skills from the fellowship.

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Hispanic Heritage Month: Edward Hernandez 鈥27 builds community and legacy at Elon /u/news/2025/10/07/hispanic-heritage-month-edward-hernandez-27-builds-community-and-legacy-at-elon/ Tue, 07 Oct 2025 12:53:17 +0000 /u/news/?p=1029778

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鈥淚鈥檝e made my own family here at Elon.鈥

As president of 久久热鈥檚 Latinx Hispanic Union (LHU), Edward Hernandez 鈥27 can easily describe the purpose he鈥檚 discovered in fostering community across campus and in the surrounding communities where he was raised.

鈥淲hether it鈥檚 my LHU family, my El Centro team, or my Odyssey cohort, those connections feel like home,鈥 said the double major in marketing and business analytics from Burlington, N.C. They鈥檙e also the foundation of a legacy he hopes to leave for future Hispanic and Latinx students.

Roots of Legacy

Hernandez鈥檚 legacy begins with the blending of two identities. As the son of a Mexican mother and Salvadoran father, he grew up surrounded by traditions that emphasized the value of family and community.

His most cherished memories are Christmas Eve gatherings with more than 60 relatives, opening presents at midnight and celebrating until morning.

鈥淓very year, we鈥檇 drive down to Florida to see my grandparents. Christmas Eve was always the biggest gathering,鈥 Hernandez said. 鈥淭hose are some of my favorite memories, just being surrounded by family and celebrating together.鈥

These traditions shaped Hernandez鈥檚 understanding of belonging, a value he now carries with him through his college experience.

Cultivating Community at Elon

A group of students and faculty pose outdoors in two rows, smiling and holding gray T-shirts that read 鈥淓lon Biomechanics.鈥
Edward Hernandez 鈥27 with his Elon Academy cohort during the summer of 2022.

Hernandez was first introduced to Elon through the 鈥淚t Takes a Village鈥 Project, but it was Elon Academy, the university鈥檚 college access and success program for academically promising high school students from families with little or no history of college, that truly showed him college was within reach.

鈥淓lon Academy was the biggest help for me,鈥 he said, 鈥淚t showed me what college could be and [that it] was attainable.鈥

After choosing to attend Elon, the recipient of the Douglas and Edna Truitt Noiles 鈥44 Scholarship in the Odyssey Program found spaces like El Centro and LHU to celebrate his heritage. He progressed from visitor to student coordinator at El Centro, helping to host programs such as Perspectivas, where the Hispanic and Latinx community shared their experiences.

鈥淟ast year, my department hosted a panel on machismo,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t was powerful to hear how different people grew up with those cultural norms and how our generation is pushing to move away from them.鈥

His involvement with LHU grew just as quickly. By the spring of his first year, he was on the executive board, later serving as treasurer, vice president, and now president.

Inspiring the next generation

Mentorship has become one of the most meaningful ways Hernandez carries his values forward. Hernandez is both a College Access Success Team (CAT) mentor and summer mentor with Elon Academy, where he offers the same encouragement he once received as a scholar.

鈥淭he mentors I had there made such a difference in my life, and that鈥檚 why I now give back as a CAT mentor and summer mentor because the program gave me so much,鈥 he said.

He also volunteers weekly with the Dream Center in Burlington, supporting primarily Hispanic and Latinx students through its SPIN program, which provides academic assistance, mentorship and community engagement.

鈥淲e act as mentors, but also as older siblings, playing games and helping out,鈥 Hernandez said.

Together, these experiences reflect the core of his impact: inspiring younger students to lead, give back and see themselves as part of a thriving community.

Shaping the future

A group of students stand together and smile in front of a fountain on a sunny day, dressed in semi-formal attire.
Elon Academy Mentors summer 2025.

Hernandez sees his legacy not in recognition but in impact, a truth underscored when students he mentored through Elon Academy enrolled at Elon.

