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毕业典礼英语演讲稿「教师篇」

时间:2023-10-09 09:17:48 演讲稿 收藏本文 下载本文

以下是小编精心整理的毕业典礼英语演讲稿「教师篇」,本文共19篇,希望对大家有所帮助。

毕业典礼英语演讲稿「教师篇」

篇1:毕业典礼英语演讲稿「教师篇」

最新毕业典礼英语演讲稿「教师篇」

Graduates and my fellow students,

You all are leaving your Alma Mater now. I have no gift to present you all except a piece of advice.

What I would like to advise is that “Don’t give up your study.” Most of the courses you have taken are partly for your certificate. You had no choice but to take them. From now on, you may study on your own. I would advise you to work hard at some special field when you are still young and vigorous. Your youth will be gone that will never come back to you again. When you are old, and when your energy are getting poorer, you will not be able to as you wish to. Even though you have to study in order to make a living, studies will never live up to you. Making a living without studying, you will be shifted out in three or five years. At this time when you hope to make it up, you will say it is too late. Perhaps you will say, “After graduation and going into the society, we will meet with an urgent problem, that is, to make a living. For this we have no time to study. Even though we hope to study, we have no library nor labs, how can we study further?”

I would like to say that all those who wait to have a library will not study further even though they have one and all these who wait to have a lab will not do experiments even though they have one. When you have a firm resolution and determination to solve a problem, you will naturally economize on food and clothing.

As for time, I should say it’s not a problem. You may know that every day he could do only an hour work, not much more than that because Darwin was ill for all his life. You must have read his achievements. Every day you spend an hour in reading 10 useful pages, then you will read more than 3650 pages every year. In 30 years you will have read 110,000 pages.

My fellow students, reading 110,000 pages will make you a scholar. But it will take you an hour to read three kinds of small-sized newspapers and it will take you an hour and a half to play four rounds of Mahjian pieces. Reading small-sized newspapers or playing Mahjian pieces, or working hard to be a scholar? It’s up to you all.

Henrik Ibsen said, “It is your greatest duty to make yourself out.”

Studying is then as tool as casting. Giving up studying will destroy yourself.

I have to say goodbye to you all. Your Alma Mater will open her eyes to see what you will be in 10 years. Goodbye!

参考翻译:

诸位毕业生同学:

你们现在要离开母校了,我没有什么礼物送给你们,只好送你们一句话吧。

这句话是:“不要抛弃学问”。以前的功课也许有一大部分是为了这张文凭,不得已而 做的。从今以后,你们可以依自己的心愿去研究了。趁着现在年富力强时候,努力做一种专门的学问。少年是一去不返的,等到精力衰退时,要做学问也来不及了。 既为吃饭计,学问绝不会辜负人的。吃饭而不求学问,三年五年之后,你们都要被先进的少年淘汰掉的。到那时再想做点学问来补救,恐怕已晚了。

有人说:“出去做事之后,生活问题急需解决,哪有功夫去读书?即使要做学问,既没有图书馆,也没有实验室,哪能做学问?”

我要对你们说:凡是要等到有了图书馆才读书的,有了图书馆也不肯读书;凡是要等到有了实验室才做研究的,有了实验室也不肯做研究。你有了决心要解决一个问题,自然会节衣缩食去买书,自然会想出法子来购置仪器。

至于时间,更不成问题。达尔文一生多病,不能多做工,每天只能做一小时的'工作。你们看他的成绩!每天花一小时看十页有用的书,每年可看三千六百多页书,三十年读十一万页书。

诸位,十一万页的书可以使你成为一个学者了。可是,每天看三种小报也得费你一小时的功夫;四圈麻将也得费你一个半小时的光阴。看小报呢?打麻将呢?还是努力做一位学者?全靠你自己选择!

易卜生说:“你的最大责任是把你这块材料铸成器。”

学问便是铸器的工具。抛弃了学问便是毁了你自己。

再会了!你们的母校眼睁睁地要看你们十年之后成什么器。

篇2:毕业典礼感人演讲稿教师篇

毕业典礼感人演讲稿(教师篇)

尊敬的各位领导、老师、亲爱的同学们:

大家上午好!

今天的聚会,既是毕业电典礼,又是战前誓师,毕业典礼老师为你们顺利完成高中学业而祝贺,也为你们即将出征走向高考考场而壮行!在此,我谨代表高三年级全体教师向所有即将毕业的高三学子献上我们最诚挚的祝福。

高中是一本太仓促的书,在不知不觉间,三年的时光,一千多页就这样匆匆翻过。那么多生动的细节,那么多精彩的瞬间早已深深铭刻在我们彼此的心头。是你们用青春与热情挥洒出十八岁的绚烂和辉煌,是你们用勤奋与智慧编织了高中生活的多彩和丰富。三年高中生活,我们不会忘记,在精彩纷呈的舞台上你们尽抒豪情的那份洒脱,在平整宽阔的操场上你们不甘落后、奋起直追的那份执着。我们同样不会忘记,在窗明几净的教室里你们认真听讲的那份专注,你们几经挫折终于走出泥沼的那份超脱......我们喜欢你们课堂上凝神思索的眼神,也欣赏你们运动场上风一样掠过的青春身影;我们喜欢你们无拘无束的慷慨陈词,也欣赏你们在不断成长中表现出的深思熟虑;我们羡慕你们青春逼人朝气蓬勃的矫健,也欣赏你们明辨是非闻过即改的果断......你们首先经历了新课改的学习,为学弟学妹们扫平了学习道路上的障碍,你们不同寻常的经历和精神,将成为一道亮丽的风景铭刻在庄河高中的校史上。你们是庄河高中的骄傲,是我们每一位老师的骄傲。校园里的每一棵树木都记录了你们三年的美丽年华,你们的一颦一笑,一举手一投足,无不在每一个关注过你的老师的心中定格成永久的胶片,将会在每一个勾起思念的契机默默放映,常常演新。

亲爱的同学们,在你们临行时,我想在你们的行囊里放上我们的希望与祝福。

面对即将离开母校的你们,我们衷心地希望:希望庄河高中三年的学习生活,留给你们的是终身受益的求知精神。这一点,让大学证明你,让未来证明你。

面对即将离开母校的你们,我们衷心的希望:希望你们要拥有思想的阳光。走出高中,纷纷扰扰的世界,也许会让你们迷失自我,林林总总的人生,可能会让你们时常面对选择,只有清醒的头脑和独立的思想才能指引你们人生正确的航向。

面对即将离开母校的你们,我们衷心的希望:希望你们要拥有责任,对社会的责任,对事业的责任,对家庭的责任,唯有承担起自己的人生责任,才能真正实现人生的价值。

面对即将离开母校的你们,我们衷心的.希望:希望你们学会感恩。感谢父母的养育之恩,感谢老师的教育之恩,感谢他人的关怀、帮助之恩。有了感恩的心情,在漫漫的人生征途中,即使遭遇到荆棘和坎坷、风雨和冰霜,你们也不会怨恨和失望。在感恩的心情中,你们定将成为更健康更完美的人。

同时老师也真心希望,每位同学都能在走进考场前,抬起你自信而高傲的头颅,张开你自信而多思的翅膀,提一口丹田气,想一件如意事,说一句自励语。告戒自己,沉着沉着再沉着,沉着是优异成绩的基石;叮嘱自己,冷静冷静再冷静,冷静是孕育“黑马”的温床。昂首上路吧,成功从来与自信为伍,幸运永远和强者同行。

亲爱的同学们,不管你们走多远,当庄河高中美丽的校园在你们眼中渐成远去的风景时,希望你们记得常回家看看,我们将一辈子守望在这里,祝福着你们,期待着你们佳音回报。

同学们,长叮咛,短嘱咐,万语千言难以诉尽老师对你们的依依不舍,就让我们把这份浓浓的留恋之情化为对你们美好的祝福吧——祝你们高考顺利,梦想早日轻舞飞扬!老师坚信你们的生命会因你们精彩的一跃而灿烂夺目,庄河高中的历史会因你们奋力的一搏而更加辉煌!

谢谢!

篇3:大学毕业典礼英语演讲稿经典篇

One Student Is Just Like a Flower

My dear Mr. and Misses, my fellows schoolmates,

Good morning! As you know and see, it is a sunny bump harvest season. In the city, in our school campus, everywhere is surrounded with roses which we together planted 4 years ago. Today may these roses and our friendship as well be together and comfort our excited hearts!

It was four years ago that everyone of us came from every part of China and formed a new collective. As we are young, it’s very easy for us to communicate. It was in the past four years that we were ambitious. It was in the past four years that we worried. It was in the past four years that we were content. It was in the past four years that we were vexed. It was in the past four years that we were friendly and lonely ... and it was in the past fours that we studied, lived and respected each other with genuine and with our ambitions. Nothing in the world is more significant than we miss all of these.

We miss you─teachers who are tireless in teaching; we will keep your gestures and your white hairs in our hearts deeply; we will miss the quietness with the lights at night in the classroom; we will miss the race and exercise on the playground; we will miss even the crowds in the dining hall and the quarrel on the beds; we will still miss every green piece and every piece of waste paper flying like flakes in the air ... However, today we will leave nothing but the first rose with our Alma Mater and our teachers which is entrusted with our love and respect.

4 years seems very long but 4 years seems very short. From now on, we all will go into the society. The society is broad and wide for us. We will shoulder heavy responsibilities; we will work diligently; and we will expect to be informed of good news from one another. Now, I beg you all to cherish the occasion; to remember the names, the status, appearance and the character of the person around you. Now let’s be hand in hand together; let’s present the rose to each other. May the rose carry our appreciation and blessing! We are very closely linked no matter what the world may be. May the fresh rose in our hands keep its fragrants!

Thank you all again!

篇4:教师毕业典礼演讲稿

教师毕业典礼演讲稿

尊敬的各位领导、各位老师,亲爱的同学们:

大家好!

今天,我们怀着无比激动的心情在此召开我校**届学生毕业典礼。伴随着成长的喜悦,洋溢着即将收获的兴奋。在此,我谨代表学校全体老师向即将圆满毕业的莘莘学子奉献上我们最诚挚的祝福!向为同学们的成长倾注了热情和智慧的所有老师表示衷心的感谢!

在不知不觉之间,三年时光,一千多个日夜晨昏,就这样匆匆地过去了。同学们,三年的跋涉,三年的苦读,三年的探索,三年的合作,成长了你们,成长了我们,也成长了我们**二中。有那么多生动的细节,有那么多精彩的瞬间,早已深深地铭刻在我们彼此的心田。是你们,是你们用青春与热情挥洒着绚丽的辉煌;是你们,是你们用勤奋与智慧编织了初中生活的温馨与坚强。三年的初中生活,老师不会忘记在富有青春活力的广播操中,你们充满朝气的那份洒脱,在美丽宽阔的运动场上,不甘落后、奋起直追的那份执着。同样,老师更不会忘记,在窗明几净的教室里,你们因基础薄弱上课坚持听讲的那份坚毅,你们几经艰难走出困境的那份喜悦。

今天,我们可以自豪地说,我们在打造品牌学校的道路上已经迈出了成功的一步。我们**二中的同学是好样的,老师是优秀的。一次又一次的奥赛捷报可以证明,教学楼前校园动态栏里一次次展示的各类师生荣誉证书及各类刊物上发表的作品可以见证,尤其是你们勇于挑战师大附中的精神可以说明,学校门口马路上悬挂的横幅更可肯定。的确,我们**二中的师生都优秀得很,棒得很。请为我们共同的努力而喝彩!为我们创造的辉煌成就而鼓掌!

