桑德伯格在加州大学伯克利分校毕业典礼上的演讲

桑德伯格在加州大学伯克利分校毕业典礼上的演讲
桑德伯格在加州大学伯克利分校毕业典礼上的演讲

Facebook COO雪莉桑德伯格在加州大学伯克利分校2016毕业典礼上的演讲5月14日,Facebook首席运营官、《向前一步》作者雪莉?桑德伯格(Sheryl Sandberg )在加州大学伯克利分校(UC Berkeley)2016毕业典礼上发表演讲。在丈夫离世一年之际,她讲到了痛失爱人的痛苦以及应付挫折的韧性。丈夫去世后,她在“向前一步”方面有些新思考,近来也引发不少讨论。

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY 2016 Commencement Address

Thank you, Marie. And thank you esteemed members of the faculty, proud parents, devoted friends, squirming siblings.

Con gratulati ons to all of you …and especially to the magn ifice nt Berkeley graduati ng class

of 2016!

It is a privilege to be here at Berkeley, which has produced so many Nobel Prize winners,

Turing Award winners, astronauts, members of Congress, Olympic gold medalists ??and that 's just the

women!

Berkeley has always been ahead of the times. In the 1960s, you led the Free Speech Movement. Back in those days, people used to say that with all the long hair, how do we even tell the boys from the girls? We now know the answer: manbuns.

Early on, Berkeley opened its doors to the entire population. When this campus opened in 1873, the class included 167 men and 222 women. It took my alma mater another ninety years to award a single degree to a single woman.

One of the women who came here in search of opportunity was Rosalind Nuss. Roz grew up scrubbing floors in the Brooklyn boardinghouse where she lived. She was pulled out of high school by her parents to help support their family. One of her teachers insisted that her parents put her back into school —and in 1937, she sat where you are sitting today and received a Berkeley degree. Roz was my grandmother. She was a huge inspiration to me and I 'm so grateful that Berkeley recognized her potential. I want to take a moment to offer a special congratulations to the many here today who are the first generation in their families to graduate from college. What a remarkable achievement.

Today is a day of celebration. A day to celebrate all the hard work that got you to this moment.

Today is a day of thanks. A day to thank those who helped you get here —nurtured you, taught you,

cheered you on, and dried your tears.

Or at least the ones who didn 't draw on you with a Sharpie when you fell asleep at a party.

Today is a day of reflection. Because today marks the end of one era of your life and the beginning of something new.

A commencement address is meant to be a dance between youth and wisdom. You have the youth. Someone comes in to be the voice of wisdom —that 's supposed to be me. I stand up here and tell you all the things I have learned in life, you throw your cap in the air, you let your family take a millio n photos —don' t forget to post them on In stagram and eve—o ne

goes home happy.

Today will be a bit different. We will still do the caps and you still have to do the photos. But I am not here to tell you all the things I ' ve learned in life. ToydtoayteIllwyilol utr what I learned in death.

I have never spoken publicly about this before. It ' s hard. But I will do my very best not to blow my nose on this beautiful Berkeley robe.

One year and thirteen days ago, I lost my husband, Dave. His death was sudden and unexpected. We were at a friend ' s fiftieth birthday party in Mexico. I took a nap. Dave went to work out. What followed was the

unthinkable —walking into a gym to find him lying on

the floor. Flying home to tell my children that their father was gone. Watching his casket being lowered into the ground.

For many months afterward, and at many times since, I was swallowed up in the deep fog of grief —what I think of as the void —an emptiness that fills your heart, your lungs, constricts your ability to think or even to breathe.

Dave' s death changed me in very profound ways. I learned about the depths of sadness and the brutality of loss. But I also learned that when life sucks you under, you can kick against the bottom, break the surface, and breathe again. I learned that in the face of the void —or in the face of any challenge —you can choose joy and meaning.

I ' m sharing this with you in the hopes that today, as you take the next step in your life, you can learn the lessons that I only learned in death. Lessons about hope, strength, and the light within us that will not be extinguished.

Everyone who has made it through Cal has already experienced some disappointment. You wanted an A but you got a B. OK, let 's be hyoonuesgtot a—n A- but you ' re still mad. You applied for an internship at Facebook, but you only got one from Google. She was the love of your life … but the n she swiped left. Game of Thrones the show has diverged way too much from the books —and you bothered

to read all four thousand three hundred and fifty-two pages.

You will almost certainly face more and deeper adversity. There 's loss of opportunity: the job that doesn'wtork out, the illness or accident that changes everything in an instant.

There's loss of dignity: the sharp sting of prejudice when it happens. There 's loss o broken relationships that can 't be fixed. And sometimes there 's loss of life itself.

Some of you have already experienced the kind of tragedy and hardship that leave an indelible mark. Last year, Radhika, the winner of the University Medal, spoke so beautifully about the sudden loss of her mother. The question is not if some of these things will happen to you. They will. Today I want to talk about what happens next. About the things you can do to overcome adversity, no matter what form it takes or when it hits you. The easy days ahead of you will be easy. It is the hard days—the times that challenge you to your very core —that will determine who you are. You will be defined not just by what you achieve, but by how you survive.

A few weeks after Dave died, I was talking to my friend Phil about a father-son activity that Dave was not here to do. We came up with a plan to fill in for Dave. I cried to him, want Dave. ” Phil put his arm around me and said, “Option A is not available. So let

kick the shit out of option B. ”

We all at some point live some form of option B. The question is: What do we do then?

As a representative of Silicon Valley, I 'm pleased to tell you there is data to learn from. After spending decades studying how people deal with setbacks, psychologist Martin Seligman found that there are three P pe'rsosn—alization, pervasiveness, and permanence —that are

critical to how we bounce back from hardship. The seeds of resilience are planted in the way we process the negative events in our lives.

The first P is personalization —the belief that we are at fault. This is different from taking responsibility, which you should always do. This is the lesson that not everything that happens to us happens because of us.

When Dave died, I had a very common reaction, which was to blame myself. He died in seconds from a

cardiac arrhythmia. I poured over his medical records asking what I could have—or should have —done. It wasn 't until I learned about the three P ce'ptsetdhat I ac that I could not have prevented his death. His doctors had not identified his coronary artery disease. I was an economics major; how could I have?

Studies show that getting past personalization can actually make you stronger. Teachers who knew they could do better after students failed adjusted their methods and saw future classes go on to excel. College swimmers who underperformed but believed they were capable of swimming faster did. Not taking failures personally allows us to recover —and even to thrive.

The second P is pervasiveness—the belief that an event will affect all areas of your life. You know that song “ Everything is awesome? ” This is the flip: “ Everything is awful. ”place to run or hide from the all-consuming sadness.

The child psychologists I spoke to encouraged me to get my kids back to their routine as soon as possible. So ten days after Dave died, they went back to school and I went back to work. I remember sitting in my first Facebook meeting in a deep, deep haze. All I could think was, “ What is everyone talking about and how could this possibly matter? ” But got drawn into the discussion and for a second —a brief split second —I forgot about death.

That brief second helped me see that there were other things in my life that were not awful. My children and I were healthy. My friends and family were so loving and they carried us—quite literally at times.

The loss of a partner often has severe negative financial consequences, especially for women. So many single mothers —and fathers —struggle to make ends meet or have jobs that don ' t allow them the time they need to care for their children. I had financial security, the ability to take the time off I needed, and a job that I did not just believe in, but where it 'asctually OK to spend all day on Facebook. Gradually, my children started sleeping through the night, crying less, playing more.

