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SPS may allow foreign exchange students to be part of graduation


Springfield’s public high schools are graduating a record number of students and they may soon invite more students to be part of the commencement ceremony.

The school board wants to change a policy that apparently prohibited foreign exchange students from participating in the graduations each May.

Superintendent Grenita Lathan said she was contacted by a teacher from Glendale High School and parents reached out to board member Maryam Mohammadkhani about “our foreign exchange students previously not being allowed to participate in graduation.”

The district’s current policy states only students who complete all of the requirements for a regular or alternative diploma to be part of the commencement ceremony.

Foreign exchange students typically study in the U.S. for one year and, therefore, do not have enough time to complete all of the courses Springfield requires for graduation.

Under the proposed change, foreign exchange students can be awarded a certificate of attendance.

Foreign exchange students enrolled in Springfield Public Schools may soon be able to participate in commencement ceremonies.

Lathan said Nicole Holt, the deputy superintendent of academics, looked into the issue and checked with other districts in Missouri to “see what they were doing.”

“In my previous experience in other school districts across the country, foreign exchange did participate. It’s a ceremony,” Lathan said.

More:Size of Springfield Public Schools’ 2021 graduating class sets new district record



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