Education

UNC’s Class of 2020, thwarted by pandemic, will finally get a graduation event this fall

UNC-Chapel Hill will host a special reunion and commencement weekend next fall for the Class of 2020 to make up for a tradition that was lost due to the coronavirus pandemic last year.

This celebration, scheduled for Oct. 9-10, is another sign that Carolina students will have a more normal campus experience next fall. Alumni and their families will be able to attend the event, which will include a tassel-turning ceremony at Kenan Stadium, the university announced Friday.

“This celebration weekend will be memorable and fitting of your special status and the sacrifices you made during your senior year … and beyond,” UNC-CH Chancellor Kevin Guskiewicz said in a campus message.

As a parent of a 2020 graduate himself, Guskiewicz said he understands the desire to celebrate this moment and wanted to give students the recognition they asked for.

As state and national COVID-19 trends continue to improve and more people are getting vaccinated, UNC-CH also announced Friday that it expects to host fully in-person classes and have more students living in dorms on campus for the fall semester. There will likely still be face masks, COVID-19 testing, and quarantine and isolation space on campus.

University employees are eligible for vaccines, and many students can get vaccinated this spring.

Guskiewicz made clear the commencement event isn’t a typical homecoming weekend for multiple UNC classes, though it is a Tar Heel football weekend.

UNC will offer exclusive events for the Class of 2020, including special recognition during the game against Florida State, the traditional Bell Tower climb, a “Taste of Chapel Hill” food truck party and the UNC General Alumni Association’s champagne toast.

The weekend will end with a tassel-turning ceremony at Kenan Stadium on Sunday, Oct. 10.

UNC is also planning an in-person graduation ceremony for the Class of 2021 in May at Kenan Stadium. It will feature virtual commencement speakers and COVID-19 experts Dr. Anthony Fauci and Dr. Kizzmekia Corbett, a Carolina alumna.

This story was originally published March 5, 2021 at 6:19 PM.

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Kate Murphy
The News & Observer
Kate Murphy covers higher education for The News & Observer. Previously, she covered higher education for the Cincinnati Enquirer on the investigative and enterprise team and USA Today Network. Her work has won state awards in Ohio and Kentucky and she was recently named a 2019 Education Writers Association finalist for digital storytelling. Support my work with a digital subscription
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