The third P is permanence —the belief that the sorrow will last forever. For months, no matter what I did, it felt like the crushing grief would always be there.

We often project our current feelings out indefinitely —and experience what I think of as

the second derivative of those feelings. We feel anxious —and then we feel anxious that we're anxious. We feel sad —and then we feel sad that wsaed. Inste'adr,ewe should accept

our feelings —but recognize that they will not last forever. My rabbi told me that time would heal but for now I should “ lean in to the suck. ” It was good advice, but not really

what I meant by “ lean in. ”

None of you need me t o explain the fourth P …which is, of course, pizza from Cheese Board.

But I wish I had known about the three P 's when I was your age. There were so many times these lessons would have helped.

Day one of my first job out of college, my boss found out that I didn 't know how to enter data into Lotus 1-2- 3. That 's a spreadsheeatsk y—our parents. His mouth dropped open and he said, ‘I can 't believe you got this job without knowing thaatnd then walked”ou—t of the

room. I went home convinced that I was going to be fired. I thought I was terrible at everything …but it turns out I was only terrible at spreadsheets. Understanding pervasiveness would have saved me a lot of anxiety that week.

I wish I had known about permanence when I broke up with boyfriends. It would ve been a ' comfort to know that feeling was not going to last forever, and if I was being honest with myself … neither were any of those relationships.

And I wish I had understood personalization when boyfriends broke up with me. Sometimes it 's not youit re—ally is them. I mean, that dude never showered.

And all three P 's ganged up on me in my twenties after my first marriage ended in divorce. I

thought at the time that no matter what I accomplished, I was a massive failure.

The three P 's are common emotionraelactions to so many things that happen to us —in our careers, our personal lives, and our relationships. You 're probably feeling one of them righ now about something in your life. But if you can recognize you are falling into these traps, you can catch yourself. Just as our bodies have a physiological immune system, our brains have a psychological immune system —and there are steps you can take to help kick it into

gear.

One day my friend Adam Grant, a psychologist, suggested that I think about how much worse things could be. This was completely counterintuitive; it seemed like the way to recover was to try to find positive thoughts. “Worse?”I said. “Areyou kidding me? How could things be worse?”His answer cut straight through me: “Davecould have had that same cardiac arrhythmia while he was driving your children. ” Wow. The moment he said it,

I was overwhelmingly grateful that the rest of my family was alive and healthy. That gratitude overtook some of the grief.

Finding gratitude and appreciation is key to resilience. People who take the time to list things they are grateful for are happier and healthier. It turns out that counting your blessings can actually increase your blessings. My New Year 's resolution this year is to writ down three moments of joy before I go to bed each night. This simple practice has changed my life. Because no matter what happens each day, I go to sleep thinking of something cheerful. Try it. Start tonight when you have so many fun moments to list—although maybe do it before y ou hit Kip 's and can still remember what they are.

Last month, eleven days before the anniversary of Dave 's death, I broke down crying to a friend of mine. We were sitting —of all places —on a bathroom floor. I said: “Eleven days. One year ago, he had eleven days left. And we had no idea. ”We looked at each other through tears, and asked how we would live if we knew we had eleven days left.

As you graduate, can you ask yourselves to live as if you had eleven days left? I don blow everything off and party all the time —although tonight is an exception. I mean live with the understanding of how precious every single day would be. How precious every day actually is.

A few years ago, my mom had to have her hip replaced. When she was younger, she always walked without pain. But as her hip disintegrated, each step became painful. Now, even years after her operation, she is grateful for every step she takes without pain —something that never would have occurred to her before.

As I stand here today, a year after the worst day of my life, two things are true. I have a huge reservoir of sadness that is with me always —right here where I can touch it. I never knew I could cry so often —or so much.

But I am also aware that I am walking without pain. For the first time, I am grateful for each

breath in and out — grateful for the gift of life itself. I used to celebrate my every five years and friends ' birthdays sometimes. Now I celebrate always. I used to go to sleep worrying about all the things I messed up that day — and trust me that list was often quite long. Now I try really hard to focus on each day ' s moments of joy.

It is the greatest irony of my life that losing my husban d helped me find deeper gratitude — gratitude for the kindness of my friends, the love of my family, the laughter of my children. My hope for you is that you can find that gratitude — not just on the good days, like today, but on the hard ones, when you will really need it.

There are so many moments of joy ahead of you. That trip you always wanted to take. A first kiss with

someone youreally like. The day you get a job doing something you truly believe in. Beating Stanford. (Go Bears!) All of these things will happen to you. Enjoy each and every one.

I hope that you live your life — each precious day of it —with joy and meaning. I hope that you walk without pain — and that you are grateful for each step.

And when the challenges come, I hope you remember that anchored deep within you is the ability to learn and grow. You are not born with a fixed amount of resilience. Like a muscle, you can build it up, draw on it when you need it. In that process you will figure out who you really are — and you just might become the very best version of yourself.

Class of 2016, as you leave Berkeley, build resilience.

Build resilience in yourselves. When tragedy or disappointment strike, know that you have the ability to get through absolutely anything. I promise you do. As the saying goes, we are more vulnerable than we ever thought, but we are stronger than we ever imagined.

Build resilient organizations. If anyone can do it, you can, because Berkeley is filled with

people who want to make the world a better place. Never stop working to do so —whether

it ' s a boardroom that is not representative or a campus that at institutions like this one, which you hold so dear. My favorite poster at

work reads, “ Nothing at Facebook is someone else ' s problem. ” When you see something that go fix it.

Build resilient communities. We find our humanity — our will to live and our ability to love —in our

connections to one another. Be there for your family and friends. And I mean in person. Not just in a

message with a heart emoji.

Lift each other up, help each other kick the shit out of option B —and celebrate each and

every moment of joy.

You have the whole world in front of you. I can ' t wait to see what you do with it. Congratulations, and Go Bears!

桑德伯格在加州大学伯克利分校 2016毕业典礼上的演讲 谢谢玛丽。谢谢尊敬的老师们、

光荣的父母、忠诚的朋友,兄弟姐妹们。

祝贺所有人??…尤其是伯克利2016的毕业生们! 在伯克利求学是一件幸事,这里出过众多的诺贝尔奖得主、图灵奖获得者、宇航员、国会 议员和奥运会金牌得主??…而且都有女性!

