by hispanic

The bunch of kids today look at a diploma as a dream come true. These are the same kids who see the diploma as a physical translation of overcoming all the late nights and nose bleeds during their school years. Though people like Bill Gates and Paul Allen might disagree, a real, authentic diploma is one of the greatest achievements a person can have.

This is the sad truth with regards to a significant majority of today's graduates, especially in many Third World nations. Nevertheless, the diploma still has its own purposes in a graduation ceremony.

Diplomas are given to students to tell them they have achieved all the requirements and passed all the obstacles from the school. Even if it is called as "testimonium" or "testamur" in other parts of the planet, a diploma still represents the same thing. It serves as proof that a student has qualified to advance to the next level of education, wherein another diploma awaits to be conquered. This piece of individual recognition was not always made from papyrus. Instead, the first few diplomas were made from sheepskin that underwent a special manufacturing process to be come as thin as paper.

In Ireland, the parchment is the equivalent of the diploma. Diplomas were not always made of paper. At the time when diplomas were first implemented, these documents were actually made out of sheepskin. The sheepskin was passed through a special manufacturing process that flattened it and made it paper thin. The information on the diploma was then written by hand prior to the graduation ceremony. Eventually, parchment replaced the sheepskin as the primary material for making diplomas, and, later still; institutions began to bind them in leather.

During its sheepskin days, the diploma was a very big piece of document. Fortunately, it is reduced to the size of a typical bond paper, making it easier for students to frame their latest feat. Though the word diploma is represented in many ways, it still signifies one thing and that is educational achievement.

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