Elon University celebrated the Class of 2026 on May 22 as students officially became alumni during the university’s 136th Commencement Ceremonies in Schar Center, where they were encouraged to embrace failure, pursue growth and remain hopeful about the future.
Rain didn’t stop the light of more than 1,500 Elon University students shining bright as the Class of 2026 became alumni during the university’s 136th Commencement Ceremonies on May 22 in Schar Center.
Despite the wet weather, families, friends, faculty and staff gathered to celebrate graduates who were encouraged not only to pursue success, but also to embrace failure as an essential part of growth.

Patricia Walsh Chadwick P’16, an Elon trustee and accomplished Wall Street strategist, delivered the Commencement address, reminding graduates that quitting is the “only true definition of failure” and urging them not to let fear guide their decisions.
“Pundits have a way of forecasting disaster every spring just as college graduates step into the world. My advice is simple: ignore them,” she said. “Technology will not be the ruin of us all; it opens far more doors than it closes. You are the future of the workforce, and that should excite you.”
The paths to success

Chadwick reflected on her own unconventional path, emphasizing that there is no “magic potion” for success. She shared how she grew up in a religious sect, which she later described as a cult, and was forced out at 17 years old.
“Fearful of the world, and in my naïveté, I turned to a single phrase for guidance: ‘Failure is not an option,’” she said. “What I hadn’t realized is that no one is immune from mistakes or failures. Those two words, dreaded by so many, are part of the learning process.”
Technology will not be the ruin of us all; it opens far more doors than it closes. You are the future of the workforce, and that should excite you.
Patricia Walsh Chadwick P’16
She also spoke about her son, Elon alumnus Jim Chadwick ’16, who had planned to launch a gaming company after graduation. After spending a year pursuing that dream, he realized it was not the future he had envisioned and eventually transitioned into private finance.
“Remember to take something of value from every employment experience before moving on to the next one,” she said. “I like to think of a career path as a circular stairway, where each success leads to a new challenge winding slowly upward toward your dreams.”

Elon celebrated graduates in two ceremonies — the morning event for the School of Communications and the Martha and Spencer Love School of Business, and the afternoon event for Elon College, the College of Arts and Sciences, the Dr. Jo Watts Williams School of Education and the School of Health Sciences.
The Rev. Kirstin Boswell, Elon University’s chaplain and dean of mulfifaith engagement, opened each ceremony with the invocation.
“As these graduates step into what comes next, grant them wisdom beyond knowledge, courage beyond fear and compassion deep enough to serve a world that is in need,” Boswell said. “May they use their gifts not only for personal success, but for healing, for justice, for truth and for the flourishing of others.”
Corinne Wilson ’26 performed the Star-Spangled Banner, and led the singing of the alma mater, while Mindy Monroe ’26 and Malia Horst ’26 gave a special musical performance of “For Good,” from the musical “Wicked.”

The Elon magic
Graduates reflected on the experiences that shaped their time at Elon, including the university’s commitment to undergraduate teaching. In 2025, for the fifth year in a row, Elon topped a “Best Undergraduate Teaching” list published by U.S. News & World Report.
“Professors can actually invest in you because of the class sizes being so small,” said Robbie Simpson ’26, an Elon native who earned a degree in exercise science. “I really appreciate that because professors get to take their time to understand you, get to know you and invest because they have a personal connection to you, so it makes them it more valuable to them.”
The strong relationships with faculty were an important part of Honors Fellow Diego Hernandez’s ’26 Elon experience.
“The time that the professors have taken out of their day and their lives to support us as students, that’s one of the best things I got from Elon,” said Hernandez, who earned a degree in engineering. “That’s something that I’m going to take with me.”

The myriad of involvement opportunities was also essential for graduates.
Autumn Goyette ’26, who earned a bachelor’s and master’s degree in accounting through the Love School of Business Accelerated 3+1 Dual Degree Program, says her time working for Residence Life and in the Love School of Business Dean’s Office has made an impact on her time at Elon. She will soon be moving to Virginia to work for Ernst & Young.
“I’m just so grateful for everything that Elon gave me and brought to me,” said Goyette, who is from Pittsburg, North Carolina. “This place is my home and has been my home for four years.”