三年来,老师和你们一起苦乐共担,荣辱与共。作为老师,我们快乐着你们的快乐,痛苦着你们的痛苦,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,请你们理解老师,理解老师恨铁不成钢的心情,请你们体会老师渴盼你们立志成才的心愿。此时此刻,老师们的脑海里都满是你们的影子你们有的个性活跃飞扬,有的文静可爱,有的技能娴熟高超,有的学习坚毅求实。三年的师生情谊,似一杯浓浓的醇香的酒,而今,离别在即,也不禁有些留恋。

初中毕业,是一首生动的离别歌,更是青春成长的里程碑。它不是终点,而是一个新的起点。十六年的成长,已经让你们懂得责任的含义,九年的学习更使你们懂得了战胜自己的粗心、自满和懦弱。同学们!没有比人更高的山,没有比脚更长的路。**二中,只是你们人生的一个驿站,今后还有更为广阔的天地任你们驰骋,还有更美好的前程任你们去展望。让青春与你们为伍,让希望和你们同行,成功一定会属于今天精彩,明天更辉煌的你们!

最后,我代表全体老师给你们五千万,千万要健康,千万要快乐,千万要自信,千万要拼搏,千万不要忘记母校。愿同学们,如愿以尝,美梦成真,金榜题名。母校期待着你们,老师静候着你们的佳音,来回报母校,感恩老师。愿你们求学路上,百尺竿头更进一步!谢谢!

教师毕业典礼演讲稿范文

各位领导老师、来宾、家长,亲爱的毕业生同学们:

每年的六月,都是校园里最伤感的季节;今年的六月,同学们是在多雨时节里阳光灿烂的日子离别的。这样的时刻对于我们老师来说,年年相似;而对于你们来说,可能一生只有一次。不用的书卖了,往日的楼梯变短了,校园里穿班服的人多了,不会喝酒的醉了,难得流泪的哭了……这就是校园里分别的日子。一千多个的日出日落,给你们留下了许多美好的和不那么美好的记忆;春夏秋冬的几次轮回,记录着你们那些值得和不值得的喜怒哀乐。你们人生中最宝贵的四年时光都是在xx大学度过的,我一直说,校友工作是从新生入学开始的。我们要让每位同学回忆起大学时光,总有那么一两件让他感到温馨的事情,有一两个让他心动的场景。

漫长的岁月会使人忘记许多往事,而有些记忆无论经过多少时间的磨洗也不会消失。今日别离的忧伤将成为永远的甜蜜。几十年前,我和在座的许多老师,也曾有过此情此景。那是冬季的离别,我们抒写徐志摩的诗句——轻轻地我走了……那天在文学院的毕业生晚会上,同学们一句“我们总是说下学期如何下学期如何,可是突然间意识到再也不会有下学期了”——深深的打动了我和在场的所有老师。往事悠悠,岁月如歌。吉大校园真正是一片热土,希望在这里萌生,硕果在这里收获。只要是种子,就能生长;只要是花儿,就能开放。看到同学们由酸涩到成熟的过程,看到大家对于母校那种深情,作为老师,我们感到欣慰,觉得无论为学生付出多少辛苦给予多少关爱也是值得的。我想,如果能从头再来,我们一定要为同学做得更好。

这里我送同学们几句寄语,是我的心声也是全体老师由衷的祝愿。

第一,大爱无疆。大学要有大楼,更要有大师,大师更要有大爱。李元元校长曾经对学生说“品格道德的高度决定着人生的高度”。同学们要永远怀有一颗宽容仁爱之心,在这个复杂纷纭的社会中,很多事情我们都无能为力,但是只有爱、善良和宽容是我们每个人任何时候都能做到的。大爱无疆,爱之所爱,爱之所不爱。爱可以温暖人生,可以化解仇恨。要宽容别人,宽容来自于心底的善,宽容使社会和谐丰富,宽容使你自己心平气和。

第二,大任无怨。天降大任,忧国忧民,苦劳身心而无怨无悔。人生百年,雁过留声,适应环境而能改造环境者乃为担当大任者。历史的发展总是需要少数人走在前面,虽然走在前面的人往往要作出牺牲。但是,国家和人民需要我们义无反顾的奉献,因为我们是民族最精华的一部分,天生的要承担更多的责任。志向高远也要从小事做起。每一件小事都是通往大志向的阶梯,细节反映本质,微小改变大局,瞬间决定命运。

第三,大智若愚。四年过去,人生开始。四年校园生活只是人生的一个驿站,一个温馨的终点,一个艰难的起点。与社会相比,校园毕竟还是一个小世界,还算得上是一块净土。环境转换,人事皆非,随着时间的推移,对比和反差可能会越来越大。在校时,有领导护着你,老师宠着你,同学帮着你。今后要有承受挫折和遭受冷遇的心理准备,生活需要最强忍耐的人。低调做人,踏实做事。xx大学的毕业生有一个两年不适综合症。批判意识过强,不善于见机行事。如果在一个平庸的环境里,个性和才华有时候就是你成长的障碍。到了社会,首先要适应环境,只有适应环境才能生存,最后才能改造环境。

最后,勿忘母校,情义无价。毕业了,让我们共同珍视过去。虽然四年的生活里,不一定那么完美,有怨言有误解,也爱过也恨过,但是此时此刻一切都将化为分别的惆怅。现在也许你还不太懂得毕业的含义,但是当你们走上社会体验复杂人生之后就会有别样的感受;也许你今天对此情此景还很淡漠,但是当你们之后再回首,就会觉得这是最难忘的时光!当你们走上社会大家天各一方,遥想当年而环顾周围现实时,你们会更进一步感受到同学和师生之间友谊的重要和纯真,除了亲人,人世间同学和老师是最亲近的关系,同学师生之间的情感是不必讲任何条件和代价的,无论走到哪里,“吉大人”就是我们相见时最亲切的问候和称呼,“吉大人”就是我们相亲相爱的理由,希望今后同学们之间互相扶持互相爱护,不要让一个人掉队,不要让一个人孤单。

年年岁岁花相似,岁岁年年人不同。无论我们多么不愿你们走,但是人总是要上路的,让我们在这里最后送你们一程!xx大学永远是你们的家,今后无论身处何处,无论你贫穷还是富有,得意还是失意,你们都是吉大人。如果有一天你们伤了、累了,想回到学校深造,我们将张开双臂欢迎你们。

最后,让我用写给校报的几句话结束我的发言:

拿起又放下的是翻开的旧书

放下又拿起的是酸甜的记忆

最后一步迈出校门,你们便成了吉大的校友

最后一声问好,相逢也许在步履蹒跚的时候

今后无论你走多远,你仍得记住:

我们在你的港湾里

你在我们的视线里……

教师毕业典礼演讲稿范例

尊敬的各位领导、老师,亲爱的同学们:

大家上午好!

非常高兴作为教师代表做毕业致辞。今天是一个充满喜悦和希望的日子,充盈在我们心里的,除了师生的惜别之情,更多是一份骄傲和自豪。因为亲爱的同学们即将开始自己新的人生里程。所以,请允许我代表我系全体教师向经过三年努力学习,圆满完成学业的同学们表示最热烈的祝贺!

每一年,学校里都有这么几天,伴着初夏的燥热,校园里处处充满了离别的伤愁。睡在上铺的兄弟,你为他找到理想的工作而高兴,可他明天就要奔赴远方;阅览室里暗恋了许久的女生,终于敬了她一杯酒,可以后还能见到那一低头的温柔吗?还有许多被你们在背后起了外号的老师,昨天还是那么真实地存在,今天过后很快就会变成回忆了。

在这三年中,我们共同经历了很多,记住了很多。我们记住了迎新晚会的新鲜和希望,我们记住了红五月歌赛的激扬和团结,我们记住了社团活动的丰富和烂漫,我们记住了运动会的动感与竞争。我们还记住了很多很多。

回首这三年,我相信大家都会感慨万千,孤单过、快乐过、努力过、挫折过,失败过、成功过、哭过、笑过、迷惘过、希望过,但无论怎样,在千滋百味的大学三年如白驹过隙时,我们都知道,从今天起,你们毕业了!

同时,你们又都将面对一个新的挑战,从这个意义上讲,各位又重新站在了同一条起跑线上。所以,曾经辉煌的同学请你不要骄傲,曾经失败的同学更不要气馁,机会对大家都是平等的,只要肯努力,时间会给大家在社会这张答卷上一个满意的评分。

在我及全体老师即将成为大家大学时代的回忆之前,我想衷心的建议每一位同学:

一是要摆正自己的位置,始终保持一种平和的心态,从零开始,从小事做起,虚心向他人学习,真诚向实践请教。书本上的知识总是有限的,而社会才是一个大课堂。

二是要学会学习。现在人类的知识总量,大约3年就翻一番,所以我们应该努力寻求获得知识的方法,学会如何学习,以适应知识日新月异迅速增长的趋势。

三是要学会做人。陶行知先生在论述教师和学生的职责与任务时,曾经言简意赅地说过十六个字:“千教万教,教人求真;千学万学,学会做人”。学会做人的最大一方面就是学会与人交流,与人交往,与人合作。同学们毕业后,无论是走向工作第一线,还是继续选择深造,都要不断地、踏实地学习新的知识,充实自己。在现在的知识经济时代,靠一个人单枪匹马地奋斗是无法建功立业的,所以希望大家要学会做人,学会做事,学会合作,在各方面都不断地完善自我,有一个健康的体魄,保持一种健康的心理状态,充满信心地面对未来。每天都能寻找到学习、生活、工作中的快乐,每天都能使自己取得一点点进步,成为一个全新的人,从而为社会,为国家做出贡献。

今天,在你们即将要离开这熟悉而美丽的校园时,准备踏上新征程之时,请别忘了带上全体老师对你们的殷切期望和祝福。没有比人更高的山,没有比脚更长的路。在人生的征程上,有许多个驿站,只有平时练就过硬的素质,成功的机遇才会属于你。记住:除了空气和阳光是大自然赋予的,其他的一切都要靠你的努力和奋斗去争取。

同学们,无论你们走到哪里,请记住,无论你是谁,无论什么时候,无论面临什么样的境况,请不妨想想你的母校,你不妨回来看看,想想你的大学生活,想想你曾经的梦想。母校的大门会永远向你敞开。

同学们,请继续热爱和批评你们在这里度过美好年华的母校,但不要让别人对她指手划脚。请继续联系你亲爱的同学、师弟师妹,也不要放过你的老师,比如我„„我们会一直守望在这里,祝福着你们!

最后祝愿同学们在人生的大舞台上秀出自己的风采,祝愿你们前程似锦,好运相伴!

Good Luck,not Goodbye。 谢谢大家!

篇5:毕业典礼教师经典演讲稿

尊敬的各位领导、各位老师,亲爱的同学们:

大家好!

今天,我们怀着无比激动的心情在此召开我校20xx届学生毕业典礼。伴随着成长的喜悦,洋溢着即将收获的兴奋。在此,我谨代表学校全体老师向即将圆满毕业的莘莘学子奉献上我们最诚挚的祝福!向为同学们的成长倾注了热情和智慧的所有老师表示衷心的感谢!

