Yes. It matters to the students. |
Did I say my child was being honored? No. My college senior did not have thousands of cords and stoles because his college only recognized stoles for graduate students and collars for honors students (my child was neither of those). He had a basic black cap and gown because he was neither a grad student nor a honors student. While some students purchased non-college sponsored stoles, the majority did not and it was actually cool to instantly recognize who were the graduate students (and honors students). |
+1 |
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I’m not sure cords matter to every high-achieving student. They know what they’ve accomplished. They aren’t all looking for external validation.
My DC who graduated today could not remember what each cord they had was for. Some of the more meaningful regalia today were athletic stoles, e.g. crew team, as many of the teams provided community for these students. Congratulations to all, class of 2026! |
| Off topic. Is there an easy way to recycle or reuse the gown? |
| IMO cords are dumb. I went to MIT and it didn't allow anything. In a crazy rat race we don't need even more mini races that don't matter. |
If cords motivates a kid to stay in school and graduate, let them have cords. Who cares! |
Don't worry, OP. There are many other ways to brag about your child's and family superiority in the Fairfax school system suburbia. Can I sell you some yard signs and car magnets, stickers, and vanity plates? How about some frames for the HS transcripts?
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I would like to send her our introductory package of the car magnets/stickers, inspirational frames, and very noticeable yard signs to put a name of your future college on it. We use reflecting paint for our yard signs, so that even in the dark every car passing by your house can see it clearly. Selling out fast!
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What a petty poster |
| Why is there a Girl Scout/Boy Scout cord but no cords for sports? |
Troll |
+1 Unnecessary cash grab. |
They aren’t very expensive at all and if the kids want them to show off their achievements, let them. |
+1 It used to be that we made a very big deal out of post-graduate degrees, a big deal out of college graduation, and a minor deal out of high school graduation. Now, we make a huge deal out of high school graduation (even throwing parties that cost $10K or more), and we expect promotion ceremonies and major school awards at the end of preschool, kindergarten, sixth grade, and eighth grade. It has gotten way out of hand. |