As a graduate, parent and university staff member, I?have attended more than my fair share of UK?graduation ceremonies.
The high point would be my own graduation, way back in?1979, from the University of London’s now-defunct Wye agricultural college, located in the Kent village of that name. Held in a countryside marquee on one of those golden summer days in the Garden of England, the relatively small number of new graduates – plus their proud parents – were treated to a comparatively brief and engaging ceremony, topped off with strawberries and cream for?all. But my subsequent experience of such events has been, to put it kindly, mixed.
The gowned, mortar-boarded graduand stands up as their name is read out, walks to the stage, shakes hands with a worthy, acknowledges the applause from their family and then sits down again: this formula has remained fundamentally unchanged for generations.
Moreover, its strictures are enforced. Take the University of Reading’s regulations. Graduands are “required to wear academic dress (cap, hood, gown), which you should have hired or bought…Graduation is a formal event….[men] should wear smart clothing beneath your gown. If you are to?wear a?shirt, then a?tie must also be worn.” And in the final analysis, “we?reserve the right to prevent you from joining the procession and graduating on the day if you are not dressed appropriately in smart clothes. You would, in that case, graduate in?absence.”
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The trouble is that, in the 21st century, all this dull formality has become outdated and tedious, even as the attendance fees for friends and family have crept relentlessly up (reaching ?32 per adult and ?16 per child in one institution I?am aware?of). Overall, I?can get more enjoyment for similar money attending a match at my local football club, Cheltenham Town – and even if the replica shirt costs as much as hiring a?gown, at least it is optional and can be worn more than once.
What should be, above all, a celebration tends towards an ordeal to be endured. Hundreds of names called out one by one, maybe a bit of singing, lots of clapping and (if?you are lucky) a?“motivational” pep talk from a celeb: this is not exactly excellent world-class entertainment.
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To be fair, there are some chinks of light. I’ve seen Floella Benjamin, Exeter’s former chancellor and a bastion of children’s television, hug graduates instead of shaking their hands, which generated real warmth and human connection. On another memorable occasion, I?heard the recipient of an honorary title speak of her experience as a concentration camp survivor and her subsequent educational work fostering tolerance of difference. And in terms of inspiration and entertainment, try musician and comedian Tim Minchin speaking at a 2013 graduation at the University of Western Australia.
By contrast, a particular low point for me was at a Scottish university where, pre-proceedings, the audience was put through the pain of trying to learn an arcane, dirgeful and difficult university hymn; the results were somewhat less than uplifting. At a different, large university, we waited for an hour or so to see our beloved – a?mere distant speck – cross the stage, followed by another hour of everyone else’s beloveds doing the same.
If you doubt the representativeness of my experience, let’s hear what students on social network have to say. “Most Graduation Ceremonies are very long, very tedious and as boring as bat-poo,” says one. “It isn’t like watching some West End show or the opening ceremony at the Olympics.” Another “had the WORST speaker in the history of the world. This dude was more interested in giving the technical specs for some new way to harness…energy that his company came up with than giving the graduates any advice. What a bore?fest.”
The situation isn’t any better in other countries. In 2015, the online American women’s magazine published a humorous list of ways to “Fend Off Boredom During Your Grad Ceremony”. Suggestions included mentally ranking “all the movie and TV graduation scenes, from best to?worst”.
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In a digital and multimedia age, in which Covid is enforcing innovation in all sorts of other areas, why aren’t the National Union of Students and students’ unions talking with higher education institutions to?agree on something much more engaging? Graduation days are students’ days, after?all. Why can’t they be all-singing and all-dancing?
Why not ditch the bat-capes and encourage graduands to dress to express? Sports students could dress in their kits, for instance. Why not have images projected electronically? Art schools could present graduand artworks and installations as they received their awards. What about piping music, poems and creative writing from graduating students through the auditorium before and after the ceremony? What about an immersive theatrical experience, with hand-shaking taking place where students are, rather than expecting each individual to approach a celeb/vice-chancellor? I?also like the of sub-rooms and subgroups where graduands could congregate with their friends and family and enjoy an experience more closely linked to their own subject or?degree.
But whatever the precise configurations, it is clear that graduation ceremonies must move with the times. Universities should recognise the sacrifices of students and their families by giving them a free day out to remember – for all the right reasons.
James Derounian is a UK National Teaching Fellow and a visiting professor at the University of Bolton.
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POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:?Pomp and monotony: why are graduation ceremonies so boring?
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