伯克利从来走在时代前列。 上世纪 60 年代,你们的前辈们倡导了言论自由运动。当时还有 人说,如果男女都留长发要怎么分辨呢现在早就有答案了:男生可以梳发髻。

其实在那之前伯克利就已兼容并包。 伯克利 1873年建校,第一届学生中有 167名男生,222 名女生。我的母校(哈佛大学 ——译者注)过了 90年后才向女性颁发第一个学位。 曾经有一位女性来到这里求学,她的名字是罗莎琳德 ?努斯?罗姿。罗姿在纽约布鲁克林一 处公寓里长

大,靠擦地为生。高中时,她的父母让她辍学养家,幸好被一位老师及时劝服 才能继续上学。 1937 年,她e 'aksunpo, te s apf e c.iaSlply s bro

英文毕业典礼演讲稿

英文毕业典礼演讲稿 Sheryl Sandberg told a graduating class of Tsinghua University that great leaders want 'genuine enthusiasm', something she said her late husband, Dave Goldberg, always had. 雪莉·桑德伯格鼓励清华大学毕业学子说,伟大的领袖需要“真正的激情”,而这一点她和她已故先生戴夫·哥德伯格(Dave Goldberg)一直怀有。 'No one won more hearts than my beloved husband Dave- He raised the performance of everyone around him,' she said during a commencement speech on Saturday in Beijing. 'He did it as CEO of SurveyMonkey, a great company he helped build, and he did it for me and our children.' 雪莉·桑德伯格周六在北京发表的毕业演讲中说道,“没有人能像我挚爱的丈夫戴夫·哥德伯格那样赢得那么多人的心,他让身边的人表现更为出色,他在调查猴子(SurveyMonkey,美国一家网络调查公司)担任首席执行官时就是如此。这是他帮助建立起来的一个极为出色的公司。同时他也让我和我们的孩子成为更好的人。”

在学校毕业典礼上的讲话-毕业典礼发言稿

在学校毕业典礼上的讲话-毕业典礼发言稿 同学们、老师们:今天,我们怀着无比喜悦的心情,在这里隆重举行xx中学xx届学生毕业典礼,我代表学校党支部、校务委员会、全体教职员工,向xx届的122名同学表示热烈祝贺!向辛勤耕耘的班主任、任课教师和工作人员表示感谢。此时此刻,我想每位同学心里都会有快乐和悲伤两种感觉。一方面为自己即将要面对的崭新生活而高兴,另一方面又为我们这个集体的解散而悲伤。我们今天的毕业典礼既代表着我们三年初中生活或高中生活的结束,又标志着每位同学的一段新的人生经历的开始。xx届的同学们,你们有着出色的智慧,但你们更注重锤炼自己坚忍不拔的意志;你们渴望优异的成绩,但你们知道更重要的是培养自我成长的能力;你们有着自身优秀的个体素质,但你们追求的境界始终是互相搀扶着前进;你们追求着自己的每一点进步,你们也不断将自我与集体、国家的责任连在一起;你们踏踏实实过着生活的每一天,但你们心中都有着渴望伟大,追求超越的信念。三年的初中或高中生活会给我们带来了什么呢?我想除了知识和能力以外,它给我们带来的最宝贵的就是一个个美好的回忆。我虽不能叫上在座的每位同学的姓名,但我一见到你们熟悉的身影就知道你是我们化隆县xx中学的一名学生。在我写这篇发言稿时,又回忆起了一幅幅精彩的画面:有同学们晨读时在操场各个部位专心致志的情景;有运动场上一些同学矫健的身影和夺冠时人人脸上的笑容;有首届艺术周上同学们美妙动听的歌声,优美的舞姿以及每个演员十二分投入

的表演;更有同学们考场上哪皱眉凝思的表情,当然也有你们贪玩、好动、有时有不遵守纪律的场面这些画面是三年的初中或高中生活送给我们最珍贵的礼物。当然还有更多的回忆留在了我们每个人的心里,并化为一股情意,一份友谊。我认为我们这个集体还是比较棒的集体,每位同学都能从中学到很多,获得很多。在感谢我们的老师,我们的学校,我希望在座的每位同学也同样要感谢我们这个集体。没有它也就没有我们丰富多彩的初中或高中生活。今天坐在台上的是教过我们的老师们。其实我们平时也许没有注意到我们教师的伟大,因为我们把老师为我们所做的一切都看成是理所当然的。三年或六年的朝夕相外,使同学们与老师之间产生了一股浓浓的师生情,在老师给予我们知识和能力,教给我们人生哲学的同时,也把他们一颗颗无私的给我们带来无微不至的关怀的爱心献给了我们,而我想他们最想得到的回报仅仅是大家从心底喊出的一声谢谢老师,以及当我们每个同学的人生到达最辉煌的时刻时,能自豪地说:那是我教的学生!而我们应该从现在就开始准备我们的这份礼品,我祝愿,我也相信同学们能在6月18、19、20日和6月7、8、9的中高考中取得好成绩,在今后的学习和事业中创出辉煌业绩。记忆是美好的,但我们不能只沉浸于对回忆的依恋。有缘千里来相会,我们在座的各位都是有缘的。珍惜这份缘分吧,因为过了今天,xx届初高中年级就将成为我校的历史。天下没有不散的筵席。我们这个集体不但有辉煌的过去,更应有充满希望的未来。我相信再次相聚的时候,我们将看到的是一张张精英的笑脸。就在同学们即将完成学习任务,结束高中生活,离

九年级毕业典礼老师精彩演讲稿

九年级毕业典礼老师精彩演讲稿 尊敬的领导、老师们,亲爱的同学们: 大家好! 回想三年前的金秋时节,当时新来的同学来到这个礼堂来参加开学典礼,从此开启了三年初中生活的历程。时光如水,今天,在这个美好的夏日我们又迎来了毕业典礼这一隆重的瞬间。在此,我有幸代表学校全体教师,向圆满完成初中学业、即将步入人生新航程的各位同学,表示衷心的祝愿!向关心、呵护九年级师生的学校领导、老师致以诚挚的谢意! 三年之间,我们一起见证了同学们从懵懂走向成熟。三年之间,我们朝夕相伴,一起走过春夏,走过秋冬。三年之间,我们有过苦,有过乐,一起面对过艰难坎坷。三年之间,同学给老师们留下了深刻的印象,你们给母校增添了靓丽的色彩。 你们是一群有情有意的孩子。还记得每年的教师节,你们用优美的歌声、甜美的笑容、真诚的话语送给我们最真挚的祝愿;还记得每到元旦、新年,你们用精心制作的贺卡、饱含真情的短信表达对老师的理解和感恩;还记得你们的随笔作文,字里行间汩汩流淌的是脉脉的亲情、友情、师生情;还记得你们曾在伤心难过时趴在老师肩头哭泣,记得你们曾在欣喜若狂时与老师击掌庆贺,记得你们曾在老师病痛时亲切探问殷切祝福,记得你们一声一声动情地喊“妈妈”,争着抢着做老师的孩子……我相信:有情有意的人最能赢得别人的信赖。 你们是一群有朝气、有激情的孩子。你们曾在课堂上积极思考、小组合作探究、踊跃回答问题;你们曾为一个难题冥思苦想、彼此争论得面红耳赤;你们曾在课本剧、历史剧的展演中头角初绽,令人惊艳;你们曾在“我行我秀”的舞台上展示自己婉转的歌喉、优美的舞步、强劲的剑道;你们曾在运动场上挥洒自己的汗水,赢得一场场拔河、篮球、跳高、跑步、跳绳比赛的成功;你们曾在颜色日、义卖会、校会上展现自己的才情,奉献自己的力量……我相信:有朝气、有激情的人最能爆发自己的潜能。 你们是一群勇于面对自我、乐于成长的孩子。也许你们曾厌烦过老师的唠叨、埋怨过老师的严厉、反感过老师的批评,但是,你们还是理解了老师“恨铁不成钢”的心情,你们