Decked out in various graduation cords, Ella Allen ’26, a Teaching Fellow who earned a mathematics degree with teacher licensure from Elon College, the College of Arts and Sciences, was heavily involved on campus, including as an orientation leader and a member of Kappa Delta sorority. Next, Allen will be pursuing her Master’s of Higher Education at Elon. She noted that the people and support she received at Elon were invaluable.
Lilly Ikle ’26 of Baltimore, Maryland, earned a cinema & television arts degree from the School of Communications. She says the time has flown by and she feels like she was “dropped off yesterday.” Ikle initially came to Elon for its nationally recognized musical theatre program and for Elon’s ability to work with students with learning disabilities.
“My major really helped me get that creative outlet that I wanted in musical theater, but it also gave me the practical side of work I wanted to do in the future,” said Ikle, who plans to move to Nashville after graduation to pursue music. “My major gave me a creative outlet, let me get kind of that artsy side out of me, but also taught me things that I can bring into the real world.”

The Class of 2026 includes many stand-out stories:
- After a trip to Ecuador, Bernardo Vargas-Lopez ’26, who earned a degree in sport management, and Juan Daniel Chiriboga ’26, who earned a degree in entrepreneurship & innovation, built YAPA, a plant-based energy drink shaped by friendship, curiosity and mentorship.
- Kaitlyn Lewis ’26, who earned a degree in elementary education, came to Elon through three of the Dr. Jo Watts Williams School of Education’s primary scholarship programs: Alamance Scholars, NC Teaching Fellows and, post-graduation, Teach for Alamance.
- Jonathan Weaver ’26 originally intended to go into finance, but through exploration and faculty mentorship, switched his major to biology, and is now going to dental school at The Ohio State University.
- Being waitlisted for one program allowed Allie Schult ’26 to realize her true passion for nursing. She now has a post-graduate position at Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta.
- Rony Dahdal ’26, a Goldwater Scholar and Lumen Scholar, earned a degree in computer science, mathematics and philosophy and did three different undergraduate research projects while at Elon. The first was helping to create a mathematical model of complex equations that predict how the human immune system responds to COVID-19; another was developing an autonomous robotic arm to monitor and tend to crops by training the 3D machine-learning model to understand plant anatomy, and a third was developing a method to gather medical vital signs.
All of these students were helped by what student commencement speaker Ruby Radis ’26 of Chicago called the “Elon magic.” Radis, who earned a degree in human service studies, delivered the “Message of Appreciation” on Friday.
“From the moment I stepped onto this beautiful brick-covered campus, one truth became clear: there is magic here,” Radis said. “That Elon magic builds a community where students know their neighbors, teachers and coworkers. Rather
than a quick hello, connections are founded on respect.”
Radis emphasized that Elon helped “emphasize the value of human difference,” and her fellow graduates should take that forward with them.
“Using those lessons, we can work together to uplift each other, amplify voices often left unheard and sprinkle a little of our very own Elon magic on everyone we meet,” Radis said.
That Elon magic builds a community where students know their neighbors, teachers and coworkers. Rather than a quick hello, connections are founded on respect.
Ruby Radis ’26

Be possible-ists
In her charge to the graduates, Elon President Connie Ledoux Book asked the Class of 2026 to look back on their New Student Convocation in 2022, 1,371 days prior.
“That morning, we placed an acorn in your hand, and I asked you to do something simple, and yet profound: To grow deep roots, and to reach high. Today, I look out at you, and I see what’s grown,” Book said.

During their first year, the Class of 2026 all read the Common Reading book “Factfulness” by Hans Rosling. In his book, Rosling described the word “possible-ist:” someone who looks honestly at the world’s problems and still believes, based on evidence, that things can get better, and that they are getting better.
“Class of 2026, through your Elon journey, you have grown into these possible-ists,” she said. “You have learned to hold complexity without losing hope, to see what’s broken without losing your willingness to build, to zoom out and recognize progress, and to keep moving forward. That is the Elon way, and the world needs more of it.”
View the full undergraduate commencement program online.
