EducationJune 6, 2026

Graduation Day and the AI Backlash

Key Vocabulary

punctured/ˈpʌŋktʃərd/
to have been broken or upset suddenly
"The mood at the ceremony was punctured by loud boos."
jeer/dʒɪər/
to shout insults or show disrespect loudly
"Speakers who praised AI were met with jeers."
automation/ˌɔːtəˈmeɪʃən/
the process of using machines or software to do jobs
"Automation has changed how employers hire."
acknowledgement/əkˈnɒlɪdʒmənt/
recognition that something is real or important
"Graduates want acknowledgement of their work."
do-over/ˈduːˌoʊvər/
a second chance to repeat an event
"The college offered a do-over to affected students."

Listening

Graduation Day and the AI Backlash

Across mid-May 2026, graduation ceremonies at several U.S. colleges have been punctured by loud boos when speakers praise artificial intelligence, a pattern that has unsettled faculty and families alike. Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, music executive Scott Borchetta and real estate executive Gloria Caulfield, who spoke at the University of Central Florida on May 8, 2026, have each faced jeers while discussing AI's role in work and media. What began as scattered interruptions has come to feel like a clear signal of student anger.

Students say that hearing optimistic forecasts about AI on their graduation day is tone deaf when many are entering a tight labor market, and employers have cited AI when announcing layoffs. At some schools graduates have been told to 'collaborate with AI' in job listings while professors prohibit AI in coursework, creating a confusing double message. The anger is not only abstract: at Glendale Community College an AI announcer skipped and mispronounced names, prompting boos and an apology, after which the college offered a do-over.

When speakers ignore this mood, they risk being jeered; when organizers rely too much on automation, they risk eroding ceremony and trust. If institutions wish to honor graduates and avoid scenes of protest, they will need to balance technological efficiency with human recognition, and ensure that gestures meant to help do not instead alienate those they aim to celebrate.

Graduation is a rite that marks personal achievement, and for students facing an uncertain labor market the ceremony can be a rare day to feel seen. The recent wave of boos suggests that many graduates prefer human acknowledgement and clear answers about work, rather than rehearsed optimism about tools that many fear will replace them.

283 words

Quiz

1. Which college had an AI announcer that skipped names?
2. What did the college offer affected students after the error?
3. On what date did Gloria Caulfield speak at UCF?

Reading Practice

Read the article from the Listening section aloud. Your AI teacher will give you pronunciation feedback.

Discussion

1

Do you think a ceremony is changed when technology fails? How would you feel?

2

Have you ever felt nervous about your work being replaced by machines?

3

What do you think matters more at a graduation: a human voice or a perfect livestream?

4

Would you accept a second chance (a do-over) if a milestone went wrong? Why?

5

How do you react when someone talks about the future of work at an emotional event?

此內容僅供英語學習使用,不保證事實的準確性。