
CHICAGO (WBBM NEWSRADIO) -- University of Illinois at Chicago announced it will hold a virtual graduation celebration.
More than 5,000 students from the UIC, who have earned their degrees, will have the opportunity to share their hard work with their family and friends through a virtual graduation celebration on May 16.
The University said the celebration is not a replacement for the traditional UIC commencement ceremony, which will be rescheduled once the COVID-19 pandemic subsides and health officials have deemed it is safe for public gatherings to resume.
The university has teamed up with Marching Order, a private company that allows an opportunity for educational institutions to provide a tailored virtual graduation ceremony. At UIC, 14 of the university’s 16 colleges will share information about their graduates onto the Marching Order site through links that will be able to be shared by the graduates themselves. These include the UIC John Marshall Law School, as well as the Honors College.
The College of Medicine will have its own virtual celebration on May 8, so that they can begin working in the health field as soon as possible.
Students in the Graduate College will participate in their academic college’s online ceremonies.
Of the 5,381 total graduates participating, 3,149 will earn undergraduate degrees while 2,232 will receive graduate/advanced degrees. The largest number of graduates are from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, followed by the College of Engineering and College of Nursing.
“We are very proud of our graduates,” UIC Chancellor Michael Amiridis said, in a statement. “We will confer their degrees in a virtual ceremony so that they can move on with the next phase of their careers. And while we will celebrate virtually this milestone, I view it as a dress rehearsal for the face-to-face celebration that everyone wants to participate in and one that our graduates, their families and their friends deserve. When it is safe to do so, I’m sure that everyone in the class of 2020 will join us for a real celebration on campus.”
Until then, graduates and their families will be able to view congratulatory messages from the chancellor, as well as commencement speakers during the May 16 virtual event.