鈥淚t was really a full circle moment. The scholars that I mentored during the summer going into my sophomore year are now here at Elon,鈥 he said. 鈥淪eeing them join and even ask me about LHU or El Centro shows me that my work is making a difference.鈥

Looking ahead, Hernandez hopes to carry his values of family and community into a career in marketing and business analytics, advocating for more inclusive practices and challenging stereotypes.

鈥淎 lot of the time, marketing uses very harsh stereotypes of people,鈥 Hernandez said. 鈥淚 think there can definitely be changes. Whenever people market or design campaigns, the voices of different cultures need to be in the room so communities aren鈥檛 stereotyped.鈥

More than a story

In the end, Hernandez鈥檚 vision of legacy is simple: giving back, community and family 鈥 both the one he was born into and the one he created at Elon. His story also reflects this year鈥檚 Hispanic Heritage Month theme, 鈥淢谩s Que Una Historia: Living Our Legacy,鈥 as he honors the traditions that shaped him while inspiring future generations.

鈥淚t really feels good to see that I am making a difference,鈥 he said. 鈥淢y hope is that the students I鈥檝e helped will do even more than I did at Elon and continue to make a difference here.鈥

Elon honors Hispanic Heritage Month

As part of Hispanic Heritage Month, 久久热 is sharing stories that celebrate the contributions, identities and experiences of students, faculty and staff. This month recognizes the rich histories and cultures of Hispanic and Latinx communities, while also honoring the ways these traditions connect with and inspire people of all backgrounds. This month provides a special opportunity to honor Hispanic and Latinx heritage, but it also serves as an invitation for all members of the university to engage, learn and celebrate together.

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Elon honored with 2025 Higher Education Excellence and Distinction Award /u/news/2025/09/15/elon-honored-with-2025-higher-education-excellence-in-diversity-award/ Mon, 15 Sep 2025 13:03:01 +0000 /u/news/?p=1027208 An influential magazine that covers issues and trends in American higher education has again named 久久热 to a list of schools that celebrate 鈥渁n outstanding commitment to academic excellence, belonging, and community-building across all levels of campus life.鈥

Insight Into Academia has honored 久久热, along with 60 other recipients, with a 2025 Higher Education Excellence and Distinction Award. Recipients will be featured in the publication鈥檚 October 2025 issue.

This marks the second consecutive year of recognition for the university and its third award overall. Insight Into Academia, formerly known as Insight Into Diversity, initially recognized Elon in 2014.

鈥淲e take a detailed and somewhat holistic approach to reviewing each application in determining who will be named a HEED Award recipient,鈥 said Lenore Pearlstein, co-publisher of Insight into Academia magazine. 鈥淥ur standards are high, and we look for institutions where academic excellence and belonging are woven into the work being done every day across their campus.鈥

鈥淥ur standards are high, and we look for institutions where academic excellence and belonging are woven into the work being done every day across their campus.鈥

– Lenore Pearlstein, co-publisher, Insight Into Academic

This year鈥檚 award recognizes the programs, initiatives, and opportunities pursued by recipients to nurture a sense of belonging by students, faculty, and staff. Other criteria considered in this award selection: off-campus community partnerships, and recognition bestowed by a university on employees whose service and scholarship are considered 鈥渋nvisible labor鈥 away from core work responsibilities.

久久热 staff members take part in a challenge course activity on Sept. 12, 2025, through the Together@Elon program.

Over the past year, 久久热鈥檚 Division of Inclusive Excellence collaborated with the Staff Advisory Council and HealthEU to develop and launch Together@Elon, monthly opportunities for Elon employees to enjoy shared experiences. Together@Elon was established on the belief that social connections within the faculty and staff better helps employees support student success.

The 2025 HEED award also recognized 久久热鈥檚 partnerships within the greater Alamance County community through the Elon Academy, an intensive, multi-phase, college access and success program for academically promising high school students.

