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大學生畢業簡短演講稿英語稿範文(通用12篇)

大學生畢業簡短演講稿英語稿範文(通用12篇)

學生畢業簡短演講稿英語稿範文 篇1

As many of you may know, I am a first-generation college graduate – I’m proud of it. My family had very little money. We lived in a small town.

大學生畢業簡短演講稿英語稿範文(通用12篇)

And try as I might to fit in, I always felt like an outsider and often was treated as one. My father was an immigrant, and the only person around who spoke with a strong foreign accent. In elementary school, I was the only Jewish girl.

And…and one day – I remember this vividly – in fifth grade, I learned just how easily false stereotypes about minorities can arise.

That’s when another blond-haired, blue-eyed girl moved into my class. My best friend Diane took one look, turned to me, and said, “Oh! She must be Jewish, too!”

My hometown may not have understood or celebrated diversity, but it treated me and my family respectfully.

I never took that for granted given my father’s escape from Nazi Germany. My parents even joined with others in neighboring towns to create the first synagogue.

Wonderfully…wonderfully…wonderfully dedicated and caring teachers helped prepare me for college. And I couldn’t wait to go.

大學生畢業簡短演講稿英語稿範文 篇2

Thank you. Thank you.

Good morning! Good morning, Class of 20xx! You look fabulous!

Though many of you may…maybe you feel a little bit tired?

Last night, some of you were out to dinner with family. Some of you were up late packing. And some of you went out with classmates and friends.

And this is Penn, I have to ask: How many of you managed to do all three?

Okay, I thought so! But did anyone here last night find time to turn on the TV…maybe turn it on…to HBO?

Are you ready? Are you ready? It’s time for a special edition of Game of Thrones!

Graduates: All of you today sit on either side of a great divide.

To my right: Southern Alliance! Among you are several Great Houses.

Arrayed on the field are members of House Engineering! House Nursing! House Wharton! Houses…Houses Medicine to Dental; Law to…Law to Design; SP2 to Education; and Annenberg to Vet! All…all of you to my right form the Southern Alliance!

Now, to my left: The Northern Alliance! Your Great…your Great Houses may be fewer…your Great Houses may be fewer, but man, are they big?

大學生畢業簡短演講稿英語稿範文 篇3

Arrayed on the field, as you can see, are the members…many members of House College! And House Arts and Sciences! All of you…all of you to my left form the Northern Alliance.

We have two sides, and spoiler alert: we’re going to do battle. But instead of a battle with spears, this will be a Battle of Cheers.

Whoops! Who left a Starbucks cup here? Not supposed to be here! Oh well, oh well…. We’ll figure that out later.

I’m…I’m going to call on each of your Alliances in turn. When I do, you need to make…I hate to ask, I know how hard it is, but you need to make the most noise you can. The side that cheers the loudest wins! Okay? Ready?

Okay, let’s hear it from the Southern Alliance!

Impressive! Impressive! Okay, now let’s hear it from the Northern Alliance! Alright! Also …also impressive!

Both sides gave it your very best shot. Now it falls to me….

But I will not call a winner. Instead, instead, I ask you to consider this a window into the human heart.

Listen up. Here we are, proud members of the Penn community – this beloved community. Yet, when called upon, how readily we divide to do battle for our side.

Game of Thrones became a global phenomenon for many reasons. We obsess over the characters. We love the dragons and the drama. But its deepest attraction is allegorical.

大學生畢業簡短演講稿英語稿範文 篇4

As Daniel goes on to Teach for America, he leaves a university that is changed for the better.

The changes you have seen on campus and around the globe also provide a roadmap that can serve as a guide to the changes you can create in society.

Purposefully contributing to change requires courage, trust, and the willingness to listen and consider many voices. It works best when trust is built by finding common ground, and when we reject the view that it is “us versus them” — that there must be winners and losers.

This is how we can overcome the erosion of trust and begin to collaborate to work through differences.

It takes courage to open ourselves up to opinions and interpretations we don’t agree with. But it’s also how we learn, sharpen our own arguments, and hone our ability to persuade others.

Your time at Michigan has provided a wonderful proving ground to develop your ability to create change. Where else can you seek solutions among such talented scholars, all pursuing knowledge and understanding to advance a quintessentially public mission?

U-M is a place where data and evidence matter, where all voices can be heard, and where talented and hard-working students emerge as leaders and best.

大學生畢業簡短演講稿英語稿範文 篇5

Our passion for change is why we are the nation’s No. 1 public research university.

It’s why the discovery process has been a foundational centerpiece of our Michigan DNA for more than 200 years.

It’s why we strive, always, to extend our impact beyond the borders of our campus – to the communities we serve, and to the frontiers of human knowledge that now span galaxies.

It’s why I hope you are asking, on the day of your graduation, what you can change next.

