Class of 2028, Elon’s most diverse yet, arrives to campus

More than 1600 first year students and over 70 transfer students arrived to Elon University on Aug. 23 excited for new experiences in their new home.

Roommates Skylar Silk ’28 and Chloe Deangelis ’28 didn’t know each other before moving in together at Elon University on Friday, Aug. 23, but they greeted each other as if they were lifelong friends.

Two people carry items up stairs
Students move into a residence hall at Elon University on Aug. 23, 2024.
President Connie Book talks to someone in a car
President Connie Ledoux Book greets members of the Class of 2028 at Schar Center on Move-In Day on Friday, Aug. 23, 2024.
Person holds a sign
The Fire of the Carolinas Marching Band welcomes families to Elon for Move-In Day on Aug. 23, 2024

“This is the first time Skylar met her roommate and they burst into cheer so that’s a good sign,” said Erica Silk P’28, Skylar’s mother. “I’m excited for Sky to make friends, meet people, live on her own and enjoy life as you should in college. We’re from Ohio and once we heard about Elon, we fell in love.”

Silk and Deangelis were two of the more than 1,600 members of the Class of 2028 and other new students who arrived at Elon on Friday for Move-In Day, a collaborative effort that helps new students get settled in and begin their academic journeys at Elon. Campus was buzzing with excitement as new students arrived to Schar Center to pick up their Move-In Day materials before heading to their residence halls. Volunteers greeted families with chants and cheers at the Schar Center entrance where students checked in and received information on how to get to their housing assignments and other important items — room keys, parking passes, Phoenix cards, schedules and a variety of educational materials.

The Fire of the Carolinas marching band amplified the spirited atmosphere, parading through campus, including through Belk Library, playing Elon’s fight song and other lively tunes. To keep the energy up, WSOE, the university’s student-run radio station, was present in every residential neighborhood. Members of Elon Campus Safety & Police managed the flow of vehicles and pedestrians through the main areas, ensuring smooth traffic while refreshment stations scattered across campus kept Move-In Day helpers energized throughout the event.

A family tradition

Several people lift a white shelf
Move-In Day on the Elon University campus on Aug. 23, 2024.
Elon students roll blue carts away from building
Students move into the new East Neighborhood Commons on Aug. 23, 2024.
Band plays in Belk Library
The Fire of the Carolinas marching band goes through Belk Library on Move-In Day on Aug. 23, 2024.

Silk and Deangelis found each other randomly on Instagram and are now beginning their journey intentionally together at Elon. Both students have family members who have attended Elon, and for Skylar, it’s a family tradition.

“Elon is really deep in my family,” said Skylar. “I had four cousins come here and then I have three older brothers who came here. It’s so beautiful here. As soon as I came and toured, I knew.”

Christine Bradsher’s ’28 father and sister both attended Elon and, after visiting over the years, it began to feel like home. Now, Bradsher gets a brand-new home in the East Neighborhood Commons, the university’s newest building which opened for the first time on Move-In Day. The three-story, 45,000-square-foot building has 90 residential rooms primarily for first-year students as well as faculty/staff apartments and office space. The commons also includes a “forum,” a large multipurpose room for class, meetings and social events.

“It’s so nice. My friend plays soccer here and I was in East Neighborhood yesterday and it’s so beautiful,” said Bradsher, a Change Maker Scholar from Lorton, Virginia. “I’m excited to be in a new place and meet new people. I’m also excited to get started with my chemistry major and focus on something that I’m really interested in.”

As a proud alumna, Julie Gillespie ’94 P’24 P’28 moved her second child into Elon on Friday. “It’s so fun to come back and look and say ‘I lived there, I went to a party here and I went to class here.’ It’s fun. We really enjoy it,” she said while helping to unpack her son’s room.

‘Best move-in’

Three Elon student smile by a blue bin
Hundreds of students, faculty and staff helped make the 2024 Move-In Day process smooth for the Class of 2028.

While Gillespie doesn’t remember much from her first-year Move-In Day at Brannock Hall more than 30 years ago, she’s been impressed with the current Move-In Day for both of her children. Other students and parents shared their appreciation for Elon’s smooth Move-In Day as well.

Move-In Day 2024 at Elon University on Aug. 23.

“Best move-in process ever,” said Erica Silk. “Number one move-in process.”

Across campus, hundreds of students, faculty and staff, including members of Elon’s football, men’s and women’s soccer, volleyball, cheer and dance teams helped unload vehicles and carry dorm-room essentials inside. Members of Elon’s Facilities Management team put utility carts and trailers to use transporting belongings from lines of vehicles to the front doors of residence halls.

“Move-In is one of my favorite times, I like seeing people getting their stuff in being all happy and excited and getting to make those connections now,” said Michaela Shapiro ’27, an international and global studies major and resident assistant helping with Move-In Day on Friday.

Choosing Elon

Cooler summer weather and sunshine welcomed the 1,620 first-year and 74 transfer students to Elon’s campus. The Class of 2028 is Elon’s most diverse class in university history – 23% identify as ALANAM (African American, Latino/Hispanic, Asian Pacific Islander, Native American, Alaska Native and multiracial). This class is coming to Elon from 43 states and 16 different countries including Mexico, Switzerland, France, China and Germany. Twelve percent identify as first-generation college students and the class overall has an average core GPA of 4.08.

“The Honors Program was really appealing and I also enjoy the small class sizes which means you get to make connections with faculty,” said Neil Parmer ’28, from Cary, North Carolina, who is looking to major in public health studies and business analytics and is one of just 63 Class of 2028 students in Elon’s prestigious Honors Program.

“There were a lot of schools, and it was hard to decide what school had what programs for you and what worked best for you and I think Elon had a combination of what I was looking for,” Parmer said.

Happy to be home

Four people stand around a blue bin
Move-In Day on the Elon University campus on Aug. 23.

While roommates like Silk and Deangelis made a connection quickly, current Elon students say it’s not a race.

“Give yourself grace,” said Danielle Giraldo ’25, a strategic communications major who offered her advice to the Class of 2028. “It’s ok to be nervous, homesick, tired, emotional, etc. You’re entering a new phase of life! It’s going to be hard, and you’re going to make mistakes, but you’re going to learn and grow so much!”

And Deangelis admits, there’s still some nerves but she’s excited for what’s to come.

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“It’s weird, because meeting my roommate was all over the phone,” said Deangelis, who is from Westport, Connecticut and plans to study elementary education. “But you have to have a good mindset going into it. I’m happy to be here.”

Move-In Day is the start of New Student Orientation which includes a variety of activities to help the Class of 2028 get acquainted with Elon. On Saturday, Aug. 24, the new students will gather for New Student Convocation where President Connie Ledoux Book will address the class for the first time, and they will receive their acorn – an Elon tradition symbolizing the start of their journey at the university.