Woolfolk's reaction took a few more seconds to register. Finally, she lifted her arms above her head in celebration as her family members continued their gleeful screams. And then came the tears of joy and hugs as the news really sank in -- she was going to UNT for a true university experience.
Woolfolk, who has an intellectual disability, had almost given up on college.
She first tried a community college after graduating from Cedar Hill High School in 2019. While there, she struggled and found it challenging to comprehend class expectations.
"I would just sit there and look at the paper, not understanding what to do," Woolfolk recalls.
She was capable of the learning, but she needed one-on-one guidance and a dedicated support system to have greater success in the classroom. Woolfolk and her family looked into collegiate programs for students with ID. The options were few -- and even fewer if Woolfolk wanted to live on campus and be integrated with the entire university community.
At the time, the closest program was hours away at Texas A&M University in College Station, and others were located outside Texas, even farther from the family's home in Cedar Hill.
"I didn't want to be so far if I needed help from my family," Woolfolk says.
Her college dreams went on hold until her grandma discovered a new program being developed at UNT.
UNT ELEVAR, which stands for Empower, Learn, Excel, enVision, Advance and Rise, officially debuted in Fall 2021 as the first inclusive post-secondary program for students with intellectual disabilities in the North Texas region.
It was the option Woolfolk had been looking for, and this fall she's joined eight other students in ELEVAR's second cohort.
"I am so excited because this program is going to help me be better and do better," Woolfolk says. "If I had to go back to another school that doesn't have the support I need, it wouldn't work."
Those sentiments are similar to the ones felt by her ELEVAR classmates and their families. College was a path they never imagined they could take, but the tide is changing.
As one of the university's newest programs, ELEVAR is giving educational access to a population that has been historically excluded from higher education, and it's uniting faculty and staff across campus to bring the students well-rounded support and experiences.
It's part of UNT's mission to give all students the inclusive and welcoming space they need to thrive -- through programs and initiatives that not only focus on academics, but also on career readiness, financial literacy, mental and physical health, and social and emotional well-being.