在不知不觉之间,三年时光,一千多个日夜晨昏,就这样匆匆地过去了。同学们,三年的跋涉,三年的苦读,三年的探索,三年的合作,成长了你们,成长了我们,也成长了我们平川二中。有那么多生动的细节,有那么多精彩的瞬间,早已深深地铭刻在我们彼此的心田。是你们,是你们用青春与热情挥洒着绚丽的辉煌;是你们,是你们用勤奋与智慧编织了初中生活的温馨与坚强。三年的初中生活,老师不会忘记在富有青春活力的广播操中,你们充满朝气的那份洒脱,在美丽宽阔的运动场上,不甘落后、奋起直追的那份执着。同样,老师更不会忘记,在窗明几净的教室里,你们因基础薄弱上课坚持听讲的那份坚毅,你们几经艰难走出困境的那份喜悦。

今天,我们可以自豪地说,我们在打造品牌学校的道路上已经迈出了成功的一步。我们平川二中的同学是好样的,老师是优秀的。一次又一次的奥赛捷报可以证明,教学楼前“校园动态栏”里一次次展示的各类师生荣誉证书及各类刊物上发表的作品可以见证,尤其是你们勇于挑战师大附中的精神可以说明,学校门口马路上悬挂的横幅更可肯定。的确,我们平川二中的师生都优秀得很,棒得很。请为我们共同的努力而喝彩!为我们创造的辉煌成就而鼓掌!

三年来,老师和你们一起苦乐共担,荣辱与共。作为老师,我们“快乐着你们的快乐,痛苦着你们的痛苦,”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,请你们理解老师,理解老师“恨铁不成钢”的心情,请你们体会老师渴盼你们立志成才的心愿。此时此刻,老师们的脑海里都满是你们的影子——你们有的个性活跃飞扬,有的文静可爱,有的技能娴熟高超,有的学习坚毅求实。三年的师生情谊,似一杯浓浓的醇香的酒,而今,离别在即,也不禁有些留恋。

初中毕业,是一首生动的离别歌,更是青春成长的里程碑。它不是终点,而是一个新的起点。十六年的成长,已经让你们懂得责任的含义,九年的学习更使你们懂得了战胜自己的粗心、自满和懦弱。同学们!没有比人更高的山,没有比脚更长的路。平川二中,只是你们人生的一个驿站,今后还有更为广阔的天地任你们驰骋,还有更美好的前程任你们去展望。让青春与你们为伍,让希望和你们同行,成功一定会属于今天精彩,明天更辉煌的你们!

最后,我代表全体老师给你们“五千万”,千万要健康,千万要快乐,千万要自信,千万要拼搏,千万不要忘记母校。愿同学们,如愿以尝,美梦成真,金榜题名。母校期待着你们,老师静候着你们的佳音,来回报母校,感恩老师。愿你们求学路上,百尺竿头更进一步!谢谢!

幼儿园大班毕业典礼教师代表演讲稿

尊敬的各位家长,亲爱的小朋友们:

大家好!

今天是个难忘的日子,是大班的孩子们最高兴的日子。亲爱的孩子们,你们要从这里毕业了,就要开始新的历程了。下个学期,你们就是小学生了,以后呢,还要成为中学生、大学生、甚至博士生。相信在这里的学习和生活,为你们今后的学习打下了一个良好的基础。

作为老师,我荣幸地见证了孩子们的成长历程。亲爱的孩子们,还记得你们刚进幼儿园时的忐忑吗? 是老师像妈妈一样抱起了你们,为你们擦去眼泪,喂你们吃饭,哄你们睡觉,带你们游戏,给你们讲故事。今天,你们不仅长高了,也长知识了,懂得了语言、拼音、科学、音乐、美术的一些基础知识;你们不仅养成了良好的学习习惯,也练就了“自己的事情自己做”这样独立的生活习惯;你们不仅懂得爱护环境,而且还学会了爱护人、体贴人。

我想和大家分享一个我和孩子们的故事。去年10月25日,我在教室拖地时不慎摔倒,孩子们呼地一下围了过来:“老师,你是不是很疼呀?”“老师,我扶你起来!”孩子们一声声问候,一双双小手,剧痛中我感到了莫大的安慰!医院检查,我骨折了,医生给我开了十五天的病假。一个星期后,我忍不住来到了幼儿园,刚走到教室门口,孩子们又呼地一下围了过来:“老师,你好了吗?”“老师,我可想你了!”一声声问候,病痛中我再一次感到了莫大的安慰!我提前上班了。医生听说后,对我说:“你要注意,别留下后遗症。”我何尝不知道呢!即使如此,我也无怨无悔!

尊敬的各位家长,孩子就要毕业了,可对孩子的教育才刚刚开始。3到13岁,是一个人成长最关键的阶段,请家长们重视这个阶段孩子的教育。借这样一个宝贵的机会,我还想和大家分享一本书,是美籍华人、著名儿童教育专家小巫女士所写的:《和孩子划清界限》。为什么要和孩子划清界限呢?看了这本书,我深受教育。我们成人千万不要用成人的观点来看待孩子的世界!家长是孩子的父母,更要成为孩子的朋友。我们的爱,不要象石头,压得孩子喘不过气来;要象温暖的阳光,润物细无声,宽广又慈祥。建议家长们在家里多听一些古典的音乐,多挂一些精美的图画,多买一些经典的读物,因为这样,孩子将潜移默化,受益终生。

到了说再见的时刻,这是依依不舍的时刻,也是开心高兴的时刻。亲爱的孩子们,老师将记住你们的天真、善良和爱心。今后,你们无论遇到了什么困难,也请记住老师对你们的爱,在老师心中,你们都是独一无二的!你们都是最棒的!亲爱的孩子们,老师爱你们,永远爱你们。老师为你们祝福,祝愿你们象一只只快乐的小鸟,在广阔的天空自由自在的飞翔;祝愿你们好好学习,实现自己心中的梦想:成为快乐能干的机器猫、机灵勇敢的喜洋洋、聪明美丽的白雪公主!

谢谢大家!

经典毕业典礼教师演讲

尊敬的各位老师,还有我亲爱的同学们:

大家好!今天我非常荣幸的站在这里,代表西山的老师、西南科技大学的老师,和所有曾经给你们传道授业解惑的老师,在此发言。

年复一年的毕业,就像话剧似的,有人要谢幕,有人要上场,不可避免的人来人往,这一年,逢到了你们——20xx届毕业生青春的又一次散场和再一次碰撞。在这个报告厅里,坐着西南科技大学应用技术学院6个专业的365名毕业生,你们都来自预科班,预科上来的孩子智商都不低,但你们不会workhard去努力地学习,你们只会通宵打dota和c4,女孩呢则花心思去shopping,去化妆,去打扮自己,总的来说,预科的孩子有三大特点:女孩都挺炫男孩都很可爱;各个不是富二代就是官二代;鬼点子挺多,但心眼都不坏!

朝夕相处的三年,老师看着你们一天天退去青涩,走向成熟。今天,看着眼前一张张鲜活、帅气、漂亮、可爱的面孔,不由地使我想起了我们共同经历过的点点滴滴。

从军训时你们的挥汗如雨,哭哭啼啼,咬牙坚持,运动场上的呼叫呐喊,矫健身子;考试顺利时的得意,作弊时的狡黠,最让人难忘的是5.12强震时的惊慌失措到后来面对余震时的平静从容,甲流袭来时,恐惧逃避,以及最后面对发烧同学的淡定,还有玉树地震时慷慨解囊和同情唏嘘,这三年中平凡的和不平凡的经历都共同铸就了你们现在的成熟和智慧……这一切幸运不幸运,不是每一届学生都能够经历的。

六月是毕业生的舞台,今年的六月也特别的清凉,但回忆和眼泪仍是它的背景和主旋律。就是在这样季节,你们要毕业了。不管你喜不喜欢,西南科技大学应用技术学院已经注定成为了你生命中的一部分,在一个地方度过,在另一段地方怀念。每个人,都会经历无数的舍得,或不舍得的离别,不管那个地方是不是你喜欢的。

我想在座的你们一定不会忘记——从西山篮球场上扶着栏杆望去,被黄晕灯光修饰的/公路的/蜿蜒;松林坡的风中,坐在石椅上/静享绵阳夜间灯火的/辉煌与阑珊;在操场上阻挡着足球,再怎么热汗淋漓也踢不出多远的/青青草长;与春日/热情的海棠树相映成趣的/装载有限知识但学习不尽的图书馆的/陈旧古朴……还有图书馆旁的一处小路,不知道你们是不是留意到:那里秋天散着桂花香,冬天飘着腊梅香,中午还混搭着饭菜香……西山的星空,西山的朗月,西山的风雨雷电……当然,还有爬的比蜗牛还慢的44路车,长长的缓坡,不要门票的西山公园,西山食堂难以下咽的饭菜,松林坡的小炒,还有老王家的面条,以及西一教学楼前秋天那铺满道路的银杏叶描画出的灿烂的秋景,而这,西山的一切,你们都将远离。但它们并没有消失,而是已经深深烙刻在你们的青春记忆里。

我想西山也一定不会忘记你们,西山的老师,宿管阿姨,包括西山的门卫,小卖部的老板、打野的的师傅都不会忘记你们的青春笑声,热情汗水,懵懵懂懂的初恋,同窗的情谊,寝室的争吵,评优时的不满争执,

从今天起,你们都将跨入人生的一个崭新的阶段,考上本科的同学将会在新的院校里继续学习,没有继续学业而步入社会的同学会更加坚强地面对人生,你们坚韧的生命在经受了就业挫折的洗礼之后会更加朝气蓬勃。

在这里我很希望你们能恪守西南科技大学的校训:“厚德博学笃行创新”。能称作知识的,不会是错误或者没用的,可能只是你暂时无法实践。所以你们一定都要继续学习、充实自己,成为一个有知识的人。

康德先生曾说:世界上唯有两样东西能让我们的内心受到深深的震撼,一是我们头顶上灿烂的星空,一是我们内心崇高的道德法则。对于每个在座的学生而言,除了学习工作是我们的本职外,我们也应该做到尽量说真话,做实事。俄国伟大的文学家索尔仁尼琴说:一句真话比整个世界的分量还重。这样我们才能成为一个大写的人,成为一个承继普世价值的人,成为一个对社会真正有用的人

当今社会竞争激烈残酷,我们要记住,“穷则独善其身,达则兼济天下”,希望同学们在立业后,多些“为天地立心、为生民立命、为往圣继绝学、为万世开太平”的士大夫情怀。大学生,自当以学习为要;又自当培养以民为重。从自身做起,守己以待时,以点滴之努力推动“自下而上”格局的形成,“为国为民”或能终成一体。

也只有这样你们才能成为鲁迅先生笔下的中国的真正的脊梁!

同学们,明天你们就将离开,在这个朗爽的夏日,留下了满寝室的垃圾,也许还有喝剩的酒瓶,还有你们认为已经毫无价值的书本,带着大包大包的行李,但我同时更希望你们带着我们应用技术学院所有老师的无限祝福,朝着你们理想的方向,或顺顺利利,或磕磕绊绊,去开创你们自己想要的未来,创造自己的明天。请相信:“世界属于你”“明天属于你们”!

谢谢大家。

篇6:教师毕业典礼演讲稿

尊敬的各位领导、各位老师,亲爱的同学们:

大家好!随着成长的喜悦,洋溢着即将收获的兴奋。在此,我谨代表学校全体老师向即将圆满毕业的莘莘学子奉献上我们最诚挚的祝福!向为同学们的成长倾注了热情和智慧的所有老师表示衷心的感谢!

今天,我们怀着无比激动的心情在此召开我校20xx届学生毕业典礼。伴随着成长的喜悦,洋溢着即将收获的兴奋。在此,我谨代表学校全体老师向即将圆满毕业的莘莘学子奉献上我们最诚挚的祝福!向为同学们的成长倾注了热情和智慧的所有老师表示衷心的感谢!

