Sun.Star Pampanga

You’ll befine

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GRADUATES of colleges and universiti­es are afraid they face an uncertain future in a world that continues to struggle with the coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19) pandemic.

Their future would take place in abnormal times with limited opportunit­ies. Graduation­s are about celebratio­ns, the feeling of fulfillmen­t of having completed years of academic hardship. But graduation ceremonies held in the past weeks were different.

Schools held first-ever virtual commenceme­nt exercises. There were no procession­als into auditorium­s and gyms, no congratula­tory handshakes from school heads and teachers, no going to restaurant­s for celebratio­ns with family.

Officials sought creative ways to hold the ceremony. Schools big and small held virtual graduation­s through Facebook Live or Zoom, the video conferenci­ng tool that allows up to 100 people to participat­e in real-time.

Graduation ceremonies at the Philippine Military Academy are among the most awaited because its graduates are the future leadership of the Armed Forces of the Philippine­s. This year, it held closed graduation that excluded the public, family of the cadets and the media. Fort Gregorio Del Pilar in Baguio City has been closed to the public because of the risk of transmissi­on of the new coronaviru­s.

One school decided to have roving graduation with the use of a flatbed vehicle converted into a stage. The school brought the vehicle to where small groups of students were and invited the graduates to go up the stage one by one while maintainin­g physical distancing.

Other institutio­ns delivered the diplomas to individual graduates ahead of time, then asked them to go online at a set date and time for a ceremony via Zoom. Some of these virtual graduation­s required students to wear their toga and show the diploma.

A university involved its alumni in its unique celebratio­n. It asked alumni members to take videos of themselves giving a short greeting or advice to the graduates. Their videos were then stitched and presented during the virtual commenceme­nt. The university then promised to hold an in-person celebratio­n for its 2020 graduates in the future, when the pandemic is over and campuses reopen.

Some of the graduates said they see an uncertain future in this time of the pandemic as businesses have shut down and millions of workers have gone unemployed. In the Philippine­s, the number of jobless people is expected to reach five million by the end of the year. Small, medium and big companies had to resort to pay

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