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AJ Shorter/Benedict College
NPR Ed
With Fall Graduation Off, But Football Still On, Students Question College Priorities
December 8, 20205:00 AM ET
Adedayo Akala
Jayme Henderson says her college's decision to cancel fall graduation over coronavirus concerns felt like "a slap in the face."
Henderson, a graduating senior at the University of Missouri in
Columbia, remembers thinking about the campus activities that hadn't
been cancelled: Football was still on, with fans still able to attend
games in-person, and there were even some in-person classes. To make
matters worse, the email cancelling fall commencement arrived the same
day as another email detailing parking restrictions for big game day
crowds.
"I wouldn't be upset if it was all or nothing," Henderson says. "It
seems like the university is picking and choosing what events are
important to have, which doesn't really seem fair."
As coronavirus case numbers continue to increase across the nation,
many colleges have canceled in-person fall graduation ceremonies, which
are usually held in December. Official announcements often cite health
concerns. But several students told NPR that these cancellations came
while other in-person activities were allowed to take place, leading to
confusion and frustration among graduating seniors.
"I completely understand safety first," Henderson says, "but it just seems like it's possible."
"The one thing that we all came here to do"
Across the country, students have started petitions in hopes of getting
their institutions to reconsider hosting in-person graduation
ceremonies. The petitions offer suggestions on how graduations could
still be held safely. For instance: limiting the number of guests each
student can bring and assigning sections for each family. Many
petitions also call attention to the large, in-person events that are
still on.
The University of Missouri petition, which Henderson helped organize,
notes, "It is difficult for students to accept that Mizzou is able to
hold football games with 20,000 guests but refuse to provide us with a
socially distanced commencement alternative to do the one thing that we
all came here to do: celebrate our achievement of graduating."
University of Missouri spokesperson Christian Basi tells NPR that the
school canceled December graduation because it couldn't guarantee
safety. "We have individuals come from all 50 states and foreign
countries to see commencement ceremonies. We don't have the resources
to screen everyone."
He says the university decided not to hold a commencement ceremony in
the football stadium because winters in Missouri are unpredictable, and
it wouldn't be fair to ask families to plan for that. "Football plays
in any kind of weather. ... And fans can decide if they want to come
and brave the weather or not," he explains. The university is still
committed to holding an in-person graduation for the entire class of
2020 when it is safe to do so, Basi says.
A Florida State University petition suggests a venue change: "All 2020
football season, FSU has been hosting limited-capacity games. Less than
3,000 students will be graduating from Florida State University in
December 2020. Doak Campbell Stadium can hold 79,560 occupants. This is
more than enough space to safely host a commencement ceremony for our
graduates."
Florida State has not announced plans for a spring 2021 commencement.
University spokesperson Amy Farnum-Patronis says the cancellation of
the in-person ceremony came after a directive from the Florida Board of
Governors and the State University System..
"In addition, with FSU moving entirely to remote classes after the
Thanksgiving break, having students and family members return to
Tallahassee in December poses further health and logistical
challenges," Farnum-Patronis says.
"It's for the community of people behind me"
For many students, earning a degree and walking across the stage isn't
only an accomplishment for themselves but also for their families.
Graduating senior Miles Feacher helped organize the Florida State petition.
"My main motivation for creating a petition was because there are a lot
of first-generation graduates, and this is like a moment of a lifetime
for them," he says. "Hosting football games, but taking this moment
away from students seems so crazy."
Feacher is a child of immigrants himself.
"I'm not walking across the stage to prove a point or even for myself.
It's for the community of people behind me," he says. "I think that's a
shared sentiment for a lot of students, especially students of color
and immigrants."
Students like Camilla Williams, also a graduating senior at Florida
State. She says her graduation means the world to her parents, who are
originally from Jamaica.
"My parents didn't get to go to college. They didn't get to experience
everything that I'm experiencing," Williams explains. "They worked
really hard to make sure my sister and I could go to college to get a
good education. This is really for them."
Williams says she was disappointed when Florida State cancelled
in-person graduation, but she has come to terms with the fact that she
will not be able to walk across the stage to celebrate this major
milestone.
"The importance of donning the cap and gown"
Some in-person graduations have taken place during the pandemic. In
August, Benedict College, a small historically black college in
Columbia, S.C., hosted a graduation ceremony in its football stadium.
Benedict usually has about 250 to 300 graduates a year, but only 180
students were able to return for the August ceremony.
"It was important for us to do this for our students. They deserved
this," explains Roslyn Clark Artis, president of Benedict College.
Graduates stayed 6 feet apart and wore masks, and while families were
not invited, the ceremony was live streamed on various platforms for
loved ones to watch.
"We wanted to make it really special for the students," Artis says, "so
as the students were leaving, the music started and the firework show
began. That was a happy surprise for the kids."
Benedict College doesn't host fall commencements — instead, the school
invites fall graduates to the spring ceremony, which it plans to do
again this year.
Artis says she would recommend a socially distanced ceremony to other universities and colleges.
"The importance of donning the cap and gown and marching across the stage to receive a diploma, cannot be understated."
But she acknowledges it's harder to pull off at larger institutions, with thousands of graduating students.
Fall graduations can also be tougher to accomplish in colder climates.
Instead, many colleges are offering make-up ceremonies tentatively scheduled for the spring.
Baylor University has pushed in-person fall graduation to May 2021, and
Baylor University senior Kennedy Kinnard says she'll be there. "This is
major to me," she says, "so I'm definitely going to come back."
As a Black student, Kinnard says Baylor wasn't always the friendliest place, so graduation feels like a double accomplishment.
For other students, coming back six months later isn't so appealing.
Jayme Henderson at the University of Missouri says, "I think by then the moment would have passed."
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