在不知不觉之间,三年时光,一千多个日夜晨昏,就这样匆匆地过去了。同学们,三年的跋涉,三年的苦读,三年的探索,三年的合作,成长了你们,成长了我们,也成长了我们平川二中。有那么多生动的细节,有那么多精彩的瞬间,早已深深地铭刻在我们彼此的心田。是你们,是你们用青春与热情挥洒着绚丽的辉煌;是你们,是你们用勤奋与智慧编织了初中生活的温馨与坚强。三年的初中生活,老师不会忘记在富有青春活力的广播操中,你们充满朝气的那份洒脱,在美丽宽阔的运动场上,不甘落后、奋起直追的那份执着。同样,老师更不会忘记,在窗明几净的教室里,你们因基础薄弱上课坚持听讲的那份坚毅,你们几经艰难走出困境的那份喜悦。

今天,我们可以自豪地说,我们在打造品牌学校的道路上已经迈出了成功的一步。我们平川二中的同学是好样的,老师是优秀的。一次又一次的奥赛捷报可以证明,教学楼前“校园动态栏”里一次次展示的各类师生荣誉证书及各类刊物上发表的作品可以见证,尤其是你们勇于挑战师大附中的精神可以说明,学校门口马路上悬挂的横幅更可肯定。的确,我们平川二中的师生都优秀得很,棒得很。请为我们共同的努力而喝彩!为我们创造的辉煌成就而鼓掌!

三年来,老师和你们一起苦乐共担,荣辱与共。作为老师,我们“快乐着你们的快乐,痛苦着你们的痛苦,”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,请你们理解老师,理解老师“恨铁不成钢”的心情,请你们体会老师渴盼你们立志成才的心愿。此时此刻,老师们的脑海里都满是你们的影子——你们有的个性活跃飞扬,有的文静可爱,有的技能娴熟高超,有的学习坚毅求实。三年的师生情谊,似一杯浓浓的醇香的酒,而今,离别在即,也不禁有些留恋。

初中毕业,是一首生动的离别歌,更是青春成长的里程碑。它不是终点,而是一个新的起点。十六年的成长,已经让你们懂得责任的含义,九年的学习更使你们懂得了战胜自己的粗心、自满和懦弱。同学们!没有比人更高的山,没有比脚更长的路。平川二中,只是你们人生的一个驿站,今后还有更为广阔的天地任你们驰骋,还有更美好的前程任你们去展望。让青春与你们为伍,让希望和你们同行,成功一定会属于今天精彩,明天更辉煌的你们!

最后,我代表全体老师给你们“五千万”,千万要健康,千万要快乐,千万要自信,千万要拼搏,千万不要忘记母校。愿同学们,如愿以尝,美梦成真,金榜题名。母校期待着你们,老师静候着你们的佳音,来回报母校,感恩老师。愿你们求学路上,百尺竿头更进一步!谢谢!

篇7:毕业典礼教师演讲稿

致我亲爱的孩子

——写在毕业典礼后

心情——分离的不舍

六年的时间太过匆匆,

一场典礼也过于形式。

已至凌晨,竟不能入睡。

昨晚还忙着修改课件,

今夜却突然无所事事,

猛然想起,

你们已离我而去,

后知后觉的我,

心中感觉空落落。

平时的夜里,

想想明天要讲什么课,

想想还要说说哪个小调皮,

今夜,

我则沉浸在分离的泪里。

设想过很多次与大家分别的场景,

没想到今天竟是这样的平静。

典礼上,

一心想把过去的点滴拾起,

让照片和音乐带大家回到过去。

可心中的感动与离愁,

却没能找到一个倾泄的出口。

毕业典礼匆匆结束,

没来及和大家好好道别,

你们就离我而去。

借着下发试卷,

掩饰自己不平的情绪。

不敢多说,怕大家哭成一团。

吴馨雨,找我合影,

曹艳妈妈也过来告别,

大家眼中都含着泪水。

回到家,看着你们群里的留言,

我的眼泪瞬间崩塌。

回忆——我们共同记得

朱自清的《匆匆》,

你们常在我耳边念起,

而让我感觉到时间流逝飞快的,

是你们的成长。

王志翔、童芳、张晶晶、郑心怡、许字国、庄泽瑞,

我们朝夕相处了六年,

吴馨雨、朱雨婷、纪静雯、汤健、张齐云、姚文武也有两三年,

邓远卓、贾邦齐、刘奔只有一年,

不管你何时加入,

不管你来自何方,

我们已经成为了一家人。

可能,父母都没法看穿你们的内心,

而我,你们抑或踊跃,抑或深沉,

透过你明亮的眸子,

我一一可以洞察清。

想起在我们埋头奋战的最后阶段,

你们的表现左右着我的情绪,

对你们的和蔼与可亲,

对你们的严厉与批评,

都有你们自己决定。

有时候,

我会忘了自己是一个老师,

随便发脾气,

那是因为你们的表现差强人意,

而我退化得跟你们父母一样的焦急。

孩子——谢谢你们

想起了我们互赠礼物

送给大家练字的毛笔与水写布,

送给小姑娘们发卡,头花,

也接受过大家的糖果与鲜花。

记得问吴馨雨,那蝴蝶结怎么不戴?

你说:我要好好珍藏。

记得送涂涂我做的蛋糕,

涂涂在日记里说:他尝到了鼓励的味道。

那一刻,我也尝到了一种特别的味道,

那是一种身为师者的幸福与感动。

嗓子哑了,冯全磊、王志翔、姚文武

是你们给我送来了润喉片,

还有那个不署名的小妞,

悄悄在我桌上放了奶糖。

那个“小妞”,我总爱叫她“小妞”,

因为她是我特别喜欢的一个“小妞”。

因为我相信,她一定

会由一只“丑小鸭”变成一只“白天鹅”。

我们的祁梦丽,

一说话就紧张得脸红,

我相信,一定会有一天,

会大方地站在我们面前。

我们的邢正阳、张齐云,

写出的字,就像花卷,

我相信,一定有一天,

会有所改变。

还有很多人,

我没能一一点名,

但你们都在我的心里,

对你们的期待也一直都在心里。

希望——你们飞得更高

今天的伤感与别离,

是为了明天更好的相聚,

不管我们来自何方,

不管我们去向何处,

有一天,我们一定会再聚首。

人生的路很漫长,也很短暂,

有了困惑,尽管来找我,

在你们的人生道路上,

我会一直陪伴在你左右。

这些天,

我六年前的毕业生给我送来好消息,

一本,二本,都很棒,

我相信六年后的这时候,

你们一定会更棒!

让我们做一个约定——

让我们把相聚定在六年后,

让我们把为了梦想好好把握,

等我带完下一届六年的毕业生,

你们再来看我!

爱你们的韩老师

篇8:毕业典礼教师演讲稿

尊敬的各位领导、家长,亲爱的同学们:

大家上午好!

一号楼前南北侧,木棉花开火红时!很荣幸代表学校高三年级乃至全校老师,为我们20xx届高三所有同学送上成人之礼的美好祝愿!

亲爱的同学们,光阴荏苒,似箭而飞;时光有如白驹过隙,匆匆而逝!当你们紧张而充实地度过了海中三年甚至六年的时光,心中已然悟透“尚德、睿智、唯实、创新”这一校训的真谛之后,你们的心智已然洞开,你们的思想渐趋成熟,你们的双脚即将跨越成人之门,你们的责任与梦想也将随之而来!此时此刻,作为与你们朝夕相处的老师们,都希望你们今天过后,舒展人生大志,创造人生价值,实现人生理想!因为我们深知:你们成长于海中,却不只属于海中;成年后的'你们,更属于我们伟大的祖国,属于这个伟大的时代!

亲爱的同学们,成人之际,你们意识到了吗?你们美丽生命的起点时刻正值新千年的起点阶段。千年轮回,大道初新!你们的人生与新千年相遇,就当有与新千年共舞的奋斗精神与生命格局!你们成长于海中,肯定知道:海中的热土上承载过千千万万的生命成长。在这座既古朴厚重,又与时俱进的学堂里,当我们翻开恢弘的历史图卷,扑面而来的是海中师者以一生艰苦奋斗培育国家栋梁、构筑教育大厦的人生华章;是海中校友以经天纬地之才肩负国家责任、担当文明进步的壮丽诗行。这些人生的先行者足以告诉即将成人的你们:所有的爱与奉献,都源于生命格局;所有的进步与担当,都依靠生命格局!格局越宽广,人生便不会因为区区小利,而束缚自由的思想;格局越高远,人生便不会因为些微困难,而失去奋斗的热情;格局越磅礴,人生便不会因为重重阻隔,而忘却伟大的梦想!

所以,亲爱的同学们,作为老师,我想告诉你们。成人之后,万水千山、星辰大海便是你们人生的征途!请你们记住:在这个世界上,有你的地方就有海中,有海中的地方就有海中人铺展开的生命气象!希望你们在今后作为成人的岁月,能牢记海中校训,秉承我们作为海中人曾经习得的优良传统,做对国家、对社会、对人类文明有责任当担与积极贡献之人!

当然,亲爱的同学们,作为老师,我也相信你们。我相信你们成人之后,通过一生的努力必将有所成就,但我更相信你们能将自身价值的实现与国家的繁荣富强紧紧相连;我相信你们成人之后,对未来生活会始终心怀阳光,但我更相信你们将来在人生之路上偶遇挫折与伤痛时,能依旧勇往直前;我相信你们成人之后,将来对母校会有绵绵不绝的想念,但我更相信你们能放眼长远,胸怀海中成人礼上的铿锵誓言,以海中精神去改造社会、成就他人,让人世间的风景美如大海中烟波浩渺、云蒸霞蔚的壮丽诗篇!

亲爱的同学们,仰望星空还须脚踏实地,畅想未来更要奋力拼搏!古人云:“青春须早为,岂能长少年。”又曰:“少年易学老难成,一寸光阴不可轻。”在高考备战不足百天的这个特殊时刻,老师更想对你们说,在你们通往高考的征途上,我们高三所有老师将是你们智慧的引路人、温馨的陪伴者和坚强的支持者!你们披荆斩棘,我们便为你们披星戴月;你们膏油继晷,我们便为你们废寝忘食;你们夙兴夜寐,我们便为你们夙夜在公;你们甘之如饴,我们便为你们甘苦与共!请相信,只要我们大家一起全力以赴、刻苦用功,遵循规律、科学备考,便会收获满满信心,迎接高考辉煌时刻的到来!

亲爱的同学们,成人之后,高考之后,你们即将背负理想、担担责任,负笈远行。在今天这个特殊的日子里,最后,请允许老师赋几句藏头之诗,为你们的成人之路壮行!诗曰:

汝辈久有凌云志,即日歌诗且远方。

海风长遂青年意,中国诸君行铿锵!

谢谢大家!

