scorecardThe 8 strangest and silliest college graduation traditions in America
  1. Home
  2. slideshows
  3. miscellaneous
  4. The 8 strangest and silliest college graduation traditions in America

The 8 strangest and silliest college graduation traditions in America

Smith College's Diploma Circle

The 8 strangest and silliest college graduation traditions in America

Wellesley College's wooden hoops

Wellesley College

Wellesley College students have one of the strangest traditions upon graduating: they race wooden hoops down Tupelo Street.

It started out as May Day celebration in honor of spring, but soon grew to become a graduation day tradition. The winner of the race is said to go on to achieve success. The winner is also swept up by the other students and promptly thrown into Lake Waban.

It may seem like an exciting race, but the reality is a little more haphazard — grads dropping their hoops, colliding into one another, all to win the coveted first place.

Yale University's lucky toe

Yale University

Yale students have a rather bizarre tradition that involves the toe of former Yale president Theodore Dwight Woolsey's bronze statue.

Yale tour guides routinely explain that students rub the toe for good luck once they graduate. Legend has it that Woosley, when he was president, would attend a regatta in support of the Yale crew team. Every time he kicked off a boat with his left toe to start the race, the Yale team would win.

Unfortunately, however, this legend has no basis in fact, and the toe itself isn't known to be lucky. And the tradition that grads rub the toe isn't true either — it was invented to cover up the real tradition: when students graduate, they urinate on the toe, which might explain the slightly worn golden tint of the bronze toe.

Williams College's watch throwing

Williams College

At Williams College, a destructive tradition has been held for the last century — throwing watches off of Thompson Chapel, to celebrate the passage of time. Perhaps these grads don't want time to keep on moving. If they could stop time at any moment in their lives, graduation day is a fitting choice.

Throwing a watch, like many graduation traditions, is said to bring good luck to the thrower.

Notre Dame's 3D graduation cap decorations

Notre Dame

Students graduating from Notre Dame's School of Architecture make their graduation cap decorations over-the-top — literally.

The students build 3D replicas of buildings, bridges, Ferris wheels, and more to wear during commencement ceremony.

"Needless to say, the architecture seating assignment during the University Commencement Ceremony is located in the back rows of the main floor section," says the Notre Dame school website.

Liberty University's nursing students burn their scrubs

Liberty University

Liberty University nursing students celebrate their freedom from school by burning their scrubs — and the school dean joins in.

Each year, graduating students gather at the home of Dean Deanna Britt's house for a bonfire, where they fling their scrubs into the fire.

"It's freedom! In the hospital we are recognized by our uniform and so burning our white scrubs means that we no longer have to label ourselves as student nurses," former nursing student Sarah Hacking said on the school's website.

West Point nominates a "class goat"

West Point nominates a "class goat"

In an otherwise cruel nightmare, the worst-performing West Point student gets recognized in front of the entire graduation crowd and gets named the "class goat."

Though the practice seems harsh, class goats are a time-honored tradition. They also receive a cash prize and a standing ovation, according to The Wall Street Journal.

Notre Dame walking down the steps

Notre Dame walking down the steps

The steps outside the front of Notre Dame's main campus building — with the iconic Golden Dome — are off-limits to students until after they graduate. When graduation day comes, excited seniors get to walk down the steps on their way to the commencement ceremony.

The tradition dates back to the 19th century, when students used to smoke with professors after completing a degree program, according to the school's website.

Advertisement