哈佛大学毕业典礼演讲稿——人生唯一目标是做自己

哈佛大学毕业典礼演讲稿——人生唯一目标是做自己奥普拉·温弗瑞:美国著名脱口秀主持人、媒体企业家。 奥普拉在哈佛大学2013届毕业典礼的演讲——人生唯一目标是做自己 我要分享的想法是:无论你有多么成功,也许你们会不断追求更高的目标,这就难免会遇到失意之时。我希望届时各位可以记住:世上并不存在失败,那不过是生活试图将我们推向另一个方向罢了。 当你身处困境时,看起来是一种失败。在过去的一年中,我时刻提醒自己牢记这一点。当深陷困境时,感到难过是正常的,给自己一点时间去思考即将失去的一切。关键在于:要从错误中汲取教训,因为所有经验,尤其是你犯下的错误,都将帮助你、推动你更好地做自己,确定下一步何去何从。生活的关键在于建立起一个内在的道德情感导航仪,为你指明方向。因为从今以后,当你用谷歌搜索自己的时候,搜索结果中会提到:“哈佛大学2013毕业生”。在这个充满竞争的世界,这的确是一张抢眼的名片。 我曾招聘过很多人,而每当我看到哈佛大学这个字眼时,我总是会坐直一些说:“他 们在哪?把他们统统带过来。”正是这张抢眼的名片可以成就你们的未来之路。你们可能成 为律师、议员、首席执行官、科学家、物理学家、诺贝尔奖及普利策奖得主,甚至深夜脱口秀节目主持人。但生活的挑战在于创建一份不仅陈述所期望的职位的履历,而且上面要明确成就怎样的自我。这份履历不仅需要表达你想成就一番怎样的事业,也要明确动机,除了头衔与职位,也要有达成目标的缘由。你的使命是什么?你的信仰是什么?你的目标是 什么?只有这样,当你不慎跌倒发现自深陷困境之时,才能帮助你重振旗鼓。 我是在1994年才认识到这一点的。那年我采访了一位凭一己之力积攒了1000美元 零花钱的小女孩,她将这钱捐出来帮助有需要的人。这个九岁大的小女孩促使我思考,仅凭一个存钱罐与雄心壮志就能做到这样,那我可以做些什么呢?于是我号召我的观众们捐 出他们的零钱,在一个月内,仅仅是一枚枚零钱硬币就募到了300万美金。我们用这笔 钱资助每个州的一位学子进入大学的殿堂。我所做的仅仅是号召我的观众,“尽己所能, 无论地域与地位,如果可能,请贡献出你们的时间、智慧与财力。无论你在哪里,请为他人送去自己的仁爱之心。”观众也用行动表明了一切。我们在12个不同的城镇建起了55 所学校,修缮了300栋被“丽塔”飓风和“卡特里娜”飓风摧毁的民宅。 创办“天使网络”的想法在我心中萦绕已久,也正是“天使网络”让我确定了心中的那个 导航仪。我决定不再单一地制作电视节目,还要关注节目的终极理念、采访对象、行业发展和慈善事业等等。无论我们追求什么,将我们团结在一起的信念胜过其他一切。作为一个19岁就出现在电视节目中的孩子,起初我并不明白这个道理,直到1994年才有所醒

大学校长在毕业典礼上的讲话稿

大学校长在毕业典礼上的讲话稿

大学校长在毕业典礼上的讲话稿 演讲稿像议论文一样论点鲜明、逻辑性强,但它又不是一般的议论文。它是一种带有宣传性和鼓动性的应用文体,经常使用各种修辞手法和艺术手法,具有较强的感染力。以下文章由XX心得体会精心为您提供,欢迎大家参考。 同学们,你们好! 我想先擦去眼角的一些泪花,否则我恐怕看不清楚我的稿子。 4年以前,你们来到复旦,和所有的复旦人一起享受复旦的百年庆典。那时候,你们作为最年轻的复旦人,积极忙碌在校庆的各项活动中。和以往历届的学生相比,甚至是和以后若干年的各届学生相比,你们在复旦的生涯有着一个不同凡响的开端。 4年以前,同样在这个体育馆,我们举行开学典礼。4年以后,你们中的大部分人将离开复旦,或者说暂时离开。你们是我就任校长以来送走的第一批毕业生,我既为你们感到高兴,内心也充满了遗憾。这半年来,除了一次面向学生的公开演讲外,单独和毕业生的交流只有两次,一次是“我为母校献‘金点子’”座谈会,一次和去国外的毕业生代表的交流。我希望和大家的交流能够更多些,更深入些,更广泛些,也更生动随意些。

XX 如果有更多的时间,我最想和大家交流的是有关通识教育的话题。4年前你们来到复旦,我们一起见证了复旦学院的成立。根据我们对人才培养的理解,我们希望通过建立书院的制度,鼓励有不同兴趣、专长、天赋及学科背景、不同地区,甚至不同国家的学生朝夕相处,促进多元文化融合。同时透过复旦学院这一平台,我们不断完善通识教育体系,其目的是希望复旦的学生能够了解不同知识的统一和差别,了解不同学科的智慧境界和思考方式,养成独立思考的习惯,养成完整的人格。 4年后我们来评价第一届复旦学院的学生和以往的学生有什么不同。他们告诉我,至少有两点值得肯定。首先是你们有更多的朋友,除了本专业的同学外,许多同学和第一年在复旦学院认识的同学结下了深厚的友谊,这是一笔不小的人生财富。前两天我去看毕业墙,我看到上面除了在醒目的地方写着“天黑请闭眼”之外,许多学生都在自己的名字后面注上自己在复旦学院时班级的名字。第二,你们自我意识较强,个性独立而张扬,对自己感兴趣的事物充满热情,并积极投身其中,为其付出不懈的努力,并且取得了不俗的成绩,组织能力也很强。只是也很难听取辅导员和老师的批评意见。 XX

2021年毕业典礼老师经典英语演讲稿范文五篇

毕业典礼老师经典英语演讲稿范文五篇 演讲是说话技巧和人格魅力的展示,以下是给大家带来 ___演讲的毕业典礼老师经典英语五篇,欢迎大家参考借鉴! I am for the robust and free exchange of ideas, as essential to the mission of a great university as it is to the health of our democracy. I am for a world where we wele the immigrant, the poor, and the forgotten; we did [do] not shut them out or silen ___ them; a world where showing empathy and understanding is considered the true hall ___rk of suess, of a life well-lived. That is what I am for. Yale’s mission says, in part, that we are “mitted to improving the world today and for future generations.”That mitment does not end at graduation.

Soon you will leave Yale and, as Robert Penn Warren, who stu ___d and taught at Yale, wrote, “You will go into the convulsion of the world, out of history and into history.” Indeed, you’ll go into history and ___ke history. Looking around me today, I think of the generations of Yale graduates who have e before you. Individuals who have been for something. There are ___ny names we know and others that would be less familiar – presidents and world leaders, artists and business executives, scholars and scientists. Like them, I know you will heed the call to leadership and servi ___ and leave your ___rk on every realm of hu ___n endeavor. That is Yale’s mission – that is what Yale is for. As members of the Yale munity, what do we believe?