篇9:毕业典礼英语演讲稿

毕业典礼英文致词

i am honored to be with you today at your commencement from one of the finest universities in the world. i never graduated from college. truth be told, this is the closest i've ever gotten to a college graduation.

today i want to tell you three stories from my life. that's it. no big deal. just three stories.

the first story is about connecting the dots.

i dropped out of reed college after the first 6 months, but then stayed around as a drop-in for another 18 months or so before i really quit. so why did i drop out?

it started before i was born. my biological mother was a young, unwed college graduate student, and she decided to put me up for adoption. she felt very strongly that i should be adopted by college graduates, so everything was all set for me to be adopted at birth by a lawyer and his wife. except that when i popped out they decided at the last minute that they really wanted a girl. so my parents, who were on a waiting list, got a call in the middle of the night asking: “we have an unexpected baby boy; do you want him?” they said: “of course.” my biological mother later found out that my mother had never graduated from college and that my father had never graduated from high school. she refused to sign the final adoption papers. she only relented a few months later when my parents promised that i would someday go to college.

and 17 years later i did go to college. but i naively chose a college that was almost as expensive as stanford, and all of my working-class parents' savings were being spent on my college tuition. after six months, i couldn't see the value in it. i had no idea what i wanted to do with my life and no idea how college was going to help me figure it out. and here i was spending all of the money my parents had saved their entire life. so i decided to drop out and trust that it would all work out ok. it was pretty scary at the time, but looking back it was one of the best decisions i ever made. the minute i dropped out i could stop taking the required classes that didn't interest me, and begin dropping in on the ones that looked interesting.

it wasn't all romantic. i didn't have a dorm room, so i slept on the floor in friends' rooms, i returned coke bottles for the 5 deposits to buy food with, and i would walk the 7 miles across town every sunday night to get one good meal a week at the hare krishna temple. i loved it. and much of what i stumbled into by following my curiosity and intuition turned out to be priceless later on. let me give you one example: reed college at that time offered perhaps the best calligraphy instruction in the country. throughout the campus every poster, every label on every drawer, was beautifully hand calligraphed. because i had dropped out and didn't have to take the normal classes, i decided to take a calligraphy class to learn how to do this. i learned about serif and san serif typefaces, about varying the amount of space between different letter combinations, about what makes great typography great. it was beautiful, historical, artistically subtle in a way that science can't capture, and i found it fascinating.

none of this had even a hope of any practical application in my life. but ten years later, when we were designing the first macintosh computer, it all came back to me. and we designed it all into the mac. it was the first computer with beautiful typography. if i had never dropped in on that single course in college, the mac would have never had multiple typefaces or proportionally spaced fonts. and since windows just copied the mac, its likely that no personal computer would have them. if i had never dropped out, i would have never dropped in on this calligraphy class, and personal computers might not have the wonderful typography that they do. of course it was impossible to connect the dots looking forward when i was in college. but it was very, very clear looking backwards ten years later.

again, you can't connect the dots looking forward; you can only connect them looking backwards. so you have to trust that the dots will somehow connect in your future. you have to trust in something - your gut, destiny, life, karma, whatever. this approach has never let me down, and it has made all the difference in my life.

my second story is about love and loss.

i was lucky – i found what i loved to do early in life. woz and i started apple in my parents garage when i was 20. we worked hard, and in 10 years apple had grown from just the two of us in a garage into a $2 billion company with over 4000 employees. we had just released our finest creation - the macintosh - a year earlier, and i had just turned 30. and then i got fired. how can you get fired from a company you started?

well, as apple grew we hired someone who i thought was very talented to run the company with me, and for the first year or so things went well. but then our visions of the future began to diverge and eventually we had a falling out. when we did, our board of directors sided with him. so at 30 i was out. and very publicly out. what had been the focus of my entire adult life was gone, and it was devastating.

i really didn't know what to do for a few months. i felt that i had let the previous generation of entrepreneurs down - that i had dropped the baton as it was being passed to me. i met with david packard and bob noyce and tried to apologize for screwing up so badly. i was a very public failure, and i even thought about running away from the valley. but something slowly began to dawn on me – i still loved what i did. the turn of events at apple had not changed that one bit. i had been rejected, but i was still in love. and so i decided to start over.

i didn't see it then, but it turned out that getting fired from apple was the best thing that could have ever happened to me. the heaviness of being successful was replaced by the lightness of being a beginner again, less sure about everything. it freed me to enter one of the most creative periods of my life.

during the next five years, i started a company named next, another company named pixar, and fell in love with an amazing woman who would become my wife.

pixar went on to create the worlds first computer animated feature film, toy story, and is now the most successful animation studio in the world. in a remarkable turn of events, apple bought next, i retuned to apple, and the technology we developed at next is at the heart of apple's current renaissance. and laurene and i have a wonderful family together.

i'm pretty sure none of this would have happened if i hadn't been fired from apple. it was awful tasting medicine, but i guess the patient needed it.

sometimes life hits you in the head with a brick. don't lose faith. i'm convinced that the only thing that kept me going was that i loved what i did.

you've got to find what you love. and that is as true for your work as it is for your lovers. your work is going to fill a large part of your life, and the only way to be truly satisfied is to do what you believe is great work. and the only way to do great work is to love what you do. if you haven't found it yet, keep looking. don't settle. as with all matters of the heart, you'll know when you find it. and, like any great relationship, it just gets better and better as the years roll on. so keep looking until you find it. don't settle.

my third story is about death.

when i was 17, i read a quote that went something like: “if you live each day as if it was your last, someday you'll most certainly be right.” it made an impression on me, and since then, for the past 33 years, i have looked in the mirror every morning and asked myself: “if today were the last day of.

毕业典礼英文发言稿范文

president clinton:

thank you. thank you, president chen, chairmen ren, vice president chi, vice minister wei. we are delighted to be here today with a very large american delegation, including the first lady and our daughter, who is a student at stanford, one of the schools with which beijing university has a relationship. we have six members of the united states congress; the secretary of state; secretary of commerce; the secretary of agriculture; the chairman of our council of economic advisors; senator sasser, our ambassador; the national security advisor and my chief of staff, among others. i say that to illustrate the importance that the united states places on our relationship with china.

i would like to begin by congratulating all of you, the students, the faculty, the administrators, on celebrating the centennial year of your university. gongxi, beida. (applause.)

as i'm sure all of you know, this campus was once home to yenching university which was founded by american missionaries. many of its wonderful buildings were designed by an american architect. thousands of americans students and professors have come here to study and teach. we feel a special kinship with you.

i am, however, grateful that this day is different in one important respect from another important occasion 79 years ago. in june of 1919, the first president of yenching university, john leighton stuart, was set to deliver the very first commencement address on these very grounds. at the appointed hour, he appeared, but no students appeared. they were all out leading the may 4th movement for china's political and cultural renewal. when i read this, i hoped that when i walked into the auditorium today, someone would be sitting here. and i thank you for being here, very much. (applause.)

over the last 100 years, this university has grown to more than 20,000 students. your graduates are spread throughout china and around the world. you have built the largest university library in all of asia. last year, 20 percent of your graduates went abroad to study, including half of your math and science majors. and in this anniversary year, more than a million people in china, asia, and beyond have logged on to your web site. at the dawn of a new century, this university is leading china into the future.

i come here today to talk to you, the next generation of china's leaders, about the critical importance to your future of building a strong partnership between china and the united states.

the american people deeply admire china for its thousands of years of contributions to culture and religion, to philosophy and the arts, to science and technology. we remember well our strong partnership in world war ii. now we see china at a moment in history when your glorious past is matched by your present sweeping transformation and the even greater promise of your future.

just three decades ago, china was virtually shut off from the world. now, china is a member of more than 1,000 international organizations -- enterprises that affect everything from air travel to agricultural development. you have opened your nation to trade and investment on a large scale. today, 40,000 young chinese study in the united states, with hundreds of thousands more learning in asia, africa, europe, and latin america.

your social and economic transformation has been even more remarkable, moving from a closed command economic system to a driving, increasingly market-based and driven economy, generating two decades of unprecedented growth, giving people greater freedom to travel within and outside china, to vote in village elections, to own a home, choose a job, attend a better school. as a result you have lifted literally hundreds of millions of people from poverty. per capita income has more than doubled in the last decade. most chinese people are leading lives they could not have imagined just 20 years ago.

of course, these changes have also brought disruptions in settled patterns of life and work, and have imposed enormous strains on your environment. once every urban chinese was guaranteed employment in a state enterprise. now you must compete in a job market. once a chinese worker had only to meet the demands of a central planner in beijing. now the global economy means all must match the quality and creativity of the rest of the world. for those who lack the right training and skills and support, this new world can be daunting.

毕业典礼英文发言稿

i am honored to be with you today at your commencement from one of the finest universities in the world. i never graduated from college. truth be told, this is the closest i've ever gotten to a college graduation.

today i want to tell you tow stories from my life. that's it. no big deal. just tow stories.

the first story is about connecting the dots.

i dropped out of reed college after the first 6 months, but then stayed around as a drop-in for another 18 months or so before i really quit. so why did i drop out?

it started before i was born. my biological mother was a young, unwed college graduate student, and she decided to put me up for adoption. she felt very strongly that i should be adopted by college graduates, so everything was all set for me to be adopted at birth by a lawyer and his wife. except that when i popped out they decided at the last minute that they really wanted a girl. so my parents, who were on a waiting list, got a call in the middle of the night asking: ”we have an unexpected baby boy; do you want him?“ they said: ”of course.“ my biological mother later found out that my mother had never graduated from college and that my father had never graduated from high school. she refused to sign the final adoption papers. she only relented a few months later when my parents promised that i would someday go to college.

and 17 years later i did go to college. but i naively chose a college that was almost as expensive as stanford, and all of my working-class parents' savings were being spent on my college tuition. after six months, i couldn't see the value in it. i had no idea what i wanted to do with my life and no idea how college was going to help me figure it out. and here i was spending all of the money my parents had saved their entire life. so i decided to drop out and trust that it would all work out ok. it was pretty scary at the time, but looking back it was one of the best decisions i ever made. the minute i dropped out i could stop taking the required classes that didn't interest me, and begin dropping in on the ones that looked interesting.

it wasn't all romantic. i didn't have a dorm room, so i slept on the floor in friends' rooms, i returned coke bottles for the 5 deposits to buy food with, and i would walk the 7 miles across town every sunday night to get one good meal a week at the hare krishna temple. i loved it. and much of what i stumbled into by following my curiosity and intuition turned out to be priceless later on. let me give you one example: reed college at that time offered perhaps the best calligraphy instruction in the country. throughout the campus every poster, every label on every drawer, was beautifully hand calligraphed. because i had dropped out and didn't have to take the normal classes, i decided to take a calligraphy class to learn how to do this. i learned about serif and san serif typefaces, about varying the amount of space between different letter combinations, about what makes great typography great. it was beautiful, historical, artistically subtle in a way that science can't capture, and i found it fascinating.

none of this had even a hope of any practical application in my life. but ten years later, when we were designing the first macintosh computer, it all came back to me. and we designed it all into the mac. it was the first computer with beautiful typography. if i had never dropped in on that single course in college, the mac would have never had multiple typefaces or proportionally spaced fonts. and since windows just copied the mac, its likely that no personal computer would have them. if i had never dropped out, i would have never dropped in on this calligraphy class, and personal computers might not have the wonderful typography that they do. of course it was impossible to connect the dots looking forward when i was in college. but it was very, very clear looking backwards ten years later.

again, you can't connect the dots looking forward; you can only connect them looking backwards. so you have to trust that the dots will somehow connect in your future. you have to trust in something - your gut, destiny, life, karma, whatever. this approach has never let me down, and it has made all the difference in my life.

my second story is about love and loss.

i was lucky – i found what i loved to do early in life. woz and i started apple in my parents garage when i was 20. we worked hard, and in 10 years apple had grown from just the two of us in a garage into a $2 billion company with over 4000 employees. we had just released our finest creation - the macintosh - a year earlier, and i had just turned 30. and then i got fired. how can you get fired from a company you started?

