Two full weekends of graduation ceremonies for the University of Virginia’s classes of 2020 and 2021 will kick off Sunday, when about 2,800 members of the Class of 2020 and members of their families are expected to return to Charlottesville for congratulatory celebrations.
Students from the Class of 2020 will be divided into two groups, with one ceremonial procession beginning at 9 a.m. and the other at 2 p.m.
In processions unlike any other in UVA’s 200-year history, students will take the time-honored walk down the Lawn, toward the Homer statue. But then they will continue on to Scott Stadium, where in a historic turn, they will walk onto the football field, where they will be seated for the ceremonies, which will last approximately one hour and be livestreamed. Students were allowed two tickets for attendees, who will be physically distanced in the stadium’s seating areas.
Class of 2020 Celebrations
The ceremonies will open with the Pledge of Allegiance and performances of the national anthem by accomplished UVA a capella performers; Summer Chambers, a graduate student who is earning her second master’s degree this year, will perform in the morning, and Jordan Brown, an alumna of the class of 2020 and member of the group Hoos in Treble, will sing in the afternoon ceremony.
UVA President Jim Ryan, who will deliver welcoming remarks, will oversee the ceremonial re-conferring of the degrees that students officially received during last year’s virtual Final Exercises, which were forced online because of the coronavirus. More than 7,000 students received degrees last year, including 4,250 baccalaureate degrees – 167 earned in three years and five in two years’ time – as well as approximately 3,000 graduate and professional degrees. (A full schedule of events can be viewed here.)
One of those students is Michael Bliss, who earned his undergraduate degree in computer engineering last year and said he is excited to return to Charlottesville to walk the Lawn.
“I spoke to a bunch of my friends. Most of them are going to be there, and I haven’t seen many of them for going on a year now,” he said from Boston, where he is working as a software engineer. “I’m excited to see many of them!”