南京女生美国波士顿大学毕业典礼演讲全文【中英文对照】

南京女生美国波士顿大学毕业典礼演讲全 文【中英文对照】 Greetings! Friends, family, faculty and staff. Welcome to Boston University on such a beautiful Friday night. 问候!朋友,家人,教职员工。欢迎大家在这样一个美丽的星期五晚上来到波士顿大学。 My name is Yujing Cai, and I am a graduate from the Master of Mathematical Finance program. I come from Nanjing, China, one of the oldest cities in the world. Right now, my family is sitting somewhere over there. They travelled, literally across half of the world to see their baby girl graduate and talk in a language they don’t understand. Therefore, I am tremendously honored to share my perspective of 6 years at the Questrom School of Business. 我的名字是蔡语婧,我硕士毕业于数学金融专业。我来自中国南京,世界上最古老的城市之一。现在,我的家人坐在那里。他们旅行跨越了半个地球来看他们的宝贝女儿毕业,并用他们不明白的语言演讲。因此,我非常荣幸能够在此分享我在Questrom商学院六年的感悟。 One of the things I always enjoyed doing while waiting for classes was looking at the different country flags in our atrium.Sometimes my friends and I even have silly competitions going on to see who knew more flags, and it often amazed me how many different cultures and

在毕业典礼上的讲话稿毕业致词(精选多篇)

在毕业典礼上的讲话稿毕业致词(精选多篇) 第一篇:毕业发言:毕业典礼上的致词 内容来自冀教 :// 尊敬的领导、来宾、老师们亲爱的同学们: 下午! “更能销几番风雨匆匆春又归去。”(辛弃疾《摸鱼儿》)真是“弹指一挥间”的工夫同学们竟然要毕业了此时此刻我们大家肯定是自有一番滋味在心头的。 现在的你们女孩个个贤静大方男孩个个活泼轩昂这么快你们就长大了要上高中了。你们还记得三年前自己刚进中学时的模样吗?这里该有多少值得回忆的事情啊! 那时的你们大部分由家长牵手而来个子都那么一丁点女孩怯如小猫缩在一隅东张西望男孩则飞如小鸟满屋欢笑没有一分钟的安静。那时的你们充满了童真满眼都是对中学生活的向往?? 最初接触今天毕业的同学们是在军训的操场上。八月的北京骄阳似火可是初一年级的全体新生却在似火的骄阳下迈正步练军姿走队型。站军姿时一站至少半个小时。大滴大滴的汗珠顺着同学们稚嫩的脸颊滚过湿了衣襟湿了裤管湿了地面留下操场上汗水塑造的无数双湿湿的脚印。可是同学们却一脸执着个个坚毅。没有一个人临阵退缩个个都在咬牙坚持。作为副班主任我有幸近距离凝视着思索过同学们那一双双坚毅的目光从那一双双坚

毅的眼神里我读懂了:这是一群特殊的学生这是一群铁打的少年。没有他们克服不了的困难没有他们想做而作不成的事情。军训让你们初尝“天将降大任于是人也必先苦其心志劳其筋骨饿其体肤空乏其身”的滋味。那一刻欢笑、汗水、眼泪与收获一样的多。 军训后常规的教学科研学习工作是紧张疲惫的多少次面对千头万绪的开始我感觉自己没有力量了我要跨掉了想逃避想妥协。每当这时同学们军训场上你们的飒爽英姿你们刚毅的目光你们脸上挂着的滴滴汗珠仿佛在鞭策着我每当这时一股无形的力量就会涌入我的心中使我多了战胜困难克服挫折的信心力量和动力。我要说亲爱的同学们是你们超龄的坚定和刚毅教会了一名教师什么叫执着什么叫刚强。 我们的校园生活丰富多彩。“爱国诗歌朗诵会”、“《十四岁的宣言》演讲”、“《身边的真理》系列辩论赛”、“科技英语”、“建筑模型”、“金鹏科技论”的等等各种名目的竞赛和五花八门的考试让你们有过多少欢娱和失落使你们深深感到学习的路上有多少山重水复又有多少柳暗花明你们在学海中遨游成长。你们拿的那些大奖曾经吸引了多少学弟学妹的目光他们把你们作为自己学习的榜样。 化节、英语节、运动会??任何一位同学都能在这样的节日里挥洒亮相让如鲜花般的青春斑斓怒放那轻歌曼舞那如泣如诉的琴声那矫健的身姿那飞滚在操场的精灵那在奇思妙想下创造的作品

高中毕业典礼演讲稿(6篇)

高中毕业典礼演讲稿(6篇) 高中毕业典礼演讲稿(6篇) 高中三年的岁月已逝,不经意间迎来了毕业季,以及那个难忘的毕业典礼。下面是小编搜集整理的高中毕业典礼演讲稿,欢迎阅读。更多资讯请继续关注毕业典礼栏目! 高中毕业典礼演讲稿 尊敬的各位校领导、各位老师、同学们: 大家好!首先,今天非常荣幸由我代表2016届全体高三毕业生发表我们的毕业感言。 今天的毕业不仅是对昨天的总结,更是对明天的呼唤。 有人说:没有开始,就没有结束。我们,三年前在这里开始,三年后又在这里结束。三年的光阴,多少人在生命中来回穿梭,却只留下背影?我们经过了彼此相遇,又经过了彼此分离,这期间,我们是否抓住了一些、又放弃了一些?摊开手掌,我们还剩下些什么? 第二是希望同学们在人生的道路上不断地追求和奋斗。世界上没有比人更高的山峰!爱拼才会赢。不要用“平平淡淡总是真”这样的话来冲淡自己的奋斗信念,这种所谓的“平淡”、“平凡”,说到底,不过是平庸的代名词。在学习和事业上,需要你们有不断进取的精神。 高三的同学们,高考后,你们将各奔前程,这是你们一个新的起点。不管将来去往何处,你们都要相信“三百六十行,行行出状元”, 只要你们用心。

三年前的我们,也许没有预见今天的分别。但是如今,分别就在眼前。你是否也渴望时间被上锁,好让今天过慢一点呢?我们真的努力想将所有的一切烙印在心底,让这些成为尘封于心底最美好的记忆。 三年的岁月已逝,1095个日日夜夜就这样从指间溜走,听起来似乎是那么的漫长,却过得那么快。我们还没有好好品味这三年身边的幸福感,就要面对别离。在我们的生命中,又会有几个这样美好又充实的三年呢? 在这三年中,我们既收获了知识,又收获了友情。那些在你落寞时陪在你左右的,是朋友;那些在你迷惘时给你信心的,是朋友;那些在你懈怠时给你动力的,是朋友;那些在你难过时对你微笑的,依旧是朋友。我们一起成长,牵手面对困难,我们一起走过春夏秋冬,一起品味三年的酸甜苦辣,一起咬紧牙关决不放弃。即使再难,也不离不弃! 随着时间的不断推移,我们逐渐褪去了身上的青涩味道,取而代之的是成熟与责任。经历了高考的洗礼,我们从一个孩子过渡到一个青年人,从幼稚渐渐走向成熟,这当然不只是称呼上的变化,更多的是心理上的升华,我们明白自己需要承担更多的责任,也真正明白了,生活其实没有想象中的那么简单。 我们在未来的这条路上也许会非常辛苦,可是“只有含泪播种,才能微笑收获”,当成功的你回首今天所付出的这一切时,就会发现 这一切都是值得的。人生就像是装满巧克力的盒子,你永远也不会知道接下来会吃到什么味道。可是不要因此胆怯,人总要尝试些什么。有些路,注定要一个人走完,但是不要忽略那些陪在你身边,最真挚的感情,如果现在你最珍惜的人在身边,请握紧她的手。给她感动。 生命中,是不断有人离开或进入的。于是,看见的看不见了;记住的遗忘了。生命中,也是不断有得到和失去的。于是,看不见的看见了;遗忘的记住了。回忆

美国大学十佳毕业典礼演讲精选(中英文对照)