well, as apple grew we hired someone who i thought was very talented to run the company with me, and for the first year or so things went well. but then our visions of the future began to diverge and eventually we had a falling out. when we did, our board of directors sided with him. so at 30 i was out. and very publicly out. what had been the focus of my entire adult life was gone, and it was devastating.

i really didn't know what to do for a few months. i felt that i had let the previous generation of entrepreneurs down - that i had dropped the baton as it was being passed to me. i met with david packard and bob noyce and tried to apologize for screwing up so badly. i was a very public failure, and i even thought about running away from the valley. but something slowly began to dawn on me – i still loved what i did. the turn of events at apple had not changed that one bit. i had been rejected, but i was still in love. and so i decided to start over.

i didn't see it then, but it turned out that getting fired from apple was the best thing that could have ever happened to me. the heaviness of being successful was replaced by the lightness of being a beginner again, less sure about everything. it freed me to enter one of the most creative periods of my life.

during the next five years, i started a company named next, another company named pixar, and fell in love with an amazing woman who would become my wife.

pixar went on to create the worlds first computer animated feature film, toy story, and is now the most successful animation studio in the world. in a remarkable turn of events, apple bought next, i retuned to apple, and the technology we developed at next is at the heart of apple's current renaissance. and laurene and i have a wonderful family together.

i'm pretty sure none of this would have happened if i hadn't been fired from apple. it was awful tasting medicine, but i guess the patient needed it.

sometimes life hits you in the head with a brick. don't lose faith. i'm convinced that the only thing that kept me going was that i loved what i did.

you've got to find what you love. and that is as true for your work as it is for your lovers. your work is going to fill a large part of your life, and the only way to be truly satisfied is to do what you believe is great work. and the only way to do great work is to love what you do. if you haven't found it yet, keep looking. don't settle. as with all matters of the heart, you'll know when you find it. and, like any great relationship, it just gets better and better as the years roll on. so keep looking until you find it. don't settle.

篇10:毕业典礼英语演讲稿

毕业典礼英语演讲稿

Thank you Bevan, thank you all!

I brought one of my paintings to show you today. Hope you guys are gonna be able see it okay.It’s not one of my bigger pieces. You might wanna move down front ― to get a good look at it. (kidding)

Faculty, Parents, Friends, Dignitaries... Graduating Class of 20xx, and all the dead baseballplayers coming out of the corn to be with us today. (laughter) After the harvest there’s noplace to hide ― the fields are empty ― there is no cover there! (laughter)

I am here to plant a seed that will inspire you to move forward in life with enthusiastic heartsand a clear sense of wholeness. The question is, will that seed have a chance to take root, or willI be sued by Monsanto and forced to use their seed, which may not be totally “Ayurvedic.” (laughter)

Excuse me if I seem a little low energy tonight ― today ― whatever this is. I slept with myhead to the North last night. (laughter) Oh man! Oh man! You know how that is, right kids?Woke up right in the middle of Pitta and couldn’t get back to sleep till Vata rolled around, but Ididn’t freak out. I used that time to eat a large meal and connect with someone special onTinder. (laughter)

Life doesn’t happen to you, it happens for you. How do I know this? I don’t, but I’m makingsound, and that’s the important thing. That’s what I’m here to do. Sometimes, I think that’sone of the only things that are important. Just letting each other know we’re here, remindingeach other that we are part of a larger self. I used to think Jim Carrey is all that I was...

Just a flickering light

A dancing shadow

The great nothing masquerading as something you can name

Dwelling in forts and castles made of witches C wishes! Sorry, a Freudian slip there

Seeking shelter in caves and foxholes, dug out hastily

An archer searching for his target in the mirror

Wounded only by my own arrows

Begging to be enslaved

Pleading for my chains

Blinded by longing and tripping over paradise C can I get an “Amen”?! (applause)

You didn’t think I could be serious did ya’? I don't think you understand who you're dealingwith! I have no limits! I cannot be contained because I’m the container. You can’t containthe container, man! You can’t contain the container! (laughter)

I used to believe that who I was ended at the edge of my skin, that I had been given this littlevehicle called a body from which to experience creation, and though I couldn’t have asked for asportier model, (laughter) it was after all a loaner and would have to be returned. Then, Ilearned that everything outside the vehicle was a part of me, too, and now I drive aconvertible. Top down wind in my hair! (laughter)

I am elated and truly, truly, truly excited to be present and fully connected to you at thisimportant moment in your journey. I hope you’re ready to open the roof and take it all in?! (audience doesn’t react) Okay, four more years then! (laughter)

I want to thank the Trustees, Administrators and Faculty of MUM for creating an institutionworthy of Maharishi’s ideals of education. A place that teaches the knowledge and experiencenecessary to be productive in life, as well as enabling the students, through TranscendentalMeditation and ancient Vedic knowledge to slack off twice a day for an hour and a half!! (laughter) ― don’t think you’re fooling me!!! ― (applause) but, I guess it has some benefits.It does allow you to separate who you truly are and what’s real, from the stories that runthrough your head.

You have given them the ability to walk behind the mind’s elaborate set decoration, and tosee that there is a huge difference between a dog that is going to eat you in your mind and anactual dog that’s going to eat you. (laughter) That may sound like no big deal, but many neverlearn that distinction and spend a great deal of their lives living in fight or flight response.

I’d like to acknowledge all you wonderful parents ― way to go for the fantastic job you’vedone ― for your tireless dedication, your love, your support, and most of all, for the attentionyou’ve paid to your children. I have a saying, “Beware the unloved,” because they willeventually hurt themselves... or me! (laughter)

But when I look at this group here today, I feel really safe! I do! I’m just going to say it ― myroom is not locked! My room is not locked! (laughter) No doubt some of you will turn out to becrooks! But white-collar stuff ― Wall St. ya’ know, that type of thing ― crimes committed bypeople with self-esteem! Stuff a parent can still be proud of in a weird way. (laughter)

And to the graduating class of 20xx ― minus 3! You didn't let me finish! (laughter) ―Congratulations! (applause) Yes, give yourselves a round of applause, please. You are thevanguard of knowledge and consciousness; a new wave in a vast ocean of possibilities. On theother side of that door, there is a world starving for new leadership, new ideas.

I’ve been out there for 30 years! She’s a wild cat! (laughter) Oh, she’ll rub up against your legand purr until you pick her up and start pettin’ her, and out of nowhere she’ll swat you in theface. Sure it’s rough sometimes but that’s OK, ‘cause they’ve got soft serve ice cream withsprinkles! (laughter) I guess that’s what I’m really here to say; sometimes it’s okay to eat yourfeelings! (laughter)

Fear is going to be a player in your life, but you get to decide how much. You can spend yourwhole life imagining ghosts, worrying about your pathway to the future, but all there will everbe is what’s happening here, and the decisions we make in this moment, which are based ineither love or fear.

So many of us choose our path out of fear disguised as practicality. What we really want seemsimpossibly out of reach and ridiculous to expect, so we never dare to ask the universe for it.I’m saying, I’m the proof that you can ask the universe for it ― please! (applause) And if itdoesn't happen for you right away, it’s only because the universe is so busy fulfilling my order.It’s party size! (laughter)

My father could have been a great comedian, but he didn’t believe that was possible for him,and so he made a conservative choice. Instead, he got a safe job as an accountant, and whenI was 12 years old, he was let go from that safe job and our family had to do whatever we couldto survive.

I learned many great lessons from my father, not the least of which was that you can fail atwhat you don’t want, so you might as well take a chance on doing what you love. (applause)

That’s not the only thing he taught me though: I watched the affect my father’s love andhumor had on the world around me, and I thought, “That’s something to do, that’s somethingworth my time.”

It wasn’t long before I started acting up. People would come over to my house and they wouldbe greeted by a 7 year old throwing himself down a large flight of stairs. (laughter) They wouldsay, “What happened?” And I would say, “I don't know ― let’s check the replay.” And I wouldgo back to the top of the stairs and come back down in slow motion. (Jim reenacts coming downthe stairs in slow-mo) It was a very strange household. (laughter)

My father used to brag that I wasn’t a ham ― I was the whole pig. And he treated my talent asif it was his second chance. When I was about 28, after a decade as a professional comedian,I realized one night in LA that the purpose of my life had always been to free people fromconcern, like my dad. When I realized this, I dubbed my new devotion, “The Church ofFreedom From Concern” ― “The Church of FFC”― and I dedicated myself to that ministry.

What’s yours? How will you serve the world? What do they need that your talent can provide?That’s all you have to figure out. As someone who has done what you are about to go do, I cantell you from experience, the effect you have on others is the most valuable currency there is. (applause)

Everything you gain in life will rot and fall apart, and all that will be left of you is what was inyour heart. My choosing to free people from concern got me to the top of a mountain. Lookwhere I am ― look what I get to do! Everywhere I go C and I’m going to get emotionalbecause when I tap into this, it really is extraordinary to me ― I did something that makespeople present their best selves to me wherever I go. (applause) I am at the top of themountain and the only one I hadn’t freed was myself and that’s when my search for identitydeepened.

I wondered who I’d be without my fame. Who would I be if I said things that people didn’t wantto hear, or if I defied their expectations of me? What if I showed up to the party without myMardi Gras mask and I refused to flash my breasts for a handful of beads? (laughter) I’ll giveyou a moment to wipe that image out of your mind. (laughter)

But you guys are way ahead of the game. You already know who you are and that peace, thatpeace that we’re after, lies somewhere beyond personality, beyond the perception of others,beyond invention and disguise, even beyond effort itself. You can join the game, fight thewars, play with form all you want, but to find real peace, you have to let the armor fall. Yourneed for acceptance can make you invisible in this world. Don’t let anything stand in the wayof the light that shines through this form. Risk being seen in all of your glory. (A sheet dropsand reveals Jim’s painting. Applause.)

(Re: the painting) It’s not big enough! (kidding) This painting is big for a reason. This paintingis called “High Visibility.” (laughter) It’s about picking up the light and daring to be seen. Here’sthe tricky part. Everyone is attracted to the light. The party host up in the corner (refers topainting) who thinks unconsciousness is bliss and is always offering a drink from the bottlesthat empty you; Misery, below her, who despises the light ― can’t stand when you’re doing well― and wishes you nothing but the worst; The Queen of Diamonds who needs a King to build herhouse of cards; And the Hollow One, who clings to your leg and begs, “Please don’t leave mebehind for I have abandoned myself.”

Even those who are closest to you and most in love with you; the people you love most in theworld can find clarity confronting at times. This painting took me thousands of hours tocomplete and ― (applause) thank you ― yes, thousands of hours that I’ll never get back, I’llnever get them back (kidding) ― I worked on this for so long, for weeks and weeks, like a madman alone on a scaffolding ― and when I was finished one of my friends said, “This would be acool black light painting.” (laughter)

So I started over. (All the lights go off in the Dome and the painting is showered with blacklight.) Whooooo! Welcome to Burning Man! (applause) Some pretty crazy characters right?Better up there than in here. (points to head) Painting is one of the ways I free myself fromconcern, a way to stop the world through total mental, spiritual and physical involvement.

But even with that, comes a feeling of divine dissatisfaction. Because ultimately, we’re notthe avatars we create. We’re not the pictures on the film stock. We are the light that shinesthrough it. All else is just smoke and mirrors. Distracting, but not truly compelling.

