Students must file an application for graduation by Oct 15 for December graduates and Feb 15 for May and August graduates. The form is used by college or school personnel for degree clearance, preparation of the annual Commencement programs and diploma presentation, and it is the student’s first step toward participation in either the May or December Commencement ceremony. Students can access the form via the Graduation Application link under the Student Records area of the myDrake portal.
Once graduate, professional pharmacy, occupational therapy doctorate, and law students have filed an application for graduation and are certified to have met the requirements of graduation by the College office, the Office of the Registrar will post the degree to the student's record with the established graduation date in May, August, or December. The student must complete and the college office must verify all requirements within 45 days of graduation to have the degree posted with the applied-for graduation date. Students who meet the requirements for graduation at a later point in time will have an effective graduation date of the following established graduation date in May, August or December.
In some cases during any given semester or summer session where a graduate student demonstrates an immediate need, he or she must give early notice to the college/school and the appropriate department of intent to graduate early. If the student is certified to have met all graduation requirements, this is reported to the Office of the Registrar, and the degree is conferred effective the 15th day of following month. Doctor of Pharmacy students cannot graduate prior to the established graduation date in May.
Commencement ceremonies are held in May and in December each year.
Principal features of academic dress are the gown, the cap and the hood. It became necessary for universities to set rules to preserve the dignity and meaning of academic dress. Since the 15th century, both Cambridge and Oxford have made academic dress a matter of university control, even to its minor details, and have repeatedly published revised regulations. American universities agreed on a standardized system in 1895. The current guidelines with minor changes have been in place since 1960.
Whereas the Commencement ceremony is a formal affair, academic attire is required. For all Drake University degrees, the black gown is appropriate. The bachelor’s gown has pointed, open sleeves with a closed front. The master’s gown has closed sleeves with an open or closed front. The doctoral gown has full bell sleeves with wide cuffs. It should be faced down in front with black velvet and three bars of velvet across the upper sleeve.
The cap is a Cambridge-style cap (resembling a large beret) for all doctoral degrees and a square mortarboard (Oxford style) for all other degrees. The cap should be adorned only with a tassel of the discipline color. The gold metallic tassel is appropriate for all doctoral degrees. The hood is worn by candidates for master’s degrees and higher. The inside silk lining is the Drake blue with a single white chevron. The outside of the master’s or specialist hood is black with velvet trim of the discipline. The outside of the doctoral hood is a wide velvet band in the color of the discipline.
Honor medallions are worn by students graduating with college or university honors. Academic honor cords or pins may be worn if earned from a Drake college- or school-recognized academic organization. Leadership of the particular academic organization will inform the President's Committee on Commencement (P.C.C.) of the academic honor item. The P.C.C. needs to review and approve the items to be worn, which is then subject to approval by the University President.
Registered Student Organizations (R.S.O.) may propose an organizational stole to the Office of Student Inclusion, Involvement, and Leadership (S.I.I.L.). The stole will express cultural expression and identity expression appropriate for the R.S.O. The S.I.I.L. Office will inform the President's Committee on Commencement (P.C.C.) of the requested stole design. The P.C.C. needs to review and approve the stole to be worn, which is then subject to approval by the University President. The R.S.O. must be in good standing with the University at the time of the Commencement Ceremony. The stole design and intent must align with the Mission, Vision, and Non-Discrimination Statement of the University. Students may wear only one stole per ceremony.
Any student who has earned a degree and has not participated in a previous Drake Commencement ceremony for that degree is encouraged to participate.
Since December 2011, Drake University has held two commencement ceremonies each year; one in December, the other in May.
Those who expect to complete all degree requirements in December (registered, with appropriate number of hours, adequate GPA, and all requirements met).
Those who completed their requirements the previous August, had have degrees awarded, but choose to participate in the December ceremony rather than the previous May.
Names to be included in the December Commencement Program are students who will be participating in that event. Students are expected to meet the stated Program preparation deadlines to ensure their name is printed. These dates are published on the Office of the Registrar's commencement web site.
Those who graduated the previous December but did not participate in the December ceremony.
Those who expect to complete all degree requirements (registered with appropriate number of hours, adequate GPA and all requirements met) in either May or August are encouraged to participate in the May ceremony.
Names to be included in the May commencement program are students who are expected May or August graduates, previous December graduates who did not participate in the December ceremony or students who will be participating in that event.
Students are expected to meet the stated program preparation deadlines to ensure their name is printed. These dates are published on the Office of the Registrar's commencement web site.
If a student desires to participate in a ceremony for which they do not meet the eligibility guidelines, the student may appeal to the Provost. The appeal must be in writing with supporting documentation attached 30 days prior to event. The Provost may consult an ad hoc advisory panel of Deans and/or commencement officials prior to making a final decision.
Appeal Criteria
The following are the criteria for considering ceremony participation on the exception basis for students with a cumulative GPA of 2.0 or higher.
The student must meet one of the following:
Complete information about commencement is available on the Office of the Registrar's commencement web site.
The information in this catalog does not constitute a contract between the university and the student. The university reserves the right to make changes in curricula, admission policies and processes, tuition and financial aid, academic standards and guidelines, student services and any other regulations or policies set forth in this catalog without giving prior notice.