Congratulations Graduates

Thursday, May 15  |  7:00 p.m.  |  State Farm Center

Some of our favorite moments

Welcome family and friends around the world!

Watch the recorded ceremony

speaker and audience in State Farm Center with Doctoral Hooding Ceremony 2025 in decorative lettering

A Welcome from the Dean

Wojtek Chodzko-Zajko

We are immensely proud to celebrate our graduates who have earned the highest degree, the doctorate, along with their faculty mentors.

Doctoral hooding is a symbolic gesture that represents the culmination of scholarly and personal achievement. During the ceremony, the hood is placed over a student’s head by a mentor or senior scholar, marking the transition from learner to producer or contributor in one’s field. It recognizes their academic achievements and welcomes them into the community of scholars.

 Illinois has a rich tradition in doctoral education. Our first two doctor of philosophy degrees were awarded in 1903, one in Chemistry and one in Mathematics. That was over 100 years ago. The graduates celebrated this term join generations of distinguished alumni who are leaders and innovators, impacting the lives of people around the world. I am confident that these graduates, with their commitment and perseverance, will use their knowledge and expertise to shape our future in profound ways.

If you are a graduate, we hope that you’ll join us for the Doctoral Hooding Ceremony to celebrate all you have accomplished, surrounded by the family, friends, mentors and colleagues who helped you succeed.

Sincerely,

Wojtek Chodzko-Zajko 
Vice Provost for Graduate Education and Dean of the Graduate College

Order of Ceremony

Welcome

Wojtek Chodzko-Zajko, Vice Provost for Graduate Education and Dean of the Graduate College

Greetings from the Chancellor

Robert J. Jones, Chancellor

Greetings from the Provost

John Coleman, Provost and Executive Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs

Remarks from the Speaker

Antoinette Burton, Director of the Humanities Research Institute, Professor of History and Swanlund Endowed Chair

Recognition of Graduates

Each graduate will be called individually and hooded by a member of the graduate faculty.
Graduates will be recognized by college in the following order:

  • College of Agriculture, Consumer & Environmental Sciences
  • College of Applied Health Sciences
  • Gies College of Business
  • College of Education
  • Grainger College of Engineering
  • College of Fine & Applied Arts
  • School of Information Sciences
  • School of Labor & Employment Relations
  • College of Law
  • College of Liberal Arts & Sciences
  • College of Media
  • School of Social Work
  • College of Veterinary Medicine
     

About our Speaker

Antoinette Burton

Dr. Antoinette Burton is the Director of the Humanities Research Institute, Professor of History and Swanlund Endowed Chair. In the two and a half decades since she joined the faculty at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Dr. Burton has made an indelible impact as a teacher, scholar, mentor, chair and institute director. In addition to her contributions to historical scholarship, Dr. Burton is an institutional champion for humanistic inquiry, engagement and education as the director of the Humanities Research Institute. Indeed, it was under her leadership that the Humanities Research Institute became one of the ten institutes on campus. She works to promote and engage the public via the humanities, and just this spring her efforts were recognized by the campus award for Faculty Excellence in Public Engagement. Earlier this year, she was elected into the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.  

A strong advocate for graduate students and graduate education, Dr. Burton serves as the principal investigator of the Odyssey Project and Humanities Without Walls, both funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. The Odyssey Project engages the community in humanities education through offering humanities courses to low-income adults to support their goals for continuing their education and intellectual development. Humanities Without Walls is a collaboration between 16 institutions and emphasizes opportunities for collaboration and professional growth for both students and faculty. This project included an innovative and highly successful Summer Career Diversity Workshop, bringing together graduate students in the humanities for an intensive, in-person experience to help them reflect, explore, and prepare for careers in a wide range of settings. Over its ten-year history, Humanities Without Walls Consortium developed a core methodology of reciprocity and redistribution, serving as a model for ethical community engagement in the humanities. 

Ritual and Tradition of Academic Dress

The history of academic dress begins around the twelfth century when the earliest universities were forming in Europe. At that time, the dress of a scholar—whether student or teacher—was that of a cleric. Typically, a medieval scholar would have taken ecclesiastical vows and would have been tonsured. The long gowns were worn primarily for warmth and hoods would have covered the heads of the scholars who spent many hours in unheated monasteries where ancient texts were maintained.

Subsequently, the material of the gown and lining, and the shape of the hood, represented the economic, social, and academic status of the wearer. The wearing of distinctive regalia for universities emerged in England in the second half of the fourteenth century.

In the United States, the tradition of academic dress dates to the 1880s, when different institutions established their own academic dress codes. Black is the traditional color for gowns, although at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, academic dress has been designed specifically for the Institution—blue gowns with orange accents and blue mortarboards

Today the doctoral gown is faced down the front with velvet and has bell-shaped sleeves with three bars of velvet across each sleeve, differentiating it from the bachelor’s and master’s gowns. The facing and bars may be black or blue, as is the case at Illinois, or may be the color of the subject to which the degree pertains. Doctoral gowns may be worn open or closed.
Another distinction of the doctoral gown is its longer hood, which measures 4 feet. Hoods are lined with the official color or colors of the college or university conferring the degree. At Illinois, the lining is orange and blue.

The five-inch, colored, velvet border of the hood identifies different doctoral degrees as follows:

  • Dark Blue – Doctor of Philosophy / PhD
  • Light Blue – Doctor of Education / EdD
  • Pink – Doctor of Musical Arts / DMA
  • Purple – Doctor of the Science of Law / JSD
  • Medium Blue – Doctor of Audiology / DAud

For Event Details

To find more information for participants, including registration, visit the Doctoral Hooding Registration and Participant Information page

For information about May 2025 Commencement ceremonies visit the Commencement website