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WGU to Celebrate the Achievements of 13,000 Grads at Dallas Commencement Ceremony

More than 1,000 graduates from 43 states to walk, including 635 from Texas

Feb 20, 2020

DALLAS – In four short months, more than 13,000 students have graduated from Western Governors University (WGU), the nation’s leading competency-based university. To celebrate their tremendous achievements, more than 1,000 WGU graduates and over 7,500 of their family and friends will gather at WGU’s 76th commencement ceremony, to be held at the Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center in Dallas on Saturday, February 22.

The ceremony will begin at 9:30 a.m. CST. For those unable to attend the ceremony in person, the session will be streamed live at https://www.wgu.edu/about/students-graduates/commencement.html. Saturday’s graduates and their families will use #WGUgrad to share their stories on social media.  

Some 557 undergraduate and 498 graduate students will walk at Saturday’s ceremony. Graduates earned degrees in health professions and nursing, business, K–12 education, and information technology.

Olga E. Custodio, STEM advocate and America’s first Latina fighter pilot, will deliver the commencement address. After serving 24 years in the U.S. Air Force, Custodio retired as a Lieutenant Colonel. Today, she works with several nonprofit organizations that advocate for inspiring and empowering students, especially those from underserved communities.

In addition to Custodio’s address, two WGU graduates will share their stories. Addressing the undergraduate and graduate class are:

·       Sarah Williams of Springfield, Oregon, whose dream is to care for those who are underserved by becoming a Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner, is graduating with her B.S. Nursing, 

·       Pooja Sijapati of Irving, Texas, a first-generation American who’s also the first woman in her family to receive a degree, is graduating with her M.S. Management and Leadership.

All of WGU's programs are competency-based—a learning model that focuses on measuring learning rather than time spent in class. This model, along with online access to courses, study materials, and proctored assessments, means students are able to complete coursework on schedules that fit their lives—not driven by a syllabus or class schedules.

The ceremony in Dallas will be the first of seven commencement ceremonies to be held across the country in 2020. In 2019, WGU hosted six commencements and celebrated more than 38,000 graduates.

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