The Sentinel-Record

School holds diplomas for cheering

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CINCINNATI – A suburban Cincinnati high school held onto four graduates’ diplomas and required community service as punishment for what it describes as overly boisterous cheering by their families during the graduation ceremony.

The mother of one of the graduates, who was one of the leading tacklers on the Mount Healthy school football team, doesn’t think he should get flagged for excessive celebratio­n.

“What does that have to do with him?” Traci Cornist told Cincinnati radio station WDBZ.

She doesn’t dispute there was a lot of loud cheering for Anthony Cornist. Cornist also said she teaches her children to be accountabl­e for their own actions, but she doesn’t think he should be punished for what other people do.

“It took away so much from how happy I was,” she said. “It makes absolutely no sense.”

Schools Superinten­dent Lori Handler said Wednesday the problem wasn’t the loudness of the yells, but their long duration, which she said halted the ceremony.

After past disruption­s, a new policy was implemente­d this year aimed at making sure that all parents can hear their children’s names called and celebrated. When they ordered graduation tickets, parents agreed that “any disruptive behavior” would result in their child’s diploma being held until 20 hours of community service is completed, she said.

“Our whole push for this was to make sure that every single student’s name is heard and recognized,” Handler said, adding that that most parents are pleased with the new rules. “Everybody understand­s that upfront.”

Four seniors, of the 205 who went through graduation May 23, were denied their diplomas, she said. When they went to school to pick them up, they got a letter from the principal informing them it was being withheld because of “excessive cheering” by their guests.

The students are considered legal graduates, and are free to use their transcript­s as they apply for college or jobs, Handler said.

Local school boards in Ohio have policymaki­ng powers governing such things as guests’ graduation ceremony conduct, and schools also sometimes hold diplomas until fees are paid, books returned or other issues are resolved.

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