View allAll Photos Tagged Graduation_Ceremony
Once again Aston's graduation ceremonies were held at the impressive Birmingham Town Hall, followed by food, drink and entertainment back on campus. Over 1000 students graduated, in 9 ceremonies over 5 days.
Please feel free to download these photos, but note they are available for personal use only.
If you're leaving Aston, there are many ways you can stay in touch...
Friend us on Facebook
Follow us on LinkedIn
Watch us on our YouTube channel
Follow us on Twitter - @AstonUniversity
Photography by Huw Meredith. Photos available for personal use only
Graduation ceremony is one of the most emotive and exciting moments in the life of any student. At Les Roches, family and friends come from all over the world to share this special moment with the new graduates. A memorable day for all of them!
Connect with Les Roches on Facebook, Twitter, Les Roches Student Blog and Youtube.
The Graduation Ceremony for the Ursuline Academy Class of 2015 was held on the Ursuline campus on May 24, 2015.
On Thursday, June 23, 2016, Fire Commissioner Daniel A. Nigro presided over a graduation ceremony for 40 students of the ninth class from the FDNY High School for Fire and Life Safety at the FDNY Training Academy on Randall’s Island. The graduating students have successfully completed a rigorous academic program that emphasizes leadership and strength as core values along with the academic and physical skills necessary for emergency responders. The FDNY High School, located at 400 Pennsylvania Avenue in Brooklyn, strives to introduce its students to future careers with the FDNY, as Firefighters, Paramedics, or Emergency Medical Technicians (EMTs).
Graduation Ceremony for 2012-13 master programs at the Barcelona Graduate School of Economics
July 8, 2013
AXA Auditorium
Graduation ceremony is one of the most emotive and exciting moments in the life of any student. At Les Roches, family and friends come from all over the world to share this special moment with the new graduates. A memorable day for all of them!
Connect with Les Roches on Facebook, Twitter, Les Roches Student Blog and Youtube.
Graduation Ceremony for 2012-13 master programs at the Barcelona Graduate School of Economics
July 8, 2013
AXA Auditorium
Free Minds Graduation Ceremony 2012 (Photo by Marsha Miller) with Vivé Griffith, Domino Perez, Neil Foley, Patty Hatcher, Laine Perez
Neil Foley (History) is Professor of History and American Studies at UT and the author of Latino USA: Mexicans and the Remaking of America, to be published in 2012. His first book, The White Scourge: Mexicans, Blacks, and Poor Whites in Texas Cotton Culture, won the Frederick Jackson Turner award of the Organization of American Historians, and awards from the American Historical Association, the Southern Historical Association, and the Western Historical Association. He teaches courses on U.S. history, race and ethnicity, Mexican American/Latino history, immigration, legal and labor history, and civil/human rights of Mexican Americans, African Americans, and Asian Americans.
Vivé Griffith (Creative Writing) has directed the Free Minds Project since 2007. A graduate of the Michener Center for Writers at UT, where she held a fellowship in poetry and fiction, she has taught poetry to everyone from kindergarteners to retirees. She is the author of the poetry collection Weeks in This Country and her poems, stories and essays have appeared in publications including The Sun, Oxford American, and Gettysburg Review, as well as at the Blanton Museum. In addition to her work with Free Minds, she also teaches poetry and creative nonfiction at ACC and works with veterans to help them share their stories.
Patty Hatcher (Humanities) is a Professor in the Department of Philosophy, Religion, and Humanities at ACC, where she teaches Humanities. She is also an award-winning copy editor and writer, a poet, and an experienced actress and director. Professor Hatcher specializes in identity studies and their connection to the arts, and the use of technology in the Humanities classroom. Her overall research interests include how to teach Humanities in mixed age and learning style classrooms.
Domino Renee Perez (Literature) is an Associate Professor at UT in the Department of English and the Center for Mexican American Studies, specializing in Chican@ Literature, American Literature, Popular Culture, Cultural Studies, and Film. Her book There Was A Woman: La Llorona From Folklore to Popular Culture examines La Llorona, the weeping woman, one of the most famous figures in US/Mexican folklore. Her current book project concerns Mexican American masculinity in literature and film.
Laine Perez (Writing) is a PhD candidate in English at UT. Her research interests include 19th century American literature and children’s literature as well as exploring the relation between literature and the economy.