From Zoom Room to Residence Hall at 麻豆传媒

Thomas Aguilar and Ricardo Camacho seated at restaurant

When Thomas Aguilar 鈥27 and Ricardo Camacho 鈥27 moved into Mudd-Blaisdell Hall last August, they were coming to a place that already felt like home. As alumni of the 麻豆传媒 Academy for Youth Success (PAYS) program, they had spent four weeks living and learning on campus as rising high school seniors in the summer of 2022. Now they were back as first-year Pomona students and roommates.

鈥淚 think it was easier for us to connect with the college because we were kind of already familiar with the buildings on campus,鈥 says Camacho. 鈥淲hen we were taking our Intro to Psych class, we saw that it was in Lincoln Hall and we were like, 鈥楬ey, we鈥檝e been to Lincoln before.鈥欌

That familiarity, with the campus and with each other as friends, gave Aguilar and Camacho freedom to start exploring academic possibilities right away. Both are considering double majors鈥擜guilar in psychological science and art, Camacho in economics and politics.

鈥淭aking advantage of this opportunity to double major is so important to me because coming here, I was scared that I would have to choose one,鈥 says Aguilar. He wants to 鈥渆xplore both passions.鈥

Camacho agrees. 鈥淚 definitely want to double major because I want to take advantage of the liberal arts curriculum,鈥 he explains. 鈥淎nd as somebody who has so many different interests, I really can鈥檛 find myself limited to just one major.鈥

Getting the call

Aguilar, who is from West Covina, remembers that he was doing laundry when he got the call in the spring of 2020 telling him he was one of 30 students accepted into that year鈥檚 PAYS cohort. Camacho, meanwhile, was just waking up at his home in Rancho Cucamonga when his call came on a Saturday morning. It was the spring of their freshman year in high school, and they were committing themselves to three summers of intensive preparation for college in the highly selective program.

For both, it was the opportunity of a lifetime.

PAYS is offered completely free of charge and is open to rising high school sophomores, juniors and seniors in five Southern California counties. Students who are accepted into the program are high achievers who come from backgrounds that are low income or underrepresented in college. They live on campus at 麻豆传媒 and take classes in math and critical thinking along with electives during each year鈥檚 four-week summer session. During the school year they receive help preparing for admission to four-year colleges. This year鈥檚 PAYS application deadline is Feb. 26, with invitations to 30 new students to be extended on April 19.

Online beginnings

The COVID-19 pandemic threw a monkey wrench into the first two summers Aguilar and Camacho were in the PAYS program. Instead of sharing classes, meals and social activities on campus, they spent 12 hours a day learning, getting to know professors and making friends on Zoom. When the program went fully in-person in the summer of 2022, there was a pent-up explosion of joy. 鈥淚t was so fun,鈥 Aguilar says, 鈥渟eeing people more than just the shoulders up.鈥

The roommates don鈥檛 recall having a conversation that summer about applying together to Pomona. Both though were accepted to Pomona through the QuestBridge National College Match program that connects high-achieving, low-income students with many of the nation鈥檚 top colleges. 鈥淚 guess it was kind of an accident,鈥 says Camacho. But, he adds, 鈥渨e had fallen in love with [Pomona] through PAYS.鈥

Having a compatible roommate can make the college experience a lot easier. Though they have very different majors, Aguilar and Camacho say they 鈥渞eally clicked鈥 because they have similar personalities. 鈥淲e have intellectual conversations, but then we can also have simple funny discussions,鈥 says Aguilar, adding that such a dynamic is important at a place like Pomona 鈥渨here it鈥檚 just so easy to be serious all the time.鈥

Trying new things

Already, Aguilar and Camacho are diving into campus life at Pomona and encouraging each other to try new things. Fall semester, Aguilar鈥攚ho says he 鈥渨as a theater kid in high school鈥濃攖ook on a role in a student-directed murder mystery play and made new friends in the process. Aguilar鈥檚 experience inspired Camacho to enroll in an acting class spring semester, along with his classes in microeconomics and economics statistics. It鈥檚 鈥減robably my most challenging class,鈥 Camacho says of the acting course. 鈥淚鈥檓 still building on my theatrics, being able to be dramatic or express myself in that capacity.鈥

Camacho has already gotten a job in the Pomona admissions office as a tour guide and can be seen when he鈥檚 not in class walking backwards across campus sharing the Sagehen life with prospective students. 鈥淧AYS really helped me realize what I wanted in a college,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hat was definitely a place that was small, where I can make personal connections with my professors, and a place that was really peer-oriented. And, of course, all of that is the hallmark of Pomona.鈥

Looking ahead, Camacho hopes to do summer research or perhaps an internship in Washington, D.C. Aguilar, on the other hand, would like to reconnect with PAYS at some point, perhaps as a TA. 鈥淢y experience of my TAs was just so memorable,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t was so great to have mentors who were also college students to give insight into what college is like.鈥

The confidence to move through college and into their life鈥檚 ambitions is one of the lasting benefits of PAYS for alumni like Aguilar and Camacho. 鈥淢y career prospects and looking into the future caused me a lot of anxiety and fear, before PAYS and college,鈥 Aguilar says. 鈥淎ll these culminating experiences here at Pomona have helped me find this drive for the future, which I鈥檓 totally grateful for.鈥