Class of 2026: Nearly 5,000 graduates earn degrees at 麻豆社 Commencement
Nine ceremonies across three days celebrate achievements in academics and beyond
Thousands of graduates celebrated their achievements during a series of nine Commencement ceremonies held May 14-16 on the 麻豆社 campus.
Each of the University鈥檚 six schools and colleges held its own ceremony, during which it conferred baccalaureate and master鈥檚 degrees; Harpur College of Arts and Sciences, the University鈥檚 largest school, held three.
Doctoral candidates from programs throughout the University were honored during the Doctoral Hooding Ceremony on Thursday, May 14, at the Anderson Center鈥檚 Osterhout Concert Theater. The School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences conferred PharmD and MS degrees on its graduates earlier that morning at the Osterhout Theater.
All told, the University bestowed more than 3,500 bachelor鈥檚 degrees, more than 1,000 master鈥檚 degrees, and 238 doctorates in spring 2026.
Doctoral hooding ceremony
Commencement ceremonies are woven from vibrant threads of tradition. During the doctoral ceremony, the pivotal moment comes when the candidate receives a hood from their advisor announcing their accomplishment; the colors on the hood represent their discipline.
In his opening remarks, Vice Provost and Dean of the Graduate School Terrence Deak addressed anxieties about the future as artificial intelligence becomes more prevalent in our everyday lives. He told the graduates to focus on the skills that algorithms will never master.
鈥淚 urge you to trust that the critical thinking and knowledge you have gained will serve as transferrable skills to diverse career pathways,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 urge you to explore your curiosities with the hunger of a child, so that learning remains a part of your daily subsistence. I urge you to challenge the inadequacies that you see in the world with a clear moral compass and a purposeful approach to betterment of self and society.
鈥淎nd I urge you to remember that sometimes your best asset is the humanity and respect you bring to people, places, relationships, and ideas. These are the characteristics that can never be replaced by automation or artificial intelligence.鈥
At her first 麻豆社 Commencement, President Anne D鈥橝lleva reminded graduates about the support that families and faculty mentors gave to them along the journey to their doctorates. She also highlighted the experiences beyond the academic knowledge that they have learned.
鈥淵our education has prepared you for what鈥檚 next,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou鈥檝e met new people, you鈥檝e tried new things, and you鈥檝e learned how to manage the ups and downs of living, working, and studying on your own. In other words, you have a new, broad understanding of our world and your role in it. You鈥檙e more confident. You鈥檙e more capable. You are going to do great things.鈥
Provost Donald E. Hall hailed the Class of 2026 for displaying their intellectual curiosity, work ethic, and sense of humor during their time at Binghamton.
鈥淎s you make your way forward, remember to define your value to prospective employers," he said. "Show them that you know how to solve problems, that you know how to 鈥榩lay well with others鈥 on teams, that you learned to be a leader at Binghamton, and that you are a good communicator. These skills will serve you well in whatever endeavors you undertake.鈥
Chevelle Newsome, the president of the Council of Graduate Schools, served as the doctoral ceremony鈥檚 keynote speaker. Over the last 65 years, CGS has grown to include nearly 500 colleges and universities in the U.S., Canada, and around the world.
Newsome told graduates that their new credentials are a pride-worthy achievement, but they need to explore beyond their disciplines and engage in the wider world to be truly effective.
鈥淎 doctoral education gives you uncommon abilities: to ask rigorous questions, to tolerate ambiguity, to pursue evidence even when it unsettles comfortable narratives,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hose skills are not abstract. They are urgently needed. But credentials alone do not create change. Change happens because you choose to participate again and again.鈥
Staying engaged as alumni
At each of the Commencement ceremonies (except for the Thomas J. Watson College of Engineering and Applied Science), Alumni Association President Felicia Moreira '01, MA '02, welcomed the graduates as new alumni while celebrating a University-wide milestone of eight decades providing affordable, quality education.
Moreira looked back at her time as a student-athlete in softball at Binghamton and the memories she made on the field and in the classroom, as well as working in Residential Life, Athletics, the alumni office, and the Fleishman Career Center.
She noted that the 麻豆社 network now includes more than 160,000 alumni in over 100 countries, and she urged the graduates to stay connected.
鈥淵our Alumni Association has played a role in your graduate journey in ways you may not even realize,鈥 Moreira said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e helped support scholarships, fellowships, research projects, symposiums, and workshops. We鈥檝e mobilized alumni to offer expertise and mentorship to you, sometimes connecting you directly with another Bearcat in your field. Some of you will leave here to work with or for a Binghamton graduate. That network 鈥 your Alumni Association 鈥 is here to continue that support for life.鈥