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In robes and pyjamas, with cake and hugs, ߲ݴý graduates celebrate virtual fall convocation

With their families and on social media, thousands of ߲ݴý students celebrated graduation Saturday during U of T’s annual fall convocation – the second virtual convocation in its 193-year history.

President Meric Gertler and Chancellor Rose Patten stood on Convocation Hall’s stage, decorated with gonfalons representing each faculty and division across the three campuses, and conferred degrees on more than 5,200 graduates in absentia.

The newest group of ߲ݴý graduates found their own ways to celebrate – and make light of – the unusual circumstances as they watched the broadcast of the pre-recorded ceremony from across Canada and around the world.

“Who else is convocating in their PJs today?” , who was graduating with an MD-PhD from the Temerty Faculty of Medicine.

At a podium wearing the traditional navy-and-silver ceremonial robe, President Gertler congratulated students for reaching the finish line, assuring them they would be invited back to campus to celebrate their achievements in person when the situation permits.

“We look forward to seeing you then and to acknowledging each of our graduating students at those celebrations,” he said, welcoming the graduates to the more than 600,000-strong family of U of T alumni that includes prime ministers, business and community leaders and other luminaries.

“We have no doubt that the ߲ݴý’s high international standing can be attributed to generations of dedicated and very talented faculty and staff members. But we also understand that this reputation has been built by our alumni, a group that now includes each and every one of you.”

Patten, a former banking executive who blazed a trail for women on Bay Street, said the graduating class “has given us all very special reason to hope” and praised the Class of 2020 for rising to meet the historic challenges brought on by the global pandemic.

“You have demonstrated exemplary courage, perseverance and generosity,” Patten said. “These are the qualities of leadership that we need in our society, now more than ever. We are so proud to count you among the global community of alumni of the ߲ݴý,” she said.

More than 5,200 graduates received their degrees in absentia as they watched on screens across Canada and around the world.

The virtual fall ceremony included many time-honoured U of T traditions: a graduation procession from Simcoe Hall in traditional attire, a bedel carrying U of T’s mace, two esquires carrying the staves, an exchange in Latin between the president and chancellor, organ music by U of T’s John Tuttle and the sound of the carillon bells from Soldiers’ Tower. The bedel for the ceremony was Claire Kennedy, chair of Governing Council, while Marium Vahed and Amin Kamaleddin, both student governors, served as esquires.

There were some important differences, too.

In lieu of reading each graduate’s name on stage, a scrolling banner listed each graduate’s full name and their program – a moment that still managed to prompt shrieks of excitement that were shared on social media.

Caitlin Tejowinoto, a member of St. Michael’s College, appeared in that showed her watching the virtual event with family and a large cake, decorated for convocation. In the video, a finger points excitedly at a laptop as Tejowinoto’s name is about to crawl across the screen. Next comes clapping, grins and someone exclaiming: “Yay! High distinction!”

Photos were posted on Instagram that showed ߲ݴý graduate Caitlin Tejowinoto celebrating with family and cake (images via Instagram)

Another key change: The Class of 2020 – both those who graduated in June and in November – will have access to secure digital diplomas in the coming months, along with their traditional parchments, which will be arriving over the coming days by courier. The move is part of U of T’s broader Transcript Innovation Initiative, a digitization project that will be formally rolled out next year.

And, in a first for the university, the national anthem was performed by the U of T Symphony Orchestra and U of T Wind Ensemble, with each musician recording their part separately from kitchens, living rooms and bedrooms across the Greater Toronto Area. More than 60 student musicians appeared on screen in a Zoom mosaic to play a version of O Canada that was arranged by John Fenwick, a U of T Faculty of Music graduate, and mixed by Jeff Wolpert, the director of music technology and digital media program.

The national anthem was performed by the U of T Symphony Orchestra and U of T Wind Ensemble, with each musician recording their part separately. 

Convocation speaker Maydianne Andrade, a world-renowned evolutionary ecologist known for her expertise in the mating habits of cannibalistic spiders and her efforts to champion equity and diversity on campus, offered graduates a “double congratulations” for reaching one of life’s important milestones – and doing it during a global public health crisis.

“You deserve to be very proud of these extraordinary accomplishments,” she said. “More than that, because of what you have experienced and overcome, you have every reason to look eagerly towards your future.”

Professor Andrade, the vice-dean, faculty affairs, equity and success at U of T Scarborough, urged students to use their knowledge and talent to solve the greatest challenges facing the world – many of which have come into sharper focus during the pandemic. They include climate change, income inequality and anti-Black and anti-Indigenous racism, she said.

“Now more than any time in recent history, you will be central to our ability to overcome the daunting challenges we must face together.”

No doubt there were many graduands who, like Ouyang, took the opportunity afforded by a virtual convocation to graduate in pajamas, sweatpants and other casual attire. Others rented formal convocation regalia from Gaspard, U of T’s official supplier.

Ellen Gute, meanwhile, after her thesis defence in August when she had an unusual cardboard mortarboard perched atop her head. The mortarboard depicts ice crystal formation on a tree pollen in a cloud, a reference to her PhD research on the effects of atmospheric processing on pollen ice nucleation ability under cold and mixed-phase cloud conditions.

Gute, who comes from Germany, explained that the making of a hat related to your PhD research topic is a European tradition.

Ellen Gute tweeted a photo of herself wearing a mortarboard that represents her PhD research (image via Twitter) 

“It was very special that my family and friends prepared the hat for me especially since it was not too easy to get all the parts together during the pandemic,” she said, after watching the convocation event with her friends and parents back in Germany.

Near the end of the virtual event, students received congratulations from their peers, faculty and division leaders, who wished them well from locations across the university’s three campuses.

Shira Joudan, who graduated with a PhD in environmental chemistry, watched the ceremony from her couch while texting with her parents in Winnipeg. After the event, she joined a spontaneous Zoom chat organized by U of T students graduating with doctorates in science.

At one point, her mom messaged her:

“Mazel tov!! Crazy but it brought a tear to my eye and you weren’t even there!!”

Shira Joudan joined a spontaneous Zoom chat with other ߲ݴý grads immediately following the official ceremony (image via Zoom)

For Keon Priestley, the moment represented an achievement that was a long time coming. The U of T Scarborough graduate finally completed a degree he had begun more than two decades earlier, when a health condition forced him to drop out of school.

He dedicated his convocation to his late mother on Instagram :

“Today I can officially say I am a graduate of the ߲ݴý. It has been a long journey, but all in its due time. This could have never happened if it were not for the support or family and friends, but especially the motivation my Mom provided. This degree is ours Mom. Graduate School next.”

 

 

 

 

 

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