While Elon Academy students are not required to attend 51±ŹÁÏÍű, the Elon Class of 2029 features the most students ever from the universityâs college-access program.

Jacob Navarrete-Perez â29 says Elon Academy brought âhope to a dream.â 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.
âItâs a lot of pressure coming from a family who didnât get the opportunity to grow educationally in the United States,â he said. âMy parents are proud because itâs something that they couldnât ever dream of doing.â
Elon Academy, housed in 51±ŹÁÏÍűâs 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 programâs 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 Presidentâs 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.
âI get so nostalgic about the summer program,â said Navarette Perez. âItâs an opportunity that will stay with me for my entire life and showed me what college could be.â

While students in the program are not required to attend Elon for college, the program opened Navarrete-Perezâs eyes to the possibilities at Elon and helped lead to choosing the university.
âI was very introverted, very quiet, kept to myself. I didnât have any confidence to put myself out there,â said Navarrete Perez, who was awarded the Leo M. Lambert Odyssey Program scholarship. âThankfully, with Elon Academy, with their coaching, mentoring and all these opportunities, it helped me become a more confident man and more outspoken.â
Now, Navarrete-Perez is excited for his first semester, planning to earn both a bachelor’s and masterâs degree through the Martha and Spencer Love School of Business Accelerated 3+1 Dual Degree Program.

Berenice Sanchez-Rosaldo â29, 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.
âHaving 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,â said Sanchez-Rosaldo, who received the Mac Mahon Family Odyssey Program scholarship. âI was able to learn new things about what to do, what not to do during my college application process.â
Sanchez-Rosaldo plans to major in political science, with the goal of eventually attending law school and becoming an immigration attorney.
âThe immigration process is not easy,â said Sanchez-Rosaldo. âItâs a lengthy process and there are many different ways to go about it, and thatâs something that many immigrants donât know. I want to show people that there is a way to go about this, and itâs a way I would like to help my community.â