Inaugural Declaration Day at Pomona Celebrates Major College Milestone

Students ring a bell

To declare a major at Pomona College is to join an academic family, and on Thursday, April 30, sophomores had the chance to do both communally for the first time.

The inaugural Declaration Day brought together second-year students, College faculty and visiting alumni for a reception on Marston Quad celebrating the seminal act of declaring a major.

Sophomore Class President Molly Grace Chakery ’28; Sophomore Class Dean Brooke Lavin; Josh Eisenberg, associate dean of students and dean of campus life; and Associate Dean of the College Heidi Schumacher planned the affair collaboratively.

“A lot of our energy our first two years is spent exploring our interests, which makes declaring a major hard because we’ve been given permission to have a multitude of passions,” Chakery says. “We thought, ‘How can we make students feel like they’re joining a new academic family as they’re being welcomed into departments?’”

A festive dinner to kick off Alumni Weekend seemed apropos, the team concluded.

“We wanted students to see and meet everyone in the areas they are declaring in, including alumni who’d been in those communities before them,” Chakery says. “There’s a great deal of pride in each department, and it is exciting for faculty to see the communities they’ve created.”

Expand the image: Students hold a frame
Students hold a frame

Pomona department heads had festive ways to celebrate sophomores who declared their major Thursday.

Expand the image: An assortment of buttons
An assortment of buttons

Pomona students who attended Declaration Day walked away with buttons and stickers.

Traditionally, students declare their majors by completing a form inside the Registrar’s Office. Once they dot the i’s and cross the t’s, they ring a large brass service bell and send an echo through Alexander Hall.

Students are also welcome to take pictures and record short videos marking the occasion.

While ringing the bell after declaring a major is a nice gesture, Chakery wanted such a fundamental moment in the college journey to be more interactive, celebratory and public.

“Declaring a major can be overwhelming to think about on your own,” she says, “so people were excited by the idea of doing it with their friends or classmates also declaring that major.”

In the way ringing a bell became the thing to do after choosing a major, Chakery—who declared as a psychology and theatre double major Thursday—hopes the inaugural Declaration Day introduced a complementary tradition.

“The idea,” she says, “is that people get to continue to declare their major while in community, and in a way that honors how much work they’ve put into discovering what they care about.”