Top 10 Commencement Speeches Quotes in American Universities 美国大学十佳毕业典礼演讲精选 阅读难度☆☆☆ 每年的五六月,是美国大学举行毕业典礼的季节。按照惯例,各界名流都会受邀到各大名校去作激动人心的演讲。本文精选了近年来美国最有影响力的十佳毕业典礼演讲,与已经或即将毕业的读者朋友们共勉。 1. Steve Jobs 史蒂芬·乔布斯 CEO of Apple Computers 苹果电脑CEO Stanford University 斯坦福大学 June 12, 2005 2005年6月12日 Remembering that you are going to die is the best way I know to avoid the trap of thinking you have something to lose. Y ou are already naked. There is no reason not to follow your heart. Y our time is limited, so don't waste it living someone else's life. Don't be trapped by dogma — which is living with the results of other people's thinking. Don't let the noise of others' opinions drown out your own inner voice. And most important, have the courage to follow your heart and intuition. They somehow already know what you truly want to become. Everything else is secondary. 记着你总会死去,这是我知道的防止患得患失的最佳办法。赤条条来去无牵挂,还有什么理由不随你的心?! 你的时间是有限的,因此不要把时间浪费在过别人的生活上。不要被教条所困——使自己的生活受限于他人的思想成果。不要让他人的意见淹没了你自己内心的声音。最重要的是,要有勇气跟随你的内心与直觉,它们好歹已经知道你真正想让自己成为什么。其他的,都是次要的。 2. David Foster Wallace 大卫·福斯特·华莱士 Novelist 小说家 Kenyon College 肯尼恩学院 May 21, 2005 2005年5月21日 There are these two young fish swimming along and they happen to meet an older fish swimming the other way, who nods at them and says, “Morning, boys. How's the water?” And the two young fish swim on for a bit, and then eventually one of t hem looks over at the other and goes, “What the hell is water?” ... simple awareness; awareness of what is so real and essential, so hidden in plain sight all around us, all the time, that we have to keep reminding ourselves over and over: “This is water.” “This is water.” It is unimaginably hard to do this, to stay conscious and alive in the adult world day in and day out. 有两条小鱼一起在水里游,碰到一条老鱼迎面游过来。老鱼向他们点点头,并说:“早上好,孩子们。水怎么样?”这两条小鱼继续往前游了一会儿后,其中一条小鱼实在忍不住了,看了一下另一条小鱼,问道:“水到底是什么东西?”

毕业生代表在大学毕业典礼上发言稿

毕业生代表在大学毕业典礼上发言稿 Speech by the representative of graduates at the university gra duation ceremony 演讲人:JinTai College

毕业生代表在大学毕业典礼上发言稿 前言:发言稿是参加会议者为了在会议或重要活动上表达自己意见、看法或汇报思 想工作情况而事先准备好的文稿。按照用途、性质来划分,是演讲上一个重要的准 备工作。本文档根据会议演讲稿的要求展开说明,具有实践指导意义,便于学习和 使用,本文档下载后内容可按需编辑修改及打印。 尊敬的各位领导、各位老师,亲爱的同学们: 大家下午好! 今天是我们大学阶段的最后一次团聚,是我们向母校挥 手告别的日子,也是我们各奔东西,或进一步深造或走上工作岗位,开启我们人生新征程的日子。在这个即将别离的时刻,能代表中文系20**届全体毕业生在此发言,我感到非常荣幸。首先,请允许我代表全体毕业生向辛勤培养了我们的各位领导、老师们表示最衷心的感谢,并致以最崇高的敬意! 几年前,我们拎着简单的行李,怀揣着同样的梦想,从 全国各地相约在了xx学院。从此,我们便成了一家人,组成 了一个团结、和谐的大家庭。从进入大学的那天起,这里便成了我们人生路上的第一个驿站;在老师们的引领下,我们一起欢笑,一起打拼,一起见证了xx学院发展的一点一滴,也为 我们的人生书写了浓墨重彩的一笔。

然而,弹指一挥间,大学时光已经悄然结束了,我们又 将背起行囊,开赴新的征程。有人说,大学是一个大熔炉,煅烧出了我们每个人与众不同的精彩人生。其实,虽然我们的母校不能跟一流的大学相提并论,但它同样给了我们一个奋斗的驿站,一个公平的展示自我、锻炼自我的舞台,而我们正是这个平台上自由的舞者;虽然我们的老师们可能不是最优秀的,但是,他们恪尽职守、尽职尽责,尽着自己最大的努力培养教育了我们。在老师们孜孜不倦的教诲下,我们掌握了丰富的专业知识,锻炼了适应社会的能力,给了我们奋飞的翅膀。几年来,我们由当初的天真烂漫、懵懂无知,到今天成熟稳重、壮志满怀,因此,我们成长了。成长了,这便是我们在母校最大的收获。 几年来,同学们之间结下了最纯真的友谊。有过争吵, 有过欢笑,更有推心置腹的彻夜卧谈。过去,几乎每个人都说:“这时间过得好慢啊,怎么还不毕业啊?”那是因为我们总觉得毕业还遥遥无期;但是今天我们又说:没想到这么快就要走了……此刻,多了一丝伤感,那是因为我们方才明白了,“毕业”这两个字的分量和沉重。其实这一天终究会来的,只是我们欠缺了一点准备。几年间,我们有过收获的喜悦,也有失落的痛苦,但每个人在前进的道路上难免都会留下或多或少的遗

在毕业典礼上的讲话稿

在毕业典礼上的讲话稿 各位老师们、同学们:今天,我们欢聚一堂,在这里隆重举行****级法学本科毕业生毕业典礼及毕业证书授予仪式。这是一个非同寻常、令人难以忘怀的重大节日。在此,我谨代表焦作广播电视大学向全体毕业生表示热烈的祝贺!祝贺你们圆满地完成了学业,掌握了现代科学知识;祝贺你们修满了法学本科专业所需的学分,顺利地拿到了本科毕业证书;同时也祝贺你们圆了自己的上大学本科的梦想。这是你们人生历程的一次重大飞跃,我们为你们能够顺利实现这一次飞跃而感到由衷的骄傲。学员们,三年前,你们满怀希望和憧憬,从全市各单位来到焦作广播电视大学,成为了我校开放教育本科法学专业的首批学员。作为首批法学本科学员。可以说,能否把你们培养成为高素质的合格人才,直接关系到学校开放教育的成功与否。你们的学习和生活,始终牵动着学校每一位领导、每一位老师的心。三年来,学校始终按照以服务为本,学员第一的理念,积极为大家提供良好的教学支持服务。法理辨析室、多媒体教室的建立,多种媒体教材的提供,高水平专业教师的聘请,网络资源的不断更新,计算机基本技能的培训等。特别是前一段非典疫病流行时期,学校领导及时提出了一手抓非典预防,一手抓教与

