Is this your cermony?

There are two commencement ceremonies. Check to be sure you're in the right spot!

This website is intended for live-streaming purposes. If you plan to attend the event in-person, please view the Registrar’s Commencement website for detailed information about tickets and ceremony information. 

June Commencement Ceremony Three

 

The video begins at minute 6:50

Adjust the timeline to 6:50 after pressing play.

View with ASL   Con subtítulos en español

Ceremony Order

  1. National Anthem
  2. Commencement History
  3. Message from Governor Inslee
  4. Message from President Sabah
  5. Student Life Montage
  6. Student Roll Call
  7. Student Speaker
  8. Faculty and Staff Congrats
  9. Dean's Message
  10. Bachelor’s Degree Graduate Slides
  11. Message from the Alumni Association
  12. Family Celebrations
  13. Closing Remarks
  14. Alma Mater

#wwugrad

Graduates

Use the #WWUgrad hashtag on social media

No one by that name has been found.

Click on individual slides for personalized information. To filter slides, type in a first and/or last name and click Apply.

Student Speakers

Serafima wearing an embroidered top sitting in soft natural light at a table with a coffee cup and a peach

Serafima Healy

Ceremony One

Read more about Serafima

.layout__region--first, .layout--threecol--page-width > .layout__region--second,.layout--threecol--page-width > .layout__region--first, .layout--threecol--page-width > .layout__region--third { flex: 1 1 33.33333%; justify-content: center; display: flex; } /*-->*/
Jade in graduation cap and gown, holding a pan African flag behind her and wearing a green/yellow/red striped sash that reads, "Black Girl Magic, Class of 2021"

Jade Jordan

Mitchell Marquez wearing a navy blazer over a black and white striped t-shirt in front of a bridge

Mitchell Marquez

In-Person Commencement Details

Memory Walk

and Alumni Way

Sabah Randhawa stands in blue ceremonial dress with two faculty members, one is wearing red ceremonial dress and holding the mace

Memory Walk has been a commencement tradition since 1912. Each year, a stone representing the graduating class is laid in the sidewalk that runs parallel to the facade of Old Main, Western’s first building. Beneath each of these class stones lie time capsules. At the ceremony, students have the opportunity to place any tangible items into the Memory Walk Box at the end of the ceremony. If you did not attend, or you did not have an opportunity to contribute, you may send in digital items to be placed in the box.

Items can be submitted through January 2022.

Digital Memory Box

Commencement History

The Mace and Pendant

Western ceremonial pendant and mace

Devices used during ceremonial occasions, the Mace and Pendant are both covered in historical symbolism.

Made of rosewood and silver, the mace has a wooden staff surmounted by a silver casting of a Viking ship. This sits at the front of the commencement podium. The top‑most circular band has the name of the University engraved and inlaid with blue enamel. The bottom of this ceremonial staff is a silver‑cast flame, symbolic of enlightenment.

The pendant worn by President Sabah is made of silver with a gold flame in the center. The gold flame is emblematic of the torch of learning, as it combines the intellectual and spiritual qualities of illumination, enlightenment, and inspiration. 

Podium

A podium on stage in front of Western

 

The commencement podium was designed and hand-crafted in Fall, 2014 by Randy Stribling, a local alumnus of Western Washington University. The pieces were built with sustainably yielded African Mahogany and faux ebony plugs to complement the chairs on the dais. The style is Greene and Greene, an elegant form of the Craftsman style popular in the early 20th century. When Western began as the Washington State Normal School at Bellingham at the turn of the last century, the Craftsman or Mission style of furniture was used extensively throughout the campus. Many examples can still be found tucked away in Old Main and elsewhere around the university. 

Nostalgic Glimpses

of Western Washington University

Western's first science classrooms were in Old Main, as in this 1910 photo. Photo courtesy of Western Libraries Special Collections.

Gov. Clarence D. Martin and President Charles H. Fisher with Western's first Bachelor of Arts in Education degree recipients in 1933. Photo courtesy of Western Libraries Special Collections.

Amanda "Peanutt" Ngeth and her grandmother Khon Pok pose for family photos at spring 2014 commencement. Photo by Dan Levine for WWU.

President Sabah Randhawa speaks during Western's first virtual commencement in June 2020.

Ceremony Evaluation Survey

Thank you for virtually attending Western’s December Commencement Ceremony. Please let us know about your experience by completing our event evaluation survey. Your feedback is valued.

Take the Survey