All Access: Go Behind the Scenes of CSU Commencement
See the ceremonies through the eyes of event staff.
Weeks before commencement ceremonies begin, students are invited to attend a "Commencement 101" session hosted by University Ceremonies and Events staff with the help of the CSU Dominguez Hills Alumni Association. Staff hold about a dozen of these sessions to provide students with pertinent commencement details and answer any questions they may have.
CSU Dominguez Hills photographer Matt Brown has spent much of his 30-plus-year career shooting sports games and events like the Olympics, and he draws upon those experiences when planning how to document six commencement ceremonies in just two days, shown in the sketches above. “Commencement is our Super Bowl," Brown says. "It's where we get 99% of our marketing photos."
All six of CSU Dominguez Hills' commencement ceremonies take place in the Dignity Health Sports Park Tennis Stadium, pictured here set up for a tennis match (left) and for commencement (right). It takes about 84 hours from load in to load out to transform the stadium.
Estela Melendez and her team—which consists of herself, Kim Larson, Sara Napoli and 98 volunteers—prep the stage before each ceremony, placing marks and water bottles for members of the platform party and switching out schedules and scripts. Fun fact: Larson came out of retirement this year to help with one more commencement season and Napoli was hired on just three days prior to the events!
“I'm nervous, but I'm just hoping to speak from my heart and to encourage people, to let them know that this is just the beginning." Mirka Trejo Parra reflects on her university experience as she gets ready in the Stadium Club with other members of the platform party. Parra was selected to be the student speaker for her major's commencement ceremony Saturday, June 20.
The platform party participates in all six ceremonies and includes the campus president and their cabinet, deans of the university's six colleges, Associated Students, Inc. president and student and invited speakers, among others. Pictured here: CSU Dominguez Hills President Thomas Parham (left) and California Attorney General Rob Bonta, who served as a commencement speaker.
College of Business Administration and Public Policy faculty members Marie Palladini (left) and Theodore Byrne get ready to celebrate their graduating students. The hat Palladini wears is called a graduation tam and the purple and blue garments they wear are doctoral hoods. Faculty members join the platform party in their procession into the stadium.
Graduating students enter through the tennis stadium tunnel and volunteers and participants like CSU Dominguez Hills Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs Michael Spagna, pictured here, will do almost anything to get guests hyped for their debut. “We want the crowd going crazy when those students walk through the tunnel," Kim Larson says. “We want them to feel the excitement."
The university's mascot, Teddy the Toro, is present before and during all six ceremonies to hype up the crowd and interact with graduates. Though not a real bull, Teddy does have handlers—including University Ambassador for Enrollment Services Con'Searra Howard—whose job it is to make sure Teddy is comfortable, even going so far as to provide shoulder rubs and adjust the costume.
Frank DeSimone, who owns S.P. Entertainment LLC, plays an important role in keeping graduates' energy levels up while they check in and make their way from the track field to the stadium. DeSimone earned a master's degree in business administration from CSU Dominguez Hills and his son will begin attending Cal State Long Beach this fall.
Using the tennis stadium, which fits about 8,000 people, is a thoughtful choice. The team has explored using bigger venues, including the sports park's soccer field next door, but the tennis stadium provides an intimacy graduates appreciate. “They can see their families from wherever they are in the stadium and vice versa—we think that's important," Estela Melendez says.
Volunteers keep an eye on the stands throughout ceremonies for guests attempting to pass forgotten items to graduates on the field including dozens of leis, mortarboards, honors sashes and more. “We tell our volunteers to always say yes, to just make it work," Melendez says. “Within reason, of course."
CSU Dominguez Hills has a tradition of holding an alumni pinning ceremony during each commencement ceremony to welcome graduating students into the alumni family and to remind them their relationship with the university doesn't end once they earn their degree. As they like to say: “Once a Toro; Always a Toro."
Male Success Alliance Student Success Coordinator Gerardo Cuevas (left) says he enjoys being a volunteer because it's another way to show up for his students. "Earning a bachelor's degree is a huge win," he says. "It's even more meaningful when you know there is a community of people to celebrate with."
COMMENCEMENT BY THE NUMBERS
84
hours from setup to breakdown
Story: ALISIA RUBLE
photography: Anthony Soler, CSU Dominguez Hills/Matt Brown and GradImages
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