Graduation for Everyone

School is different for everyone. Some people coast through without having to open a book, some don't. But either way, everyone will graduate. At least, that's how it is in fiction. In reality some people just don't graduate.

This is probably used for good reason, as it's no fun to watch someone drop out, or not earn the credits they need to graduate. But it can also be a glaring error when someone who made straight Fs or Ds graduates with their class. Sometimes this is Handwaved as the character doing enough extra credit work to make up for what they missed. But even then, this is hard to believe. Most teachers will only assign extra credit work to those who are already passing. This trope will often go hand-in-hand with Ivy League for Everyone.

In the case of an overly dramatic series, this can be used to create a happy ending. This is exceedingly common in American works.

When it happens in Real Life, this is called Social Promotion., and it is restricted to grade levels earlier than high school.

Film

 * Fast Times at Ridgemont High: Jeff Spicoli (Sean Penn) is going to fail his History class, which means he wouldn't graduate. However, on the evening of the graduation dance, Mr. Hand shows up at Spicoli's house and informs him that since he has wasted eight hours of class time over the past year, Mr. Hand intends to make up for that time now. They proceed to have a one-on-one tutoring session that lasts until Mr. Hand is satisfied that Spicoli has understood the lesson and finally tells him he will pass him with a D (the lowest possible passing grade).

Live-Action TV
"Oz: Well, it's sort of a funny story. You remember when I didn't graduate? Willow: Well, I know you had a lot of incompletes, but that's what summer school was for. Oz: Yeah, well, you remember when I didn't go?"
 * Averted in Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Oz had to repeat the 12th grade.


 * Of course, the out-of-universe purpose served by this was to keep him at Sunnydale High with the other characters even though he was a year older than them.
 * In Saved by the Bell, Zack is almost never shown studying, and a few times it is shown that he is close to failing out of at least one class, yet he graduates with everyone.
 * And he was accepted into Yale on his SAT scores alone.
 * On The George Lopez Show, a running plot point is the question of whether Max, George's dyslexic and generally Book Dumb son, would have to repeat the fifth grade. To the show's credit, it even notes that it might be better for him if he does repeat; however, he squeaks by enough to pass.
 * On Happy Days, Fonzie spent the first four seasons as a high school dropout. There was even one early episode where he returns only to quickly drop out again. When it came time for Richie, Potsie, and Ralph to graduate, Fonzie started attending night school and graduated alongside them. They did note that it was unusual for a night school student to attend graduation, but the fact that he caught up is still amazing.

Video Games

 * The good ending for BioShock has this, along with Weddings for Everyone. Only one is shown each time; the others are only implied.

Western Animation

 * Averted in the backstory of Arthur's Binky Barnes, who's repeating fourth grade. Then the series gets firmly frozen in time, so who's to say if he'll ever graduate or not.
 * It was also revealed that Brain had to repeat kindergarten, which is why he's larger & more athletic than the other kids in his class. It's a big secret though, so don't tell anybody!
 * In the last episode of |Hercules: The Animated Series, everyone in Hercules' class graduates, except for Adonis, who has to take summer school.
 * The Alpha Bitch of Kim Possible also has to attend summer school when she comes up short at graduation.
 * It's revealed in Tale Spin that Baloo never graduated from grade school, and thus may be barred from attending his class reunion.
 * Averted in Daria. Dumb jock Kevin actually doesn't graduate with the others because his grades were so bad. You'd think he would have been cut from the football team first until his grades improved, but there you go.
 * Given that he received byes on test because of his football involvement, he might have just outlived his usefulness to the school.
 * Alternatively, football season doesn't last all year, and "Is It College Yet?" explicitly takes place after it ends; it's possible he stopped getting special treatment once academic suspension from the team stopped being an issue.