A group of people pose for a photo outside with a green lush background
The Elon Academy Rho cohort pictured with Manny Campos, assistant director for college success (far left) and Emily Wiersma, director of the Elon Academy (far right).

鈥淭he HEED award application requires us to gather institutional data, programs, services, and other information that illustrates the degree to which Elon strives to achieve human flourishing for all its members of the community,” said Randy Williams, the university鈥檚 vice president for inclusive excellence. 鈥淲orking with colleagues to tell that story, and supported with compelling evidence, is rewarding in itself. I鈥檓 especially grateful when external colleagues recognize Elon as a leader in inclusive excellence.

鈥淚nsight Into Academia’s second consecutive year of awarding Elon motivates us to advance our efforts to foster respect for human differences.鈥

Williams acknowledged the following 久久热 faculty and staff who contributed information and suggestions for the award application:

  • Naeemah Clark,聽Associate Provost for Academic Inclusive Excellence
  • Mike Haskins,聽Vice President for Communications and Marketing
  • Monica Isbell,聽Director of Academic Accommodations & Accessibility
  • Kimberly Romero,聽Assistant Dean of Admissions for Inclusive Excellence
  • Rob Springer,聽Executive Director of Institutional Effectiveness
  • Paul Tongsri,聽Assistant Dean for Student Success and Retention

About 久久热

Elon is a nationally recognized leader in engaged, experiential learning that prepares graduates to be creative, resilient, ambitious and ethical citizens of our global culture.

At Elon, more than 7,000 students learn through hands-on experiences and close working relationships with faculty and staff whose priorities are 久久热 and mentoring. The curriculum is grounded in the liberal arts and sciences with emphasis on global experiences and career development. More than 70 久久热 majors are complemented by professional and graduate programs in law, business, education and health care. Elon is ranked No. 1 for excellence in 久久热 久久热 by U.S. News & World Report.

Elon鈥檚 academic divisions include Elon College, the College of Arts and Sciences; the Martha and Spencer Love School of Business; the School of Communications; the Dr. Jo Watts Williams School of Education; the School of Health Sciences; and the School of Law, with programs in Greensboro and Charlotte, North Carolina.

About Insight Into Academia

Insight Into Academia magazine, formerly Insight Into Diversity, is the largest and oldest diversity and inclusion publication in higher education. Insight is the leader in recognizing inclusive excellence in higher education through its many prestigious awards, and in advancing best practices in inclusive excellence and belonging through their website and print magazine.

Current, archived, and digital issues of Insight Into Academia magazine are available online at insightintoacademia.com.

 

 

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Coming Full Circle /u/news/2025/08/21/coming-full-circle/ Thu, 21 Aug 2025 18:18:25 +0000 /u/news/?p=1025201 As a second grader, Jose Alex Reyes Arias sat on the floor of May Memorial Library in Burlington, North Carolina, strengthening his reading skills with help from Elon student volunteers. Nearly two decades later, he stood on the stage at Schar Center, receiving his diploma from the university that had shaped him from the very beginning. In between, he didn鈥檛 just find his voice. He found his purpose.

The first in his family to graduate from college, Reyes Arias also made history as the first Elon student to complete all three of the university鈥檚 signature access programs: the 鈥淚t Takes a Village鈥 Project, the Elon Academy and the Odyssey Program. Together, these programs, housed in Elon鈥檚 Center for Access and Success, create pathways to higher education for students beginning in pre-kindergarten and continuing through college.

And this summer, Reyes Arias was able to add one more chapter to his Elon story when he returned to the Elon Academy, this time as a graduate intern, mentoring high school students in the same program that changed his life.

