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Catholic college graduations, like the academic year, have made changes

Carol Zimmermann | Catholic News Service

University of Dayton students in Ohio wait to receive diplomas during one of six graduation ceremonies held May 7-9, 2021, at the University of Dayton Arena amid the coronavirus pandemic. (CNS photo/Meridith Robinson, courtesy University of Dayton)

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WASHINGTON — Catholic college graduation ceremonies — like
everything else this past year — look different. But they are primarily
happening in-person unlike last year, when many ceremonies were canceled or
took place virtually.

Some commencement ceremonies will be in bigger venues to give
crowds more space to be socially distant, while others will be outside for the
first time.

Many schools also are honoring last year’s graduates, who didn’t
get the chance to publicly mark this milestone, during this year’s
celebrations.

Across the board, college and universities seemed to be
significantly limiting the number of guests each graduate can invite,
encouraging others to view the ceremony on what is now a familiar venue:
livestream.

Many Catholic colleges have listed a backup plan if there is
inclement weather, tapping into that flexibility that have used during the past
year to adapt to COVID-19 restrictions.

The Franciscan University of Steubenville in Ohio, for example,
said in its graduation announcement: “Please note that all plans are
subject to change as we respond to health and safety protocols in a rapidly
changing environment.”

To accommodate students and their guests at this year’s
graduation, the University of Dayton, a Marianist-run school in Ohio, held six
smaller ceremonies in its arena for the May 7-9 graduations, where graduates
were each allowed four guests.

Prior to the event, Gretchen Theil, the university’s registrar
coordinator, said that ceremonies would look different from graduations in previous
years.

For starters, students would not process into the arena; instead,
the school planned an abbreviated procession of essential university support
staff. She also said there would be limited interaction between students and
staff members and no handshakes. Each ceremony was limited to 90 minutes to
allow for required cleaning and setup for the next ceremony.

“While we would love to be together under one roof at the
same time, hosting the smaller ceremonies allows us to offer a weatherproof
facility with excellent accessibility, sound and video capabilities and an
experienced team well-versed in working under public health guidelines,”
said school officials in a message to students announcing graduation plans.

John Garvey, president of The Catholic University of America in
Washington, similarly sent a message to the school community about this year’s
different graduation ceremony May 15 at FedEx Field, the stadium that is home
to the Washington Football Team, in Landover, Md.

In his April 9 message, he pointed out that since the 1960s,
Catholic U. has held its commencement on the campus mall adjacent to the
Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception.

“It’s always beautiful,” he said, but noted the
COVID-19 guidelines for the District of Columbia made a ceremony there
impossible last year and would have significantly limited the number of guests
this year. With the new venue, graduates could each have four guests and the
event also will be livestreamed, he said.

“I want to acknowledge the persistence and creativity of our
commencement team, who worked so hard over the past year to find alternatives
to a virtual commencement. We have tried all year to be as open as is safely
possible and these plans will carry that through to the end,” he added.

Garvey noted that last year’s graduates had a virtual ceremony
and had been promised an in-person commencement.

“While the pandemic has lasted longer than any of us
expected, ” he said the university intends to keep its commitment to the
2020 class and is working on having an in-person celebration on campus for our
graduates “once it is safe to do so.”

Benedictine College in Atchison, Kan., also changed its usual
commencement venue by announcing that its May 15 ceremony would be outdoors, at
the school’s football stadium, instead of indoors as it has been for decades.

Because last year’s commencement was canceled, graduates from the
previous year will be honored at this year’s ceremony and the speaker will be
last year’s scheduled speaker: Auxiliary Bishop Andrew H. Cozzens of St. Paul
and Minneapolis, who is a 1991 alum of Benedictine College.

If rain moves the ceremony indoors, the university’s gym will be
used. Graduation details on the university’s website note that the gym will be
seated to capacity, that there are no COVID-19 restrictions in the county and
that masks are voluntary.

“For any uncomfortable with that setting, we will have
multiple simulcast locations for viewing the ceremony,” it said.

Loyola University Maryland in Baltimore is combining its ceremony
for last year’s graduates and this year’s. Notre Dame of Maryland, also in
Baltimore, is having a virtual graduation ceremony May 23, but the week prior
to the ceremony, 2020 and 2021 graduates will be invited to return to campus to
take pictures and receive their diplomas.

No matter the venue or the crowd size at this year’s graduation
ceremonies throughout the month of May, the topic of the coronavirus pandemic
and its impact on students, faculty and staff and the world will likely loom
large.

This was the case at Assumption University in Worcester,
Massachusetts, where the university’s president, Francesco Cesareo, told
graduates during the May 9 ceremony that they represent a milestone in the
school’s history.

“This year, you have also shown yourself to be resilient as
you adapted to the changes that were necessary as we addressed the impact of
the pandemic,” he said. “The sacrifices you made have allowed you to
grow as a person in ways that were unexpected. In this way, the pandemic shaped
your education as it shaped you as well.”

Follow Zimmermann on
Twitter @carolmaczim

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