
UC Berkeley's graduation season is upon us
The annual campus-wide ceremony honoring all graduating seniors will be held at Edwards Track Stadium on the southwest corner of campus. The keynote speaker will be Google Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt, a software engineer, Internet pioneer and UC Berkeley’s 2012 Alumnus of the Year.
Chancellor Robert Birgeneau, who will leave his post to return to teaching and research at the end of this year, will address the graduates and their families. A capacity crowd of 16,000 people is expected for the event, which will include speeches, awards, and students, faculty and campus administrators in colorful regalia. No diplomas are awarded at the ceremony, but the name of each participating graduating senior is called out as the students cross the stage to "Pomp and Circumstance" to receive a handshake and a bear pin.
At least 7,000 UC Berkeley students will receive diplomas this month at nearly 100 ceremonies being sponsored by the campus’s individual departments, colleges and units. More than 10,000 bachelor’s, master’s, doctoral and professional degrees are expected to be conferred for the 2011-12 academic year, as some students were awarded degrees last summer and winter.
Currently, the most popular majors for UC Berkeley graduates include economics, political science, integrative biology, business administration, psychology, English, electrical engineering and computer sciences, sociology, history and media studies. On average, students who enter UC Berkeley as freshmen take four years to earn their undergraduate degrees, according to the campus’s Office of Planning and Analysis.
Among the student speakers at commencement will be top graduating senior Eric Olliff , a double major in Chinese language and literature and in conservation and resource studies. He will receive the coveted University Medal at Saturday’s ceremony in recognition of his scholarship, public service and amazing life experiences.
Keynote speakers at individual department graduation ceremonies that run throughout May will include Nassim Nicholas Taleb, a former derivatives trader who wrote the 2007 New York Times best-seller The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable; award winning science-fiction writer Kim Stanley Robinson, author of the "Mars Trilogy"; Deena Gonzalez, UC Berkeley’s first Ph.D. recipient in Chicana history, and an expert on borderlands studies; and physicist Freeman Dyson, author of numerous books on the origins of life, nuclear weapons and the cosmos.
Below is a sampling of speakers scheduled to address graduates at ceremonies this month:










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