Washington-Liberty High Drops AI Graduation Name Reader for 700 Students After Backlash
Updated
Updated · The Washington Post · May 24
Washington-Liberty High Drops AI Graduation Name Reader for 700 Students After Backlash
1 articles · Updated · The Washington Post · May 24
Washington-Liberty High School scrapped plans to use AI to announce names at its June commencement and will have faculty read roughly 700 graduates instead.
Student and parent criticism drove the reversal, with opponents arguing AI made a milestone moment feel standardized and impersonal despite the school’s goal of improving pronunciation accuracy and speed.
The debate comes as AI name-reading spreads at commencements: Glendale Community College in Arizona recently saw a malfunction that skipped multiple graduates and drew boos from the crowd.
Alexandria City Public Schools, by contrast, is using Tassel for a second year after saying it eliminated mispronunciations and helped keep ceremonies on schedule for nearly 1,000 seniors.
Tassel says its high school user base has doubled since 2023, underscoring a broader split between schools prioritizing efficiency and those favoring a more human ceremony.
Is an AI's perfect pronunciation more respectful than a human's potential mistake?
As AI enters our most cherished traditions, where do we draw the line between efficiency and the human experience?