学模式调整、一手抓非典预防,一手抓教学质量的指导思想,转变教与学模式,通过网络课堂。E--mail、BBS讨论、电话、有线电视等方式实现教学,以弥补面授教学的不足。这一切都是学校针对开放教育本科专业的特点,提供的力所能及的服务。学员们,三年来,你们克服种种困难,较好地处理了工学矛盾,做到了学习工作两不误;三年来,你们刻苦学习,孜孜不倦,掌握了较高的法学知识;三年来,你们从陌生到相识,从相识到熟悉,最终成为朋友,这不能不说是电大给你们提供了认识机会,不能不说是每学期的学员联欢会使你们成为朋友的结果;三年来,你们刻苦钻研,不懈努力,掌握了较高的计算机技能,目前有的同志以成为自己单位的计算机高手。这些都是令我们极其欣慰的。希望大家都能学以致用,成为各自工作岗位上的优秀工作者。当前,随着中央广播电视大学人才培养模式改革和开放教育试点项目的推进,越来越多的人进入开放教育课堂学习,这样如何确保教学质量,如何进行学员管理等问题就摆在了我们面前。学校将以你们首届法学本科毕业生为契机,找出不足,发现问题,积极探索和改进开放教育教与学的手段和方法。争取使我校的开放教育水平再上一个新台阶。请学员们经常与学校保持联系,当你们事业有成的时候,不要忘了向母校报喜,当你们遇到困难和挫折时,母校会给予你们最大的帮助

2020大四毕业典礼演讲稿5篇

2020大四毕业典礼演讲稿5篇 【导语】演讲又叫讲演或演说,是指在公众场所,以有声语言为主要手段,以体态语言为辅助手段,针对某个具体问题,鲜明,完整地发表自己的见解和主张。本篇文章是为您整理的2020大四毕业典礼演讲稿5篇,供大家阅读与鉴赏! 【篇一】2020大四毕业典礼演讲稿 尊敬的各位老师、亲爱的同学们: 大家下午好! 今天我非常荣幸能够在这个特别的时刻,代表xx护理学院年级全体学生在此发言,向的母校道别,向的师长们道别,向朝夕相处的同窗们道别,也向这段不能忘怀的青葱岁月道别! 四年的大学时光已如白驹过隙,转瞬即逝。作为学子,我们已从一个渴求知识的新生,成长为一名略有所成的毕业生,生活、学习中的点点滴滴无不凝聚了各位老师的心血。是你们教给了我们科学的知识和严谨的态度; 是你们让我们体会到了成功的喜悦; 也是你们教给了我们做人的道理。今天我们之所以能满怀自信的站在

这里,要感谢我们的母校,感谢护理学院的全体老师,感谢你们用青春和汗水缔造了我们今天的成绩。 有人说,丰富多彩的大学校园就像是一个熔炉,煅烧出每个人与众不同的精彩人生。我们经历了大一的纯真年代,走过了大二的轻舞飞扬,告别了大三的紧张与忙碌,来到今天大四的依依别离。时光荏苒,岁月如梭,四年的大学生活就这样即将离我们远去。依然记得大一刚入学时的情景,那时的我们青涩而又懵懂,刚刚经历完高考的洗礼,满怀着对大学生活的憧憬与向往踏进了启秀校区的大门。一晃眼,那熟悉的一幕幕已然留在了四年前。这四年的来路,走得辛苦而又快乐,四年的生活,过得充实而美丽,今天来看,竟然象昨天的事情。四年的岁月,1460个日日夜夜,听起来似乎是那么的漫长,而当今天面对离别,又觉得它是那么的短暂。四年的时光,弹指一挥间,但很多记忆将成为生命中最为珍贵的收藏:还清晰记得第一次站在军训操场上的那个瞬间,带着未脱的稚气和对大学未来生活的无限幢憬,我们开启了通向丰富多彩大学生活的大门。转眼间,时光的年轮匆匆转过,我们的回忆中多了足够一辈子品味的东西。和我们一起成长的启秀校区,美丽的濠河,鸟语花香树下的长凳都曾留下了我们的晨读的背影; 精密的实验仪器、条件优越的实验室里,曾留下了我们对科学的向往,运动场上留下了我们拼搏的身影……那铭刻了我们共同经历的日子,让我们受到了锻炼,增长了经验,也更让我们体会到了我们护理学院严谨的作风和学风,体会到了那种团结向上的精神面貌。太多太多的

美国大学毕业典礼演讲选集

( 毕业典礼发言稿) 姓名:____________________ 单位:____________________ 日期:____________________ 编号:YB-BH-033214 美国大学毕业典礼演讲选集An anthology of graduation speeches in American Universities

演讲稿| Speech 毕业典礼发言稿美国大学毕业典礼演讲选集 1、杰瑞·朱克(导演、电影制片人,2019年,威期康星大学) 如果你一生都在睡觉,你的梦想是否实现就无关紧要了。 问你自己一个问题:如果我不是必须做得完美,那我还努力什么呢? 没有人会像你那样,对自己的失败那么在意。你是唯一在乎自己的重要性的人。对于其他人来说,你只是雷达荧光屏上的一个光点。所以,只管前行吧! 2、马克·刘易斯(教授、临床心理学家,2019年,得克萨斯大学) 有时候你会干得很漂亮,有时候你会失败。但二都都不是成功的标准。成功的标准是你对自己的所为怎么看。让我换一句话说:“让自己幸福的办法是喜欢自己,喜欢自己的办法是只做让自己感到骄傲的事情。” 3、大卫·福斯特·华莱士(小说家,2019年,肯尼恩学院) 有两条小鱼在一起游泳,一天他们碰巧遇到了一条老鱼。老鱼向他们点头,并说:“早上好,孩子们。水怎么样?”这两条小鱼继续往前游,其中一条小鱼实在忍不住了,问另一条小鱼:“水是什么东西?” 简单的意识,对我们生活中如此真实、如此必不可少,无处不在、无时不在的事物的意识,需我们一遍一遍地提醒自己:“这是水,这是水。” 4、约翰·沃尔什(作家和艺术历史学家,2019年,惠顿神学院) 第2页

实用文档之教师在毕业典礼上的发言稿

实用文档之"毕业典礼教师发言稿" 尊敬的各位领导、老师、亲爱的同学们: 大家早上好! 离别总带着不舍,离别总带着挂念!然而今天的离别更多的是快乐,因为你们是在告别过去的时光,向着人生更高更远处飞翔,我们要用掌声欢送过去的美好时光,同样用掌声迎接未来更加灿烂的人生。我很开心、也很荣幸可以代表全体教师为同学们送上临别赠言,在此,我谨代表全体教师向顺利毕业即将离开母校的2013届全体毕业生表示热烈的祝贺和衷心的祝福!祝贺你们顺利毕业,祝福你们未来更加灿烂夺目! 还很清晰的记得你们刚刚入校时稚嫩的脸庞,升国旗时还在行的少先队队礼,看见老师立正敬畏的表情,然而转眼间,你们长大了,就要毕业了。往事如歌,时光匆匆,三年的学习历程,你们留下了一串串深深的足迹。在武威十九中这片沃土上,你们已经练就了自己坚强健康的体魄,成熟理性的思维,你们已经逐渐学会自己选择;难忘在体育节跑道上你们飒爽的英姿,难忘在艺术节中你们多才多艺的表演,难忘教室里你们埋头苦学的身影;难忘你们一铲铲铲去粘在地上的积雪,太多的记忆让我们感动,太多的记忆让我们铭记。在丰富多彩的校园生活中,你们个性飞扬,你们的能力和智慧得以尽情施展,你们已经懂得了尊重和热爱是生活最好的老师。你们勤奋努力,你们追求进步,以成竹在胸的姿态迎接考试的检验。考场上,镜头前,课堂外,你们一次次为母校赢得了无数荣光,你们的名字一个个闪烁着 耀眼的光华。你们有着出色的智慧,但你们更注重锤炼自己坚韧不拔的意志;你们渴望优异的成绩,但你们更知道培养自我成长的能力;你们有着优秀的个体素质,但你们追求的境界始终是携手共进的友情。你们用自己的行动解读我们的校训:进步就是一百分!我和你们所有的老师都为你们的成长感到由衷的高兴,为我们能在你们的成长历程中有过一段参与而感到自豪。 同学们,毕业是一个里程碑。但毕业并不意味着结束,而是开始,一个新征程的开始。但是你们要始终牢记 1.珍惜时间、把握机遇 “业精于勤荒于嬉,行成于思而毁于随”要懂得珍惜青春时光,时刻以一种昂扬向上的精神风貌,书写美好的青春人生。同学们,当今社会,机遇与挑战并存,只有努力拼搏的人才能把握机遇,才能拥有成功!是金子总会闪光,只要有一颗永不放弃的心,无论走到哪里你都是好样的! 2 .要把感恩当成一种责任 母校是你们人生的摇篮,是你们“梦开始的地方”,我想对你们说的是:无论今后走到哪里都要铭记你们是武威十九中的学子。父母的养育、长辈的关怀、老师的教诲、同学的关心、他人的服务帮助我们每一位同学渡过了人生中珍贵的三年时光,所以你们要学会感恩。在临别之际轻轻叩响办公室的门,为那些教过你们的老师送上一句祝福;再次走遍母校的每一个角落,让母校成为你心中永恒的记忆,感谢她曾经给予你们的鼓励与关怀……学会感恩,你就学会了处世、学会了为人!一个懂得感恩的人才是一个有修养的人,才是一个有智性的人。把感恩当成一种责任,你就会获得圆满的人生! 大家 中国梦