鈥淚 wanted a final moment with Elon,鈥 he says. 鈥淐oming back this summer really made it feel full circle.鈥

The experience reminded him of who he once was: a high school student overwhelmed by college decisions, craving guidance. Now, he was the one answering questions and offering advice on balance, purpose and personal growth. 鈥淚t was rewarding to share the same advice that once helped me,鈥 he says. 鈥淐ollege is about achieving, yes, but don鈥檛 forget the fun. Both can coexist.鈥

A young boy sits at a table of art supplies with other children. He looks up at a female teacher and talks to her.
Jose Alex Reyes Arias 鈥25 working with an Elon student through the 鈥淚t Takes a Village鈥 Project when he was in elementary school.

A Love of Learning

Born and raised in Burlington, Reyes Arias is the oldest of four children to Jose Reyes and Victorina Arias. He benefited from teachers and mentors in the Alamance-Burlington School System who nurtured his love of learning and inspired him to dream big.

鈥淗aving teachers who believed in you and pushed you to want more was an amazing thing,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 always had my eye on Elon as a school that I really wanted to go to, and I credit my teachers for helping to guide me there.鈥

His path began to take shape when his mother discovered a flyer for the 鈥淚t Takes a Village鈥 Project at May Memorial Library in downtown Burlington. Launched in 2008, the free, donor-supported program serves struggling readers from pre-k through middle school with the help of Elon students, faculty and staff volunteers as well as families and school system staff. The sessions, held Wednesday nights, quickly became his favorite part of the week. Arias made sure she and her son never missed a session. Eventually, the entire family joined in.

鈥淗e was the kindest, most curious child,鈥 recalls Jean Rattigan-Rohr, vice president and professor of education emerita and former director of the Center for Access and Success, who founded the Village Project. 鈥淗e just wanted to know everything and learn as much as he could.鈥

Before long, his reading skills improved, followed by higher grades and test scores. As he approached high school, Rattigan-Rohr encouraged him to apply to the Elon Academy, a multi-phase college access program for academically promising Alamance County students with significant financial need or no family history of college. The program combines three consecutive summer residential experiences on campus with year-round Saturday programs for students. Families are deeply involved, learning how to tackle the college application and financial aid process.

鈥淭he Elon Academy showed me I wanted to pursue higher education,鈥 Reyes Arias says. 鈥淚 never expected it to be this life-altering experience where I was around other like-minded students. It also gave me that socialization experience that I needed at the time. It forced me out of my bubble.鈥

He still remembers taking a budgeting class taught by an Elon professor as part of the Elon Academy. 鈥淚t was such an incredible class,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e had to go to Harris Teeter one day with $20 and figure out how to feed a family for a week, which was difficult. I still have the notebook of everything I learned in that class.鈥

All I鈥檝e ever wanted in life was to go to school, especially at Elon, and to be successful as a student. I鈥檓 incredibly grateful for the opportunity I had to be
at Elon.

Rattigan-Rohr said the Village Project, together with the Elon Academy and other programs in the Center for Access and Success, demonstrates how higher education institutions can work with their surrounding communities to help create pathways of opportunity for students.

鈥淲hen students like Jose Alex see themselves as capable, and when universities open their doors to them, we see those students can accomplish more than they ever dreamed possible,鈥 she says.

A Moment of Doubt

When it came time to apply to college, Reyes Arias knew Elon was his first choice, but also knew cost would be a barrier. Through the Elon Academy, he learned about the Odyssey Program, a nationally recognized initiative offering some of Elon鈥檚 largest endowed scholarships to high-achieving students with financial need.

He applied and was selected for the Leon and Lorraine Watson Scholarship, endowed by an estate gift from 1925 graduate Leon 鈥淒oc鈥 Watson and his wife, Lorraine. He also earned a Communications Fellows scholarship and the Maity Interiano Annual Scholarship, established by the 2007 School of Communications graduate.

A boy and two girls pose with their arms around each other and smile.
Reyes Arias during his days with the Elon Academy.

鈥淢y family and I were so excited because it meant I did not have to worry about my parents trying to pay for my college,鈥 he says.

