Please don't waste your time or the taxpayers money on a degree from ERAU. Here are three potential outcomes:
1. You don't make it into the Navy. There is no guarantee that you will actually go into the Navy, even with a 4 year NROTC scholarship. Plenty of ROTC studs get NPQd, academically suspended (highly unlikely at ERAU), or just plain decide that the military isn't for them. In the event you do not go into the military, but have a degree from ERAU, it is like having some certificates with no college degree. ERAU is not even a third-tier school. When future non-airline employers see ERAU on your resume, it will quickly find its way into the circular bin, and you will find yourself moving free bags around the Southwest baggage terminal.
2. You go into the Navy, but you have difficulty in flight school. One thing I've observed in the fleet and as an instructor is that people who major in aviation stuff (whether it be from ERAU or something similar) have binary results: either they have a leg up on their peers when it comes stick and rudder, and they can hang with the tactics because they are naturally gifted, or they have an overconfidence in their stick and rudder abilities and fall significantly short in the headword department when conditions get challenging. While I'm sure you've already put yourself into the preferable of the aforementioned categories, I think you should consider that you will be in a class with students who went to legitimate colleges and universities, and who have been intellectually challenged beyond what you will experience at ERAU.
3. You have no problems in flight school, rock it, and get your platform of choice. At some point you will come to a crossroads and be faced with some career decisions. Two of the few items that are part of your permanent record are your graduate institution and your major field of study. It is safe to say that you will never be a test pilot with a ERAU degree, and you will probably be excluded from other career paths, whether you realize it or not. Your school and major say a lot about your cognitive achievement and capability. Wouldn't you want to have more doors open for you down the road?
In conclusion, you can still do well in the Navy with a degree from ERAU, and I have several friends who have had great success to prove this - yet I think those friends would have been successful coming from any background, because they are talented and motivated people. I just hope they are able to stay in the cockpit of something, because once they leave the Navy or the airlines, they are going to be in for a rude awakening.