毕业典礼发言稿 在小学毕业典礼上的讲话(400字)

在小学毕业典礼上的讲话(400字) 一篇在小学毕业典礼上的讲话优秀作文是怎么样的呢,大家是不是在为这一作文而困恼呢?来看看优秀的作文范文吧。下面是小编搜集整理的在小学毕业典礼上的讲话400字,欢迎阅读。更多资讯请继续关注毕业典礼栏目! 在小学毕业典礼上的讲话400字 敬爱的老师,亲爱的同学们:" 六年的小学活过去了,我们即将离开亲爱的母校。对母校的依恋如潮水般在我的心中激荡奔流,我怎能不留恋?怎能舍得离开哺育我成长的母校? 夕阳西下,暮色苍苍。小溪拍打着岸边,拍打着五颜六色的鹅卵石,我随手抓起一把石头,扔向小溪,可是从前波纹荡漾的溪面近日却感觉平静得像面镜子,好像又回到那个愉快的六一儿童节。 那天,天是那么蓝,空气是那么清,阳光是那么灿烂,一切都好像有人特意布置过似的。我穿着节日的盛装,心里有说不出的喜悦。就在这宽阔的大操场上,举行了隆重的庆祝会。在一片咚咚的队鼓声中,我带上了鲜艳的红领巾,它是那么红艳,像一团火,在我的心中燃烧,把我的心融化了。我想:今天,我带上了鲜艳的红领巾,捧着奖状向老师报喜,我将是21世纪的栋梁,从此,我成为了一名少先队员,我承载着祖国的希望。 如果我们是需要修剪的花草,老师就像是辛勤的园丁,如果我们是一只只渴望花粉的蜜蜂,老师就是充满花蜜的花朵,如果我们是一

棵棵植物,老师就是阳光与雨露,老师的一生都在为我们服务。在这里,我要对天下所有的老师说一声:"老师,您们辛苦了!" 回忆着六年中件件往事,怀着惜别之情,我的眼眶湿润了,我再一次发出肺腑的呼唤:"别了,亲爱的母校!再见了,亲爱的老师!" 在小学毕业典礼上的讲话400字 敬爱的老师,亲爱的同学: 你们好!在这艳阳高照槐花飘香的日子里,这也是我们最后一次见面吧!两千个日子悄悄走远,但春节的师生友谊,同学友谊却不会因为岁月的流逝而消融。 我记得,在3年级的一节作文课上,老师叫我们好好观察周围的事物。过了一会儿,老师叫班长站到走廊上去,然会叫大家说出班长今天是什么打扮,同学你看看我,我看看你,就像哑巴一样,全都说不出话来,这时,老师说出了班长今天的打扮——一件黑色的上衣,天蓝色的牛仔裤,再配一双黑白相间的运动鞋。从那时起,老师就告诉我们:"写作文不仅要有写作的基础和丰富的想象力,还要去认真地去观察事物,去了解事物。这样,作文才会写得根号! 再见,亲爱的的同学,我给我的最珍贵的礼物——真诚的友情,我将永远珍藏在心里。 在小学毕业典礼上的讲话400字 敬爱的老师,亲爱的同学们: 大家好 在这喧暖的夏季,我即将挥手告别这伴我走过六个春秋的母校,

高中毕业典礼演讲稿范文8篇

高中毕业典礼演讲稿范文8篇 【篇一:高中毕业典礼演讲稿】尊敬的各位校领导、各位老师、同学们: 大家好!首先,今天非常荣幸由我代表2010届全体高三毕业生发表我们的毕业感言。 今天的毕业不仅是对昨天的总结,更是对明天的呼唤。 有人说:没有开始,就没有结束。我们,三年前在这里开始,三年后又在这里结束。三年的光阴,多少人在生命中来回穿梭,却只留下背影?我们经过了彼此相遇,又经过了彼此分离,这期间,我们是否抓住了一些、又放弃了一些?摊开手掌,我们还剩下些什么? 三年前的我们,也许没有预见今天的分别。但是如今,分别就在眼前。你是否也渴望时间被上锁,好让今天过慢一点呢?我们真的努力想将所有的一切烙印在心底,让这些成为尘封于心底最美好的记忆。 三年的岁月已逝,1095个日日夜夜就这样从指间溜走,听起来似乎是那么的漫长,却过得那么快。我们还没有好好品味这三年身边的幸福感,就要面对别离。在我们的生命中,又会有几个这样美好又充实的三年呢? 在这三年中,我们既收获了知识,又收获了友情。那些在你落寞

时陪在你左右的,是朋友;那些在你迷惘时给你信心的,是朋友;那些在你懈怠时给你动力的,是朋友;那些在你难过时对你微笑的,依旧是朋友。我们一起成长,牵手面对困难,我们一起走过春夏秋冬,一起品味三年的酸甜苦辣,一起咬紧牙关决不放弃。即使再难,也不离不弃! 随着时间的不断推移,我们逐渐褪去了身上的青涩味道,取而代之的是成熟与责任。经历了高考的洗礼,我们从一个孩子过渡到一个青年人,从幼稚渐渐走向成熟,这当然不只是称呼上的变化,更多的是心理上的升华,我们明白自己需要承担更多的责任,也真正明白了,生活其实没有想象中的那么简单。 我们在未来的这条路上也许会非常辛苦,可是“只有含泪播种,才能微笑收获”,当成功的你回首今天所付出的这一切时,就会发现这一切都是值得的。人生就像是装满巧克力的盒子,你永远也不会知道接下来会吃到什么味道。可是不要因此胆怯,人总要尝试些什么。有些路,注定要一个人走完,但是不要忽略那些陪在你身边,最真挚的感情,如果现在你最珍惜的人在身边,请握紧她的手。给她感动。 生命中,是不断有人离开或进入的。于是,看见的看不见了;记住的遗忘了。生命中,也是不断有得到和失去的。于是,看不见的看

相关文档
最新文档