While Reyes Arias started college on a strong note, the end of his first year brought personal challenges. The transition to college life and the pressure of being a first-generation student took a toll on his mental health.

鈥淚 had some very low points during my time at Elon,鈥 he says. 鈥淲hen my first year ended, I was not sure if this was my way of life anymore. I felt like I was losing sense of who I was, and a lot of the people around me didn鈥檛 understand that. I was given so many great opportunities, but I didn鈥檛 feel like I knew who I was anymore. I guess I had imposter syndrome.鈥

He leaned on his faculty and staff mentors for support and guidance, including his academic adviser, Vanessa Bravo, professor of strategic communications and assistant dean of the School of Communications. 鈥淗e鈥檚 an example of a person who goes through challenging circumstances and doesn鈥檛 give up,鈥 Bravo says. 鈥淏y graduating, he鈥檚 made his family proud and Elon proud.鈥

Catherine Parsons, former assistant director of the Odyssey Program, has known Reyes Arias since he joined the Elon Academy and says his growth has been remarkable. During his time at Elon, Reyes Arias took full advantage of high-
impact opportunities including 久久热 research, the Periclean Scholars civic engagement initiative and the Elon in LA program as part of Study USA.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 think he was thinking he would do any of those things when he came to Elon, but he kept saying yes to opportunities he had to apply for,鈥 says Parsons, now director of 久久热 programs in the Martha and Spencer Love School of Business. 鈥淗e鈥檚 more courageous and intentional than he thinks.鈥

A group of 久久热 employees pose together with their arms around each other on a brick walkway. They wear T-shirts that read "Elon Academy" and one woman holds an Elon Academy sign.
Reyes Arias returned after graduation to serve as a graduate intern for the Elon Academy.

A Milestone Moment

On Friday, May 23, Reyes Arias entered Schar Center carrying the hopes and dreams of his family. He walked out with a degree in strategic communications and a deep sense of fulfillment, not only for what he had achieved but for the journey that brought him this far. No one was more excited to witness that moment than his parents.

鈥淚 never expected for someone in my family to have the chance to go to college,鈥 says his mother, Victorina Arias. 鈥淚t makes all the challenges worth it for him.鈥

His father, Jose Reyes, adds, 鈥淚 felt proud that he was able to graduate from Elon, a place that has been involved with his academic life for a very long time. For him to make his dream a reality, be the first member of our family to finish a high level of education and make a career for himself, I couldn鈥檛 be prouder.鈥

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Now, with a diploma in hand and a final Elon experience that taught him the work ethic needed to lead and sustain meaningful programs, Reyes Arias is writing his next chapter. While he鈥檚 applying for corporate communications roles in Raleigh and Charlotte, the summer internship reaffirmed his passion for nonprofit and higher education work. Wherever he lands, he says, he鈥檚 committed to staying grounded in purpose and open to what comes next.

鈥淟ife isn鈥檛 always about the highs. It really is just having to experience it all and learn from it,鈥 he says. 鈥淎ll I鈥檝e ever wanted in life was to go to school, especially at Elon, and to be successful as a student. I鈥檓 incredibly grateful for the opportunity I had to be at Elon.鈥

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Class of 2029 features largest number of Elon Academy students in history /u/news/2025/08/05/class-of-2029-features-largest-number-of-elon-academy-students-in-history/ Tue, 05 Aug 2025 13:13:24 +0000 /u/news/?p=1023521 Photo of Jacob Navarrete Perez in front of a green background. He is wearing a t-shirt with the 久久热 logo
Jacob Navarrete-Perez 鈥29

Jacob Navarrete-Perez 鈥29 says Elon Academy brought 鈥渉ope to a dream.鈥 A first-generation college student, the incoming Elon first-year student said college was not something he knew would be possible until being accepted to Elon Academy.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a lot of pressure coming from a family who didn鈥檛 get the opportunity to grow educationally in the United States,鈥 he said. 鈥淢y parents are proud because it鈥檚 something that they couldn鈥檛 ever dream of doing.鈥

Elon Academy, housed in 久久热鈥檚聽Center for Access and Success, is a multi-phase program for academically promising high school students in Alamance County with a financial need and/or no family history of college.