I’ve often said that I wished people could realize all their dreams of wealth and fame so theycould see that it’s not where you’ll find your sense of completion. Like many of you, I wasconcerned about going out in the world and doing something bigger than myself, untilsomeone smarter than myself made me realize that there is nothing bigger than myself! (laughter)

My soul is not contained within the limits of my body. My body is contained within thelimitlessness of my soul ― one unified field of nothing dancing for no particular reason,except maybe to comfort and entertain itself. (applause) As that shift happens in you, youwon’t be feeling the world you’ll be felt by it ― you will be embraced by it. Now, I’m always atthe beginning. I have a reset button called presence and I ride that button constantly.

Once that button is functional in your life, there’s no story the mind could create that will beas compelling. The imagination is always manufacturing scenarios ― both good and bad ―and the ego tries to keep you trapped in the multiplex of the mind. Our eyes are not onlyviewers, but also projectors that are running a second story over the picture we see in front ofus all the time. Fear is writing that script and the working title is, ‘I’ll never be enough.’

You look at a person like me and say, (kidding) “How could we ever hope to reach those kinds ofheights, Jim? How can I make a painting that's too big for any reasonable home? How do youfly so high without a special breathing apparatus?” (laughter)

This is the voice of your ego. If you listen to it, there will always be someone who seems to bedoing better than you. No matter what you gain, ego will not let you rest. It will tell you thatyou cannot stop until you’ve left an indelible mark on the earth, until you’ve achievedimmortality. How tricky is the ego that it would tempt us with the promise of something wealready possess.

So I just want you to relax―that’s my job―relax and dream up a good life! (applause) I had asubstitute teacher from Ireland in the second grade that told my class during Morning Prayerthat when she wants something, anything at all, she prays for it, and promises something inreturn and she always gets it. I’m sitting at the back of the classroom, thinking that my familycan’t afford a bike, so I went home and I prayed for one, and promised I would recite therosary every night in exchange. Broke it―broke that promise. (laughter)

Two weeks later, I got home from school to find a brand new mustang bike with a banana seatand easy rider handlebars ― from fool to cool! My family informed me that I had won the bikein a raffle that a friend of mine had entered my name in, without my knowledge. That type ofthing has been happening ever since, and as far as I can tell, it’s just about letting theuniverse know what you want and working toward it while letting go of how it might come topass. (applause)

Your job is not to figure out how it’s going to happen for you, but to open the door in yourhead and when the doors open in real life, just walk through it. Don’t worry if you miss yourcue. There will always be another door opening. They keep opening.

And when I say, “life doesn’t happen to you, it happens for you.” I really don’t know if that’strue. I’m just making a conscious choice to perceive challenges as something beneficial sothat I can deal with them in the most productive way. You’ll come up with your own style,that’s part of the fun!

Oh, and why not take a chance on faith as well? Take a chance on faith ― not religion, but faith.Not hope, but faith. I don’t believe in hope. Hope is a beggar. Hope walks through the fire.Faith leaps over it.

You are ready and able to do beautiful things in this world and after you walk through thosedoors today, you will only ever have two choices: love or fear. Choose love, and don’t ever letfear turn you against your playful heart.

Thank you. Jai Guru Dev. I’m so honored. Thank you.

篇11:关于毕业典礼英语演讲稿

i take with me the memory of friday afternoon acm happy hours, known not for kegs of beer, but rather bowls of rainbow sherbet punch. over the several years that i attended these happy hours they enjoyed varying degrees of popularity, often proportional to the quality and quantity of the accompanying refreshments - but there was always the rainbow sherbert punch.

i take with me memories of purple parking permits, the west campus shuttle, checking my pendaflex, over-due library books, trying to print from cec, lunches on delmar, friends who slept in their offices, miniature golf in lopata hall, the greenway talk, division iii basketball, and trying to convince dean russel that yet another engineering school rule should be changed.

finally, i would like to conclude, not with a memory, but with some advice. what would a graduation speech be without a little advice, right? anyway, this advice comes in the form of a verse delivered to the 1977 graduating class of lake forest college by theodore seuss geisel, better known to the world as dr. seuss - heres how it goes:

my uncle ordered popovers from the restaurants bill of fare. and when they were served, he regarded them with a penetrating stare . . . then he spoke great words of wisdom as he sat there on that chair: ”to eat these things,“ said my uncle, ”you must excercise great care. you may swallow down whats solid . . . but . . . you must spit out the air!“

and . . . as you partake of the worlds bill of fare, thats darned good advice to follow. do a lot of spitting out the hot air. and be careful what you swallow.

thank you.

篇12:英语毕业典礼演讲稿

i am honored to be with you today at your commencement from one of the finest universities in the world. i never graduated from college. truth be told, this is the closest i've ever gotten to a college graduation.

today i want to tell you three stories from my life. that's it. no big deal. just three stories.

the first story is about connecting the dots.

i dropped out of reed college after the first 6 months, but then stayed around as a drop-in for another 18 months or so before i really quit. so why did i drop out?

it started before i was born. my biological mother was a young, unwed college graduate student, and she decided to put me up for adoption. she felt very strongly that i should be adopted by college graduates, so everything was all set for me to be adopted at birth by a lawyer and his wife. except that when i popped out they decided at the last minute that they really wanted a girl. so my parents, who were on a waiting list, got a call in the middle of the night asking: ”we have an unexpected baby boy; do you want him?“ they said: ”of course.“ my biological mother later found out that my mother had never graduated from college and that my father had never graduated from high school. she refused to sign the final adoption papers. she only relented a few months later when my parents promised that i would someday go to college.

and 17 years later i did go to college. but i naively chose a college that was almost as expensive as stanford, and all of my working-class parents' savings were being spent on my college tuition. after six months, i couldn't see the value in it. i had no idea what i wanted to do with my life and no idea how college was going to help me figure it out. and here i was spending all of the money my parents had saved their entire life. so i decided to drop out and trust that it would all work out ok. it was pretty scary at the time, but looking back it was one of the best decisions i ever made. the minute i dropped out i could stop taking the required classes that didn't interest me, and begin dropping in on the ones that looked interesting.

it wasn't all romantic. i didn't have a dorm room, so i slept on the floor in friends' rooms, i returned coke bottles for the 5 deposits to buy food with, and i would walk the 7 miles across town every sunday night to get one good meal a week at the hare krishna temple. i loved it. and much of what i stumbled into by following my curiosity and intuition turned out to be priceless later on. let me give you one example: reed college at that time offered perhaps the best calligraphy instruction in the country. throughout the campus every poster, every label on every drawer, was beautifully hand calligraphed. because i had dropped out and didn't have to take the normal classes, i decided to take a calligraphy class to learn how to do this. i learned about serif and san serif typefaces, about varying the amount of space between different letter combinations, about what makes great typography great. it was beautiful, historical, artistically subtle in a way that science can't capture, and i found it fascinating.

none of this had even a hope of any practical application in my life. but ten years later, when we were designing the first macintosh computer, it all came back to me. and we designed it all into the mac. it was the first computer with beautiful typography. if i had never dropped in on that single course in college, the mac would have never had multiple typefaces or proportionally spaced fonts. and since windows just copied the mac, its likely that no personal computer would have them. if i had never dropped out, i would have never dropped in on this calligraphy class, and personal computers might not have the wonderful typography that they do. of course it was impossible to connect the dots looking forward when i was in college. but it was very, very clear looking backwards ten years later.

again, you can't connect the dots looking forward; you can only connect them looking backwards. so you have to trust that the dots will somehow connect in your future. you have to trust in something - your gut, destiny, life, karma, whatever. this approach has never let me down, and it has made all the difference in my life.

my second story is about love and loss.

i was lucky – i found what i loved to do early in life. woz and i started apple in my parents garage when i was 20. we worked hard, and in 10 years apple had grown from just the two of us in a garage into a $2 billion company with over 4000 employees. we had just released our finest creation - the macintosh - a year earlier, and i had just turned 30. and then i got fired. how can you get fired from a company you started?

well, as apple grew we hired someone who i thought was very talented to run the company with me, and for the first year or so things went well. but then our visions of the future began to diverge and eventually we had a falling out. when we did, our board of directors sided with him. so at 30 i was out. and very publicly out. what had been the focus of my entire adult life was gone, and it was devastating.

i really didn't know what to do for a few months. i felt that i had let the previous generation of entrepreneurs down - that i had dropped the baton as it was being passed to me. i met with david packard and bob noyce and tried to apologize for screwing up so badly. i was a very public failure, and i even thought about running away from the valley. but something slowly began to dawn on me – i still loved what i did. the turn of events at apple had not changed that one bit. i had been rejected, but i was still in love. and so i decided to start over.

i didn't see it then, but it turned out that getting fired from apple was the best thing that could have ever happened to me. the heaviness of being successful was replaced by the lightness of being a beginner again, less sure about everything. it freed me to enter one of the most creative periods of my life.

during the next five years, i started a company named next, another company named pixar, and fell in love with an amazing woman who would become my wife.

pixar went on to create the worlds first computer animated feature film, toy story, and is now the most successful animation studio in the world. in a remarkable turn of events, apple bought next, i retuned to apple, and the technology we developed at next is at the heart of apple's current renaissance. and laurene and i have a wonderful family together.

i'm pretty sure none of this would have happened if i hadn't been fired from apple. it was awful tasting medicine, but i guess the patient needed it.

sometimes life hits you in the head with a brick. don't lose faith. i'm convinced that the only thing that kept me going was that i loved what i did.

you've got to find what you love. and that is as true for your work as it is for your lovers. your work is going to fill a large part of your life, and the only way to be truly satisfied is to do what you believe is great work. and the only way to do great work is to love what you do. if you haven't found it yet, keep looking. don't settle. as with all matters of the heart, you'll know when you find it. and, like any great relationship, it just gets better and better as the years roll on. so keep looking until you find it. don't settle.

my third story is about death.

when i was 17, i read a quote that went something like: ”if you live each day as if it was your last, someday you'll most certainly be right.“ it made an impression on me, and since then, for the past 33 years, i have looked in the mirror every morning and asked myself: ”if today were the last day of

篇13:英语毕业典礼演讲稿

first of all, we must cultivate students' interest in english study. let students in learning to find joy in joy in the interest of interest, found in the determination of decision and perseverance, namely train drivers + + to + perserve = interest. of course started to learn english, don't be too hard. guiding students from the simple, funny, funny began to enable students to find suitable for their interest in learning. and they decide to “light” surveys. and allow students to go wrong, don't pursue every word is correct. ,

secondly, the students have interest, help them to plan. watch english materials and listen to english radio, looking for learning environment, life is much, learn english and have much broader, take every chance to exposure to english. in class, students try to speak in english, usually between classmates exchange, encourage students to use english, don't be afraid of making mistakes the wrong. to establish weekly learning new words in the target, the vocabulary, records recorded all sorts of new words and phrases. because learning english must have vocabulary as the foundation, will play a protracted war, remembering words to guerrilla warfare. can make them more “to” surveys.

learning english as friends, in different occasions contact might remember, not isolated words and remember its neighbors. it is necessary to guide students to read, this of learning english is very important to have more understanding of western culture and western learning habit, master of language background is also an important way of learning. then two chinese ppc to achieve. we finally achieved the goal “, two surveys to two chinese to spending.”

finally, let students enjoy happiness in suffering, more study is interesting, from passive to active, change from me to learn to learn.

