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Wearing Other People's Graduation Regalia
:confused:Today, our 8th child graduated from high school. We noticed that one girl--who's maybe the biggest B at the school--was wearing honors regalia and a teacher stared at her and said, "That must be her older sister's; believe me, she didn't graduate with any honors." (We've known the kid for years and we figured that out early on. Evil jerk.)
I asked my son about it and he said that a lot of people walked with friends' or siblings' past regalia. I was :eek:; as a former college professor, I can't believe that someone would do that. This son didn't graduate with honors--he was 0.2 of a point short--and we wouldn't have dreamed of heaping his older siblings' regalia on him. Has anyone else heard of this? |
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Well, I think that is weird someone would wear someone else's honors cords and whatnot. Did anyone ask the girl about it? I'm just as :eek: as you are about that. Is that the new thing these days? You know, wearing other people's items that you did not receive or earn yourself? |
I can't believe the school officials would let someone wear honors regalia that they did not earn. That is totally unfair to the people that did earn it, regardless of who it belonged to originally.
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No, but kids do the darndest and dumbest things.
This wouldn't go over at the college level. The most they get to do is put silly stuff on their cap and smuggle beach balls in. |
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He has been looking at schools in Georgia, where carnation is from. Maybe she has some good advice about it. As far as large universities catching things like that, I know that for some reason my school was really stupid about that. I remember they told us we couldn't wear any cords or stoles. It was so stupid. I wanted to have one made up with my letters on it but, I was too afraid to upset the administration. One of my friends, an SGRho, was smart enough to not care. She had the nicest stole with her letters on it. After that, I was so annoyed I didn't do the same. |
I do know that robes and tassels are handed down and sold (those things can get expensive!) at the college level, but that's really tacky to wear honors cords you did not earn.
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[QUOTE=DrPhil;1932820]Because it's his gig. ;) Let him have it. If he was your underage son, that would be different. :)
I've never heard of a college or university forbidding cords and stoles. The graduation coordinators probably didn't care for the school's restriction and didn't mind your friend's stole. If it had been something more ridiculous, like someone else's honors regalia, they probably would've caught it (a lot of schools of various sizes highlight the honors students during the program along with a corresponding name and number for each graduate).[/QUOTE] That's just it, though...I will be moving with him. We are planning on getting engaged/ married and I don't want to move to some place that is so far away or that I hate. In fact, he told me that until I started working again, this summer, I should check out other schools with great programs in what he wants. He works stupid/crazy hours at the hospital and he is currently studying up for the GRE. There isn't anything wrong with asking for my help. In fact, I enjoy doing it. I respect a lot of the people on here and I'm sure they would have some great advice to give regarding grad schools. if you have any advice-please share. Nope, they were jerks about it. That really surprised me. I wish I would have just not listened and worn my gear. Maybe it has since changed. I hope it has for the sake of the newer classes graduating. |
All I can figure out is that they must not check the kids before they march in or that whoever checks them has no clue who's supposed to wear what. Come to think of it, I believe that someone said that the coaches were in there with the graduates. (Mystery solved.)
I still think that the honor society and honor grad faculty should check them before they march. Last year, the NHS advisor refused to let the members who had done dual college/high school enrollment wear their stoles because they hadn't come to any meetings--they were taking their college classes. Punishing them for excelling!:mad: There was a huge uproar and the national office of the NHS said there was nothing they could do. One of Tall Son's sisters found her old NHS stole and told him to wear it anyway but he said it really didn't matter to him anymore and we didn't want him getting jerked out of line. Now I realize he probably wouldn't have but the difference was that he had earned his stole. These kids earned nothing. |
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Your son has graduated now so you may not care what happens next year, but do you want to express this concern to the school so they can make changes? It may be more trouble than it's worth. |
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We will have 3 daughters at the high school next year. I plan to talk to the principal but I have to be very professional because my husband teaches there and teachers are being RIFed left and right in Georgia.
Luckily, the NHS sponsor retired at the end of last year or there would have been huge trouble from a lot of us. Even though her daughter is a Pi Phi! |
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