The challenges we face as a society are numerous and complex – from climate change to poverty to conflict between nations.

But these and many other challenges can unite us as we strive for change – if we choose the path of courage.

Listen to different views.

Trust one another.

Find common ground.

And commit to the discussions and the discoveries that can produce a better world.

Class of 20xx, our society is yours to change.

Seek out new evidence, develop new methods, and consider many points of view.

And choose the path that will make ours a better world – as you Go discover, Go achieve, Go serve, and Go Blue!

大學生畢業簡短演講稿英語稿範文 篇6

We live in an era of accelerating change where often as a society and as individuals we seem to be struggling to keep up.

Graduation is all about change. And at Michigan that means it’s not only about the change in you, it’s about the changes you will contribute to in society.

In the fall of 20xx, when many of you started as undergraduates here at Michigan, our world was a different place.

Me Too was not yet a hashtag. The event horizon of a black hole had never been imaged. And midterm voter turnout on university campuses across the country was just 19 percent.

Each of these examples, in their own way, demonstrates the often long and difficult path to change.

The Me Too Movement was founded in 20xx by activist and sexual assault survivor Tarana Burke. Burke wanted to provide a place for survivors to tell their stories, for empathy, and for healing.

She spent more than a decade persevering and advocating on the behalf of those whose stories are marginalized, or not told at all. Then the idea she started went viral, transforming into global conversation and, we must hope, change.

The image of the black hole event horizon presented last month required two years of computer analysis, data from 8 observatories on three continents, and a team of 200 scientists, which included 20xx U-M Electrical Engineering graduate Katie Bouman.

We have now seen what had previously been described as un-seeable, and pushed the frontiers of knowledge to the darkest regions of the universe.

And during the 20xx midterm election, Tufts University reports that youth turnout increased in every state for which they have data. In 27 states, it rose by double digits.

Plus, precincts that serve Big Ten campuses saw their turnout increase by an average of 24 percentage points. This is more than double the increase in nearby areas, indicating that students made their voice heard. Higher turnout was a goal of the Big Ten Voting Challenge. Well done!

Choosing to commit to the work needed to make change, and see it through, can produce amazing results – but it can also frustrate.

Change doesn’t happen in a straight line. It’s messy. It can take years, or even decades.

But when it is founded on principled dedication, collaboration, and hope – all the ingredients are in place.

Our campus has wonderful examples.

大學生畢業簡短演講稿英語稿範文 篇7

Last month we opened our Trotter Multicultural Center on State Street. This inspirational new home devoted to unity, peace and understanding brings together people from all backgrounds, in a building planned and designed in collaboration with students.

It was an historic change for our campus — and it was made possible by a legacy of student activism. Members of our Black Student Union, past and present, shared their experiences on our campus and their aspirations for a better Michigan. Some are even graduating today.

They mobilized their fellow students and called on, and worked with, the university to create the new Trotter.

And while our work to enhance diversity, equity and inclusion is far from finished, the University of Michigan is changed for the better.

Another member of the Class of 20xx used the power of journalism to create change.

In March of 20xx, Kevin Sweitzer wrote an editorial in the Michigan Daily criticizing the name of a house in our West Quad residence hall. Winchell House had been named after a 19th century U-M professor, whose published work supported white supremacy.

In 20xx, Kevin submitted a formal request under the process we established to reconsider the names of university spaces. After a review by our prominent committee of historians, humanists, and many other experts, we removed the Winchell name.

Kevin is graduating today, from a university changed for the better.

CSG President Daniel Greene, who also graduates today, spent much of his time in office advocating for greater affordability, food security, mental health services, and diversity.

The results produced by CSG this year include a housing survey, the expansion of a food pantry for students in need, greater mental health awareness, and a plan to help student organizations achieve their full potential.

大學生畢業簡短演講稿英語稿範文 篇8

In the walls of ice, in the thrones of iron, we see a mirror for our times.

We recognize our own world, where too many live for their tribe alone. Where too often, we listen only to those who think, look, and believe as we do.

Where the game seems rigged against open and free exploration. We hear too few dissenting voices, and we consider too few conflicting views. But remember: None of this is inevitable.

We can glorify our own tribe to the exclusion of others. We can build up our walls, and we can cast down those who are different.

Or we can better use the strength in our hearts and the power in our hands.

Our many identities and beliefs: We make these our threads. Our diverse backgrounds and goals: They become our loom.

From this world of differences, we can weave a tapestry of communities.

Weaving…yeah…weaving is hard work, especially when we interlace many into one. Our identities may clash. Our beliefs diverge. We disagree over where we want to go. We argue about the best way to get there.

But when – together – we embrace the challenge, the cloth of human understanding grows more resilient. We craft something stronger by far…by far than iron thrones and walls of ice.

