- gaduation



graduation
Academic procession during the University of Canterbury graduation ceremony.

Graduation is the action of receiving or conferring an academic degree or the associated ceremony. The date of event is often called degree day. In the United States, it is also used to refer to the advancement from a primary or secondary school level. Many colleges have different traditions associated with the graduation ceremony, the most well known probably being throwing mortarboards in the air.

Contents

  • 1 United States
    • 1.1 Graduation speech
  • 2 United Kingdom
    • 2.1 University of Cambridge
  • 3 Other countries
  • 4 See also

United States

Graduation ceremonies in the United States are often orchestrated procedures involving a march of students onto the stage, the reading of speeches, the giving of diplomas, and an official moment when the students are declared graduated, also called the commencement exercise. The march is often set to music, usually Edward Elgar's Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1. In United States colleges and universities the speakers will include the salutatorian, an alumnus of the institution, possibly a famous speaker not associated with the institution, and the valedictorian. The giving of diplomas is usually the longest portion of the ceremony: One by one the graduates come forward as their names and major/minor announced. Each of them is given a diploma by an academic administrator or official such as the dean. It is very common for graduates not to receive their actual diploma at the ceremony but instead a certificate indicating that they participated in the ceremony or a booklet to hold the diploma in. At the high school level this allows teachers to withhold diplomas from students who are unruly during the ceremony, and at the college level this allows students who need an extra quarter or semester to participate in the official ceremony with their classmates.

At most colleges and universities in the US, the faculty technically will recommend that each candidate be given a degree, which is then formally conferred by the President or other institutional official. Typically, this is accomplished by a pair of short set speeches by a senior academic official and a senior institutional official: "Mr. President, on behalf of the faculty of Letters and Science, I hereby declare that these candidates have met all the requirements for the degree of...and request that such degree be conferred upon them." "Under the authority vested in me by the State of Iowa and the Trustees of Podunk College, I hereby confer upon these candidates the degree of..."

Graduation speech

A graduation speech, in the U.S., is a public speech given by a student or alumnus of a university or university college to a graduating class and their guests. Common themes of the graduation speech include wishing the graduates well in the "real world," cautioning that the world of academe is a special place where they were taught to think (a common variation contradicts this view). Ultimately, the speech is ceremonial, with attempts of humor and little wisdom or insight. Most recently, especially in prestigious institutions, the trend has been to find a celebrity (often one with no apparent connection to the specific institution or education in general) or a politician.

United Kingdom

Many university graduation ceremonies in the United Kingdom begin with a procession of academics, wearing academic dress. This procession is accompanied by music, and a ceremonial mace is often carried. However Pomp and Circumstance is not played, since this is a patriotic hymn. After this, an official reads out the names of the graduands one by one, organised by class of degree or by subject. When their names are called, the graduands walk across the stage to shake hands with a senior official, often the university's nominal Chancellor or the more important vice-chancellor, and receive their degree certificate. Graduands usually wear the academic dress of the degree they are receiving. There are some exceptions to this rule; for example serving members of the armed forces may wear their military uniform. Some of the older universities may hold their graduation ceremonies in Latin, whilst member institutions of the University of Wales hold their graduation ceremonies almost entirely in the Welsh language, even though barely any students understand either of these languages. The Latin section of the ceremony may include a rendition of an anthem, sometimes called the unofficial anthem of all universities, the De Brevitate Vitae, also known as The Gaudeamus.

University of Cambridge

At the University of Cambridge, however, each graduation is a separate act of the university's governing body, the Regent House, and must be voted on as with any other act. First an official will propose (in Latin) that the graduands be admitted to the relevant degree; a vote is then taken, although in practice only one vote will be cast, and that in favour. Next, the graduands come forward in groups of four and kneel before the Vice-Chancellor, who wears a special graduation cape, place their hands within his (a relic of the mediaeval pledge of fealty), and are told in Latin that they are admitted to their degrees. (In practice the head of the a college, often that of the graduands themselves, always deputises for the Vice-Chancellor.) The graduands always wear the academic dress that they were entitled to before graduating: for example, most students becoming Bachelors of Arts wear undergraduate gowns.

The Proceeding order for graduation is:

King's, Trinity, St Johns and then colleges from foundation order

Other countries

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See also

  • Academic dressja:卒業
Search Term: "Graduation"

 

graduation news and graduation articles

Here's our top rated graduation links for the day:

Carolina University Sees New Graduation Gap 

NPR - Feb 13 4:42 PM
News & Notes , February 13, 2007 ยท At the University of North Carolina, Greensboro, the graduation rate between blacks and whites are just about the same. Yet many more black women graduate than black men.
Huntington holds 16th annual D.A.R.E. graduation 
The Natchez Democrat - Feb 13 10:21 PM
FERRIDAY At Huntington Schools 16th annual D.A.R.E. graduation ceremony Wednesday morning, Sheriff Randy Maxwell told the group of 18 fourth-graders that with their certificate came a great responsibility.

In brief: Graduation forms due 
The News Record - Feb 13 8:36 PM
Students graduating Spring Quarter 2007 must complete their graduation application by Friday. Students are required to complete the proper forms and turn them into room 102 McMicken Hall.

ACLU may sue over black graduation rates 
The Palm Beach Post - Feb 12 9:11 PM
Prompted by the school district's low graduation rates of black students, the American Civil Liberties Union is considering filing a first-of-its-kind lawsuit against the district to bring them up.

Officials mull possible graduation speakers; Obama mentioned 
The Webster University Journal - 17 minutes ago
As the May 12 commencement ceremony approaches, so does the need to find a speaker. In the past, only Webster's board of trustees, faculty, staff and administration played a role in nominating the commencement speaker. This year, students had the opportunity to have a say.

Last Update: 2007-02-14 13:10:44

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