Ĵý graduated its largest class to date across Friday and Saturday, with more than 5,700 degrees awarded during its spring commencement ceremonies.
“This record-setting class represents more than an important milestone for Ĵý,” Chancellor Jim Dalton said in a release. “These graduates will serve communities, strengthen industries, drive discovery, and help move Louisiana forward for generations to come.”
The Maravich Assembly Center, Maddox Fieldhouse and Student Union Theater were seas of purple and gold as thousands of students from 12 schools walked the stage over the course of the two days of ceremonies. They crossed a lavender carpet as their names were read out and families and friends cheered from the audience.
Ĵý saw increases in the number of degrees awarded across the board for each demographic compared to spring 2025.
Here are some highlights provided the Ĵý Office of Data and Strategic Analytics:
5,710 total degrees (spring 2025: 5,428)
4,215 bachelor's degrees (spring 2025: 4,073)
1,069 master’s degrees (spring 2025: 907)
3,428 female graduates (spring 2025: 3,237)
2,282 male graduates (spring 2025: 2,191)
871 degrees awarded to Black students (spring 2025: 736)
525 degrees awarded to Hispanic students (spring 2025: 449)
3,482 in-state graduates (spring 2025: 3,369)
2,002 out-of-state graduates (spring 2025: 1,864)
Outside of Louisiana, the state with the greatest number of graduates was Texas, with 533. Florida was a distant second, with 170 students awarded degrees this spring, followed by California, Georgia and Maryland.
Foreign countries with the most Ĵý graduates were Nigeria, China and Honduras.
The record-breaking graduating class reflects Ĵý’s soaring enrollment and application numbers. More than 62,000 potential incoming freshmen applied this cycle, according to institutional data, compared to 18,122 in 2016.
University officials speculated that the draw of the SEC and the prestige of a flagship university might be pulling more students, particularly out-of-state applicants, to Baton Rouge.
“If they’re not from the state or from the region, they see us on ESPN on a Saturday night,” Ĵý Vice President for Enrollment Management Emmett Brown said in an interview in February.
Ĵý leaders have made subtle moves to heighten the selectivity of the institution and balance increasingly strained resources as the campus population swells. The Ĵý Board of Supervisors voted in February to reinstate the standardized test score requirement at the main campus in Baton Rouge after making scores optional during the COVID-19 pandemic. Dalton said at the time there would be no minimum score to gain admission, but the information would be used as “one component of our comprehensive evaluation of students.”
In December, the university broke ground on the $200 million South Quad freshman dorm project to bring 1,266 additional beds to campus.
Ĵý System President Wade Rousse recently told the the flagship may have to consider an enrollment cap in the coming years as demand for parking and housing grows.