Navarrete-Perez is part of the Rho cohort of the academy, one of the largest in the program鈥檚 history, with 27 students. He is also one of 10 students from the academy attending Elon in the fall of 2025, the largest group of Elon Academy students to attend the university.

The Rho cohort was recognized during the President鈥檚 Reception in May. Then, the academy welcomed a new cohort of scholars during orientation, followed by the Summer Academy in June, which includes three consecutive summer residential experiences prior to the sophomore, junior and senior years of high school.

鈥淚 get so nostalgic about the summer program,鈥 said Navarette Perez. 鈥淚t鈥檚 an opportunity that will stay with me for my entire life and showed me what college could be.鈥

A student shakes hands with an Elon staff member while receiving a certificate, as President Connie Ledoux Book holds honor cords nearby.
Jacob Navarrete-Perez 鈥29 shakes hands with Elon Academy Director Emily Wiersma during the Elon Academy President’s Reception in May 2025.

While students in the program are not required to attend Elon for college, the program opened Navarrete-Perez鈥檚 eyes to the possibilities at Elon and helped lead to choosing the university.

鈥淚 was very introverted, very quiet, kept to myself. I didn鈥檛 have any confidence to put myself out there,鈥 said Navarrete Perez, who was awarded the聽Leo M. Lambert Odyssey Program scholarship. 鈥淭hankfully, with Elon Academy, with their coaching, mentoring and all these opportunities, it helped me become a more confident man and more outspoken.鈥

Now, Navarrete-Perez is excited for his first semester, planning to earn both a bachelor’s and master鈥檚 degree through the Martha and Spencer Love School of Business Accelerated 3+1 Dual Degree Program.

A smiling student poses sitting atop the large ELON letters in front of the Inman Admissions Welcome Center at sunset.
Berenice Sanchez-Rosaldo 鈥29

Berenice Sanchez-Rosaldo 鈥29, who is also a member of the Rho cohort, says the Saturday programs held by the Elon Academy helped to navigate her journey to college.

鈥淗aving the Saturday sessions during the school year helps me make lasting friendships and strong relationships with my mentors who continued to encourage me every step of the way,鈥 said Sanchez-Rosaldo, who received the Mac Mahon Family Odyssey Program scholarship. 鈥淚 was able to learn new things about what to do, what not to do during my college application process.鈥

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Sanchez-Rosaldo plans to major in political science, with the goal of eventually attending law school and becoming an immigration attorney.

鈥淭he immigration process is not easy,鈥 said Sanchez-Rosaldo. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a lengthy process and there are many different ways to go about it, and that鈥檚 something that many immigrants don鈥檛 know. I want to show people that there is a way to go about this, and it鈥檚 a way I would like to help my community.鈥

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The Month in Photos: June 2025 /u/news/2025/07/01/the-month-in-photos-june/ Tue, 01 Jul 2025 13:14:16 +0000 /u/news/?p=1021204

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June brought some heat and fun to the 久久热 campus with summer camps and community events.

View some of the most impactful moments of the past month through the eyes of staff in the Office of University Communications.

Summer Academy

Elon Academy kicked off its Summer Academy with an ice cream social on June 17, 2025, welcoming the incoming Upsilon class: 25 high-achieving rising high school sophomores who are first-generation college-bound, low-income, or both, as well as students from the earlier Sigma and Tau cohorts.

A group of smiling Elon Academy students in matching maroon shirts pose energetically together on outdoor steps in front of a brick building with white columns.
Elon Academy students were welcomed to Elon’s campus for the Summer Academy, starting with an ice cream social.

