UTSA - The University of Texas at San Antonio

06/05/2024 | News release | Distributed by Public on 07/05/2024 09:41

Everything you need to know about UTSA’s academic regalia

The style of the gowns vary depending on the degree the student receives. The sleeves of the gowns worn by master's degree recipients are square at the end.

The gowns of doctoral degree recipients have flowing sleeves with three bars of velvet and velvet facing down the front with the UTSA seal. The velvet trim is five inches wide for the doctoral degree. The color of the velvet border indicates the degree and aligns with the graduates' tassel colors.

The biggest difference in regalia can be found in the hood, which identifies the graduate degree and institution from which it was awarded. For master's students, the hood is short. For those receiving a doctoral degree, the hood is longer and lined with silk in the official colors of the student's institution. The UTSA hoods are blue and lined in orange with one white chevron.

The academic caps also have their own special meanings. Developed in the 15th century, some caps were stiff, some soft, some square and some round with a tuft in the center.

The tassel used today is an elaboration of the tuft. While some institutions still use the round caps, most institutions, including UTSA, have adopted the mortarboard style that comes from Oxford University. Students earning terminal degrees wear a tam instead of a mortarboard.

For a bachelor's degree, the tassel's colors represent the university in a tricolor of orange, blue and white. The tassel color worn by master's degree recipients indicates the discipline in which the degree has been earned. Those graduating with a doctoral degree wear a gold bullion tassel.

The gold cord, worn by some undergraduate students, indicates graduation with honors: summa cum laude, which include graduates with a GPA of 3.90 to 4.00; magna cum laude, which is awarded to those with a GPA of 3.75 to 3.89 or cum laude, which includes graduates with a GPA of 3.50 to 3.74.

Graduates also wear one or more stoles, indicating individual achievements such as being a student in Honors College, a veteran or a first-generation college student.

UTSA leadership and faculty wear robes representing the university where they earned their highest degree. President Taylor Eighmy's regalia, for example, is from the University of New Hampshire, where he earned his Ph.D. in Environmental Engineering. Eighmy's orange hood likewise signifies his engineering degree.

Eighmy also wears the UTSA Presidential Medallion, which symbolizes the authority and responsibility vested in the UTSA President. The brass medallion has the university's seal on one side and the words "Presented by the UTSA Development Board in honor of the University's 25th anniversary-1994" on the other side.