译文

首先,我们要培养学生学习英语的兴趣。让学生在学习中去寻找欢乐,在欢乐中找到兴趣,在兴趣中下决心,在决心中培养毅力,即动因+兴趣+决心+持之以恒=成绩。当然开始学英语时不要追求太高,太难。指导学生从简单的,有趣的,好笑的开始使学生找出适合自己的学习兴趣。同时引导他们“from easy to difficult.”。并允许学生出错,不要追求每个单词都正确。,

其次,学生有了兴趣,帮助他们制定计划。每天看英语材料和听英语广播,寻找学习环境,生活范围有多大,学英语的天地就有多宽广,利用一切机会去接触英语。在课堂上让学生试着讲英语,平时同学之间交流时多用英语,鼓励学生不要怕出错,错了没关系。同时要建立每周学习生词的目标,在记录词汇本里,记录各种各样的生词,短语。因为学好英语必须要有词汇作基础,要打持久战;记单词要打游击战。就能做到“from little to more”。

学英语如同交朋友,在不同的场合接触就可能记牢,不能孤立的记单词,要记住它的左邻右舍。同时很有必要指导学生大量的.阅读,这对学习英语有是非常重要的,多了解西方文化,学习西方习惯,掌握大量的语言背景是学习的又一条重要途径。那么就达到from chinese to english。我们最终要达到目的 “from english to english ,from english to chinese ”

最后,让学生在苦中享受欢乐,越学越有趣,从被动变主动,从要我学变为我要学.

篇14:毕业典礼英语演讲稿

Thank you very much, Margaret, for that very generous introduction.

First, let me say congratulations to our graduates. Welcome back to our alumni. Good afternoon to everyone – colleagues and friends, and family members, loved ones, and our most special guest – our eminent speaker. It’s a pleasure to address you this afternoon and to offer a few reflections as I approach the end of my first year as president.

I realize, however, that I’m literally the last thing standing between you and the speech that you’ve all actually come here to hear. So, while I can’t promise to be mesmerizingly eloquent, I can at least promise to be mercifully brief.

We gather this afternoon buoyed by the aspirations of our graduates – some 7,100 people who have distinguished themselves in nearly every field and every discipline imaginable. We welcome them into the venerable ranks of our alumni, and we send them forth into a world that is very much in need of both their minds and their hearts.

篇15:毕业典礼英语演讲稿

you all are leaving your alma mater now. i have no gift to present you all except a piece of advice.

what i would like to advise is that “don’t give up your study.” most of the courses you have taken are partly for your certificate. you had no choice but to take them. from now on, you may study on your own. i would advise you to work hard at some special field when you are still young and vigorous. your youth will be gone that will never come back to you again. when you are old, and when your energy are getting poorer, you will not be able to as you wish to. even though you have to study in order to make a living, studies will never live up to you. making a living without studying, you will be shifted out in three or five years. at this time when you hope to make it up, you will say it is too late. perhaps you will say, “after graduation and going into the society, we will meet with an urgent problem, that is, to make a living. for this we have no time to study. even though we hope to study, we have no library nor labs, how can we study further?”

i would like to say that all those who wait to have a library will not study further even though they have one and all these who wait to have a lab will not do experiments even though they have one. when you have a firm resolution and determination to solve a problem, you will naturally economize on food and clothing.

as for time, i should say it’s not a problem. you may know that every day he could do only an hour work, not much more than that because darwin was ill for all his life. you must have read his achievements. every day you spend an hour in reading 10 useful pages, then you will read more than 3650 pages every year. in 30 years you will have read 110,000 pages.

my fellow students, reading 110,000 pages will make you a scholar. but it will take you an hour to read three kinds of small-sized newspapers and it will take you an hour and a half to play four rounds of mahjian pieces. reading small-sized newspapers or playing mahjian pieces, or working hard to be a scholar? it’s up to you all.

henrik ibsen said, “it is your greatest duty to make yourself out.”

studying is then as tool as casting. giving up studying will destroy yourself.

i have to say goodbye to you all. your alma mater will open her eyes to see what you will be in 10 years. goodbye!

毕业典礼英语演讲稿范文

篇16:毕业典礼英语演讲稿

i am honored to be with you today at your commencement from one of the finest universities in the world. i never graduated from college. truth be told, this is the closest i've ever gotten to a college graduation.

today i want to tell you three stories from my life. that's it. no big deal. just three stories.

the first story is about connecting the dots.

i dropped out of reed college after the first 6 months, but then stayed around as a drop-in for another 18 months or so before i really quit. so why did i drop out?

it started before i was born. my biological mother was a young, unwed college graduate student, and she decided to put me up for adoption. she felt very strongly that i should be adopted by college graduates, so everything was all set for me to be adopted at birth by a lawyer and his wife. except that when i popped out they decided at the last minute that they really wanted a girl. so my parents, who were on a waiting list, got a call in the middle of the night asking: “we have an unexpected baby boy; do you want him?” they said: “of course.” my biological mother later found out that my mother had never graduated from college and that my father had never graduated from high school. she refused to sign the final adoption papers. she only relented a few months later when my parents promised that i would someday go to college.

and 17 years later i did go to college. but i naively chose a college that was almost as expensive as stanford, and all of my working-class parents' savings were being spent on my college tuition. after six months, i couldn't see the value in it. i had no idea what i wanted to do with my life and no idea how college was going to help me figure it out. and here i was spending all of the money my parents had saved their entire life. so i decided to drop out and trust that it would all work out ok. it was pretty scary at the time, but looking back it was one of the best decisions i ever made. the minute i dropped out i could stop taking the required classes that didn't interest me, and begin dropping in on the ones that looked interesting.

it wasn't all romantic. i didn't have a dorm room, so i slept on the floor in friends' rooms, i returned coke bottles for the 5 deposits to buy food with, and i would walk the 7 miles across town every sunday night to get one good meal a week at the hare krishna temple. i loved it. and much of what i stumbled into by following my curiosity and intuition turned out to be priceless later on. let me give you one example: reed college at that time offered perhaps the best calligraphy instruction in the country. throughout the campus every poster, every label on every drawer, was beautifully hand calligraphed. because i had dropped out and didn't have to take the normal classes, i decided to take a calligraphy class to learn how to do this. i learned about serif and san serif typefaces, about varying the amount of space between different letter combinations, about what makes great typography great. it was beautiful, historical, artistically subtle in a way that science can't capture, and i found it fascinating.

none of this had even a hope of any practical application in my life. but ten years later, when we were designing the first macintosh computer, it all came back to me. and we designed it all into the mac. it was the first computer with beautiful typography. if i had never dropped in on that single course in college, the mac would have never had multiple typefaces or proportionally spaced fonts. and since windows just copied the mac, its likely that no personal computer would have them. if i had never dropped out, i would have never dropped in on this calligraphy class, and personal computers might not have the wonderful typography that they do. of course it was impossible to connect the dots looking forward when i was in college. but it was very, very clear looking backwards ten years later.

again, you can't connect the dots looking forward; you can only connect them looking backwards. so you have to trust that the dots will somehow connect in your future. you have to trust in something - your gut, destiny, life, karma, whatever. this approach has never let me down, and it has made all the difference in my life.

my second story is about love and loss.

i was lucky – i found what i loved to do early in life. woz and i started apple in my parents garage when i was 20. we worked hard, and in 10 years apple had grown from just the two of us in a garage into a $2 billion company with over 4000 employees. we had just released our finest creation - the macintosh - a year earlier, and i had just turned 30. and then i got fired. how can you get fired from a company you started?

well, as apple grew we hired someone who i thought was very talented to run the company with me, and for the first year or so things went well. but then our visions of the future began to diverge and eventually we had a falling out. when we did, our board of directors sided with him. so at 30 i was out. and very publicly out. what had been the focus of my entire adult life was gone, and it was devastating.

i really didn't know what to do for a few months. i felt that i had let the previous generation of entrepreneurs down - that i had dropped the baton as it was being passed to me. i met with david packard and bob noyce and tried to apologize for screwing up so badly. i was a very public failure, and i even thought about running away from the valley. but something slowly began to dawn on me – i still loved what i did. the turn of events at apple had not changed that one bit. i had been rejected, but i was still in love. and so i decided to start over.

i didn't see it then, but it turned out that getting fired from apple was the best thing that could have ever happened to me. the heaviness of being successful was replaced by the lightness of being a beginner again, less sure about everything. it freed me to enter one of the most creative periods of my life.

during the next five years, i started a company named next, another company named pixar, and fell in love with an amazing woman who would become my wife.

篇17:毕业典礼英语演讲稿

pixar went on to create the worlds first computer animated feature film, toy story, and is now the most successful animation studio in the world. in a remarkable turn of events, apple bought next, i retuned to apple, and the technology we developed at next is at the heart of apple's current renaissance. and laurene and i have a wonderful family together.

i'm pretty sure none of this would have happened if i hadn't been fired from apple. it was awful tasting medicine, but i guess the patient needed it.

sometimes life hits you in the head with a brick. don't lose faith. i'm convinced that the only thing that kept me going was that i loved what i did.

you've got to find what you love. and that is as true for your work as it is for your lovers. your work is going to fill a large part of your life, and the only way to be truly satisfied is to do what you believe is great work. and the only way to do great work is to love what you do. if you haven't found it yet, keep looking. don't settle. as with all matters of the heart, you'll know when you find it. and, like any great relationship, it just gets better and better as the years roll on. so keep looking until you find it. don't settle.

my third story is about death.

when i was 17, i read a quote that went something like: “if you live each day as if it was your last, someday you'll most certainly be right.” it made an impression on me, and since then, for the past 33 years, i have looked in the mirror every morning and asked myself: "if today were the last day of

篇18:毕业典礼英语演讲稿

Sasha Kill Ewald, who’s revealing how marriage and parenthood affects wages, and helping us understand why economic inequality persists across?generations – and also how we might break the cycle of poverty.I’ve also come to know about the work…

Of Conor Walsh, who’s helping people with neurodegenerative and neuromuscular diseases walk again with soft exosuits that use the latest robotic technology to help improve movement;

Of Sara Bleich, who’s helping to address the obesity epidemic by considering how changes in public policy can reduce consumption of?high-calorie foods and soft drinks;

Of Tony Jack, who’s changing how colleges th ink about supporting disadvantaged students and improving their prospects not just in college but throughout life;

Of Arlene Sharpe and Gordon Freeman, who are giving hope to cancer patients by harnessing the body’s own immune system to treat disease;

Of Xiaowei Zhuang, whose super-resolution imaging is enabling scientists to look inside cells with unprecedented clarity and see how molecules function and interact;

Of Andrew Crespo, who’s culled massive amounts of data from our trial courts to change how we think about our system of criminal justice – and how we might actually improve it.

篇19:毕业典礼英语演讲稿

I’ve yet to meet anyone who thinks that this world that we live in is?perfect.?

This is not a political statement. It’s equally true of liberals and conservatives, Democrats and Republicans. And if you don’t think the world that we live in is perfect, the only way it gets better is if good people work to repair it. Our students, our faculty, our staff and alumni are doing that daily, and it makes me so proud.

This year, I had the privilege to meet, and be moved by, not just one but two of the nation’s preeminent poets – the United States Youth Poet Laureate, our own Amanda Gorman, and the United States Poet Laureate, our own Tracy K. Smith. I’ve also had the chance to marvel at artists who every day breathe life into our campus with their performances and their creative work –it’s amazing to see the talent that is represented on this campus and among our alumni, our faculty, and staff.

And every day, I’ve learned more about the remarkable efforts of our faculty to improve the world:Alison Simmons and Barbara Grosz were [are] making sure that the next generation of computer scientists is prepared to address the ethical questions posed by the development of new digital technologies;

Ali Malkawi and his HouseZero, which is demonstrating the possibilities of ultra-efficient design and new building technology to respond to the threat of climate change;

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