大學生畢業簡短演講稿英語稿範文 篇9

when I finally arrived on campus, I was in for a surprise. In fact, I was stunned. I had never before in my life felt poor. As a scholarship student, suddenly, I was surrounded by people who were so astoundingly rich! I was also fascinated by this and other differences – different faiths, politics, ethnicities, and culture.

And sure, at times it was uncomfortable. There were many moments I just wanted to turn around and go back home to my mother’s warm embrace – and also her great home cooking!

And like every one of you…every one of you, I made the best, most important choice of my life: I would pick up the threads of differences to weave myself a new community.

This would become my cause, my mission, my identity. I had found my purpose, rooted in beloved community.

I was inspired by the work of Dr. Martin Luther King. He called upon us all to embrace inclusion, love, and justice. He preached the soul force of nonviolent protest.

He warned against the perils of tribalism, of clinging to the familiar and holding sacred the status quo.

King famously addressed his…go ahead…he famously addressed his “Letter from a Birmingham Jail” not to his jailers, but to his “fellow clergymen.”

He challenged them to reject the status quo. In King’s words, we find the essence of beloved community, recognizing that: “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.”

大學生畢業簡短演講稿英語稿範文 篇10

Commencement is a milestone—one of life’s landmark occasions, a time when graduates, family members, and friends gather to celebrate past and future.

At the University of Michigan, Spring Commencement is a festive, campus-wide event where graduates are recognized by their school or college as a group, and honorary degrees are conferred. In addition to Spring Commencement, which all graduates are welcome to attend, each school, college and campus hold individual ceremonies to celebrate their graduates’ s of 20xx, Congratulations!

I join your professors, family members and friends in expressing my utmost pride as we celebrate your accomplishments as the newest graduates of the University of Michigan.

Graduates, you did it!

Each one of you earned a place here – and you made the most of it.

I know that for many of you, the road to get here was not easy. Perhaps you traversed some potholes along the way.

I have it on the highest authority, however, that these potholes are about to be filled, and the roads are going to get fixed …

But for those of you who are first-generation students, military veterans, or from communities, cities and towns that don’t send many students to Michigan – I hope you are especially relishing this day.

As members of the Class of 20xx, all of you have conquered the rigors of our curricula.

You exceled in your studies, your research, your advocacy and your service. You found ways to navigate central campus, when we decided to renovate the LS&A building and the Union at the same time. And you even survived a polar vortex – with not one, but TWO, days of canceled classes.

Since we are here, you must have used that time to study.

大學生畢業簡短演講稿英語稿範文 篇11

我是湖北民族學院應屆本科畢業生,專業是臨牀醫學。明年6月我將順利畢業並獲得臨牀醫學學士學位。近期獲知貴公司正在招聘人才,我自信我在大學五年的學習情況會有助於我來應聘這些職位。

大學五年,我努力學習各門專業知識,在校時各科考試均取得了優良的成績。實習期間,我積極主動學習,對於各科的常見多發病有了較深的瞭解。特別是外科,曾在老師指導下主刀一次闌尾切除術,獲得了帶教老師的好評。

我有較好的計算機知識和應用能力,並於20xx年通過了全國計算機等級考試(二級qbasic)的考核,現在正準備參加三級網絡技術考試。我能熟練的進行windows98操作,並能使用c,qbasic等語言編程,並能熟練運用offices軟件。我具備英語的聽説讀寫能力,於20xx年通過了cet-4。

在大學期間,我多次獲得各項獎學金,發表多篇文章,還擔任過班幹部,具有很強的組織和協調能力。很強的事業心和責任感使我能夠面隊任何困難和挑戰。我很希望能加盟貴公司,發揮我的潛力。隨信附上我的簡歷。如有機會與您面談,我將十分感謝。

大學生畢業簡短演講稿英語稿範文 篇12

本人性格開朗具親和力,樂觀耿直,誠實守信,有良好的心理素質,環境適應性強,有吃苦的精神,做事有毅力,喜歡挑戰,行事積極認真富有責任心;能夠注意統籌安排,進行有效的自我管理;注重團隊協作,善於溝通協調;學習能力強,並喜歡學習和接受新事物,深信有耕耘就會有收穫。憑着年輕,我會不懈努力,讓自己做得更好。給我一個舞台,我會給你滿意的表現。相信年輕,相信自己!您的信任與我的實力將為我們帶來共同的成功!

誠實守信,待人處事熱情大方,性格開朗,能很快接受新事物,富有創新和開拓意識,勇於挑戰自我,有較強的時間觀念和責任心,善於思考,虛心向學,並始終堅持嚴於律己,寬以待人,懂得“若要人敬己,先要己敬人”的道理,良好的人際關係和豐富的專業知識為我的成功之路作了鋪墊。

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