Community College Uses AI to Announce Names During Graduation; Results in Backlash

Students boo as an AI name-reading system fails at Glendale Community College’s 2026 graduation. See how the school responded.
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Commencement is supposed to be the crowning moment of a student’s academic career, but for many graduates at Glendale Community College (GCC) in Arizona, the big day was overshadowed by a “technical issue” involving an artificial intelligence system.

During the May 15 ceremony, the college debuted a new AI-powered name-reading system intended to announce each graduate as they crossed the stage. However, the technology quickly faltered, skipping dozens of names entirely and mispronouncing others.

The mismatch between the names on the jumbotron and the students on stage left families confused and the crowd increasingly restless.

As the ceremony ground to a halt, GCC President Tiffany Hernandez took the podium to address the malfunction. When she revealed the school was using a “new AI system,” the audience began to boo.

The tension escalated when Hernandez initially suggested that affected students would not be able to walk a second time. She told the crowd that while the names were missed, each student was still able to “get a picture, which is what I would hope is the most meaningful”.

This response was met with further shouting from the audience, with many arguing that hearing one’s name called is the core of the graduation experience.

Following the intense backlash, the college reversed its decision. Graduates whose names were skipped were eventually invited back to the stage to walk again, this time with their names read by human announcers.

In a statement, the Maricopa County Community College District apologized for the disruption, calling it a “technical issue” that impacted a celebratory moment. While the district has communicated directly with graduates to offer apologies, they have not yet disclosed the specific AI vendor responsible for the glitch.