The publicly available commencement page on the OCCC website details how graduates can participate in the official ceremony.
Students are instructed to purchase their graduation cap and gown at the “Your College Store” at the Newport campus or order directly via a recognized vendor (e.g. Jostens).
The ceremony is inclusive — credit students, GED‑completing students, and ESOL students who meet requirements may participate. Graduates needing accommodations (e.g. ASL) are invited to request them.
At check‑in, eligible students receive recognition cords — “all recognition cords” are handed out at the official Commencement Ceremony check‑in table.
However — neither the OCCC commencement page nor the publicly accessible student handbook (e.g. 2025 Student Handbook) appears to specify official color codes for tassels, honor cords, or stoles tied to particular degrees or honors. As a result, there is no documented institutional standard for what tassel color, stole color, or cord colors correspond to which academic program or honors level.
Given standard academic‑regalia practices in U.S. colleges, it is likely that OCCC uses black gowns and a standard mortarboard, with tassels and cords/stoles to indicate honors or student‑organization recognition — but since no color‑coding is published, any specific color associations remain undocumented for OCCC.
In short: while OCCC clearly supports and facilitates commencement ceremonies — including cap & gown purchase, and distribution of honor cords — there is **no public guide or PDF** that defines the color scheme (tassel, stole, cord) for academic regalia across programs or honors levels.
OCCC’s commencement ceremony framework is clearly established: graduates obtain graduation gowns and caps (via the campus bookstore or vendor), participate in ceremonies, and eligible students receive recognition cords at check‑in. But OCCC does not publish a public academic‑regalia code (tassel colors, stole or cord colors) by degree or honor level. As a result, while the institution supports graduation regalia, the exact color conventions remain unspecified.
The publicly available commencement information on the OCCC website confirms that eligible graduates — including credit, GED, and ESOL students who meet completion requirements — may participate in the official ceremony.
Despite OCCC facilitating cap, gown and cord distribution, there is no publicly accessible documentation (handbook, PDF, or commencement‑regalia policy) that defines the color scheme for tassels, honor cords or stoles by degree level (bachelor’s, master’s, doctoral), discipline, or academic honors. A review of the OCCC website yields no color‑code chart or regalia‑requirements document.
Thus, the following categories remain undocumented for OCCC:
Because there is no published color standard, any assumption about colors (e.g. black gowns, colored tassels, gold or discipline‑specific cords) for OCCC would be speculation. It appears the institution leaves personalization or vendor‑provided regalia flexible. Graduates are responsible for their cap and gown purchase or order.
OCCC’s approach may prioritize accessibility and simplicity — providing regalia options without locking into a public color‑coded uniform that might exclude special recognitions, diverse programs, or non‑traditional graduates (GED, ESOL, etc.).
Note: To confirm the exact colors of the graduation gown, cap, tassel, honor cords, and stoles for your specific program at Oregon Coast Community College, you can reach out directly to the college's administration or the office responsible for commencement and student services. They can provide you with the most accurate and up-to-date information regarding academic regalia.