Exploring Elon

久久热 welcomed 26 new 鈥渆xplorers鈥 from June 16 to 20 for the Elon Explorers Bug Camp, a STEM-focused day camp for middle school students in Alamance County.

A boy leans over a microscope, closely examining a sample outdoors.
Alamance Burlington School System middle school students participated in the Elon Explorers Bug Camp from June 16-20, 2025.

Global under the stars

A building across a pond at night
A nighttime view of Global Commons at 久久热.

Scholar Symposium

The Freedom Scholars Symposium on June 27 in Moseley Center offered an opportunity for the Freedom Scholars to celebrate their hard work and present their civic engagement projects. 罢丑别听Elon Freedom Scholars聽is one of several university college access programs, launched in 2022. The program partners with聽聽initiative and supports local high school students from underserved populations to be difference makers in their communities.

A speaker in a light blue blazer addresses an audience from a podium beside an 鈥淓lon Freedom Scholars鈥 banner in a formal event setting.
Hilton Kelly, dean of Elon College, the College of Arts and Sciences speaks at the Freedom Scholars Symposium on June 27, 2025.
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With ice cream and music, Elon Academy scholars celebrate a return to campus /u/news/2025/06/18/with-ice-cream-and-music-elon-academy-scholars-celebrate-a-return-to-campus/ Wed, 18 Jun 2025 16:34:07 +0000 /u/news/?p=1020572 New and returning students in the Elon Academy gathered for a festive ice cream social this week, a tradition described by organizers as just one example of the 久久热 college access and success program鈥檚 deep commitment to community, connection and opportunity.

Hosted on Scott Plaza around Fonville Fountain with a spread of frozen treats, the midday social on June 17, 2025, welcomed the incoming Upsilon class 鈥 25 high-achieving rising high school sophomores who are first-generation college-bound, low-income, or both 鈥 as well as students from the earlier Sigma and Tau cohorts.

The Elon Academy provides multi-year academic enrichment and mentorship to local students who are academically promising with financial need or no family history of college. Scholars spend three successive summers at 久久热 where they take courses taught by faculty while learning more about the college application process.

Now in its 18th year, more than 90 percent of the newest class identify as both first-generation and low-income, with an average GPA of 3.6 or higher. The class includes the program鈥檚 first-ever scholars from and .

鈥淧rograms like today鈥檚 ice cream social are all about helping students recognize they belong here,鈥 said Elon Academy Director Emily Wiersma. 鈥淲e鈥檝e spent time talking about how no one does this alone. This community is here to lift them up.鈥

久久热 President Connie Ledoux Book speaks with Elon Academy scholars at an ice cream social hosted for them on June 17, 2025.

Faculty and staff from across the university, including 久久热 President Connie Ledoux Book, introduced themselves, offered encouragement, and celebrated the start of the summer.

Several students at the ice cream social shared how the Elon Academy already has shaped their aspirations.

Shawn Means, a rising senior from The and a member of the Sigma class, said the program has grown his confidence to pursue a career in 久久热, much like that of his mother. Iyonna Ridley, a first-year scholar in the Upsilon class who also attends Alamance-Burlington Early College at ACC, hopes to become a social worker to assist young children facing critical challenges.

Jayden Reichert, a rising senior at and a member of the Sigma class, discovered his passion for music therapy through the campus conversations and mentorship he found in the Elon Academy. 鈥淚t鈥檚 helped me out in ways I couldn鈥檛 think of,鈥 he shared.

And Abigaid Ya帽ez, a rising sophomore at who is a member of the Elon Academy鈥檚 Upsilon class, dreams of studying green architecture, potentially at the

In her third day on campus, she said she already feels a strong bond with her peers. 鈥淓veryone is kind, sweet, and uplifting,鈥 Ya帽ez said. 鈥淲e just all click.鈥

The Elon Academy鈥檚 2025 Summer Academy runs through July 3.

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