Graduation marks the end of one chapter and the beginning of another. For students, it is more than a ceremony; it is a moment of pride, relief, and achievement after years of tests, assignments, and personal growth.
Families look forward to it. Schools showcase it. Students remember it for years. But in recent times, a growing debate has emerged: should schools ban graduation parties altogether?
This conversation has become increasingly relevant as some school authorities and governments move to restrict end-of-session celebrations, arguing that many have drifted away from their original purpose.
There is no doubt that celebration has its place in education. Human beings naturally celebrate milestones. Whether it is completing primary school, secondary school, or university, recognising effort and achievement encourages students and creates lasting memories. Few adults forget the joy of receiving awards, signing classmates’ shirts, taking photos with friends, or hearing their names called during graduation.
The concern, however, is not the graduation itself; it is what some graduation parties have become.
Across many schools today, graduation activities increasingly resemble elaborate social events rather than academic ceremonies. Parents sometimes feel pressured to buy expensive outfits, rent event spaces, hire decorators, organise entertainment, and provide costly souvenirs simply to keep up appearances. For some families already struggling financially, what should be a joyful occasion becomes another economic burden.
There have also been situations where school celebrations lose structure entirely. Cases of overcrowding, reckless behaviour, unnecessary competition among students, and distractions from academic priorities have become common complaints. Instead of celebrating learning and achievement, attention shifts to fashion displays, social media moments, and extravagant spending.
One relatable example can be found in schools where graduation ceremonies begin as brief academic events but end as unofficial parties extending beyond school supervision. Students who should be celebrating responsibly sometimes become exposed to environments that schools cannot effectively control. In such situations, concerns about discipline and student safety become legitimate.
Yet, banning graduation parties completely may not be the best solution.
Education is not only about examinations and discipline; it is also about experiences, emotional development, and building positive memories. Students who have spent years meeting expectations deserve moments of recognition. Completely removing celebration may unintentionally make schools feel overly rigid and disconnected from students’ emotional needs.
The better approach may be moderation rather than prohibition.
Schools can maintain meaningful graduation ceremonies while setting clear boundaries. Prize-giving events, certificate presentations, speeches, cultural displays, and modest entertainment can still create memorable experiences without becoming extravagant social functions. Schools can establish guidelines on duration, costs, dress codes, and activities while ensuring celebrations remain educational and inclusive.
Parents also have a role to play. Not every celebration needs to become a competition. A simple family gathering, dinner, or photo session can mean just as much to a child as an expensive event.
Ultimately, the goal should not be to remove joy from education but to protect the values education is meant to build. Graduation should remain a celebration of learning, effort, and growth, not a contest of status or spending.
Schools must find the balance between allowing students to celebrate their achievements and preserving the discipline, simplicity, and academic purpose that schools exist to promote.
Because when students look back years later, they should remember not how extravagant the party was but how meaningful the achievement felt.
