[QUOTE 4849632, member: 259"]No dress code, but you'll feel a bit out of place if you're not smart - I even wore a tie
Your daughter will expect a gift or at least some dosh, but surely not at the event itself.
They do tend to go on a bit, but that's all part of the game.[/QUOTE]
It's sad that people's children "expect" gifts or money, my daughter isn't like that at all. I only mention gifts because the lad I work with has just bought his girlfriend a graduation gift of a watch, and I was "oh, is that a thing?"
I like the idea of a bottle of bubbly, I'm sure she will too.
Last summer I went to the graduation of a Sudanese friend in Salford. I graduated in 1979 so I was quite shocked at the lack of decorum in 2016 as families and friends shouted, whooped, cheered, ran to the front to take photos and generally made a racket. To add to my discomfort one of my friend's other Sudanese pals turned up dressed in religious clothing and at the moment our friend received his handshake, jumped up beside me and shouted "Allahu Akbar" very loudly indeed a couple of times. I discovered later that the bloke is actually a university lecturer and deeply intellectual.
Daughter is graduating from Salford too. I hope there isn't whooping and such, I'm not a fan of that in a formal setting - like football style yelling at a cricket or tennis match, it's just not cricket!