2023年应届毕业典礼简洁三分钟英语演讲稿(通用8篇)
演讲稿也叫演讲词,它是在较为隆重的仪式上和某些公众场合发表的讲话文稿。优质的演讲稿该怎么样去写呢?下面我给大家整理了一些演讲稿模板范文,希望能够帮助到大家。
应届毕业典礼简洁三分钟英语演讲稿篇一
as you heard a moment ago, the second person to walk on the moon was buzz aldrin. buzz was the first astronaut to have a doctoral degree, and he earned it from the school that has produced more astronauts than any nonmilitary institution. in fact, of the 12 humans who have walked on the moon, four graduated from that same institution, which is known by just three letters.
mit.
you are great. i knew you could do it. “the beaver has landed!” mrs. reif, i believe they are ready.
as you…as you prepare for liftoff, i’d like to use the apollo story to reflect on a few larger lessons we hope you learned at mit because the spirit of that magnificent human project speaks to this community’s deepest values and its highest aspirations.
the first lesson is the power of interdisciplinary teams. we live in a culture that loves to single out heroes. we love to crown superstars.
as graduates of mit, however, i expect you’re already skeptical of stories of scientific triumph that have only one hero. you know by now that if you want to do something big, like detect gravitational waves in outer space or decode the human genome, or tackle climate change, or finish an 8.01 pset before sunrise, you cannot do it without a team.
as margaret hamilton herself would be quick to explain, by 1968, the mit instrumentation laboratory had 600 people working on the moon-landing software. at its peak, the mit hardware team was 400. and from virginia to texas, nasa engaged thousands more. in short, she was one star in a tremendous constellation of talent. and together – together – those stars created something impossible for any one of them to create alone.
应届毕业典礼简洁三分钟英语演讲稿篇二
as you heard earlier, just over on that side of killian court, showing off their spectacular red jackets are more than 170 members of the class of 1969. apollo 11, as you heard, landed on the moon a few weeks after their mit graduation. a number of them went on to work in fields that were greatly…greatly accelerated by progress from apollo 11. one of them is irene greif, the first woman to earn a phd in computer science from mit.
but i believe our 1969 graduates might all agree on the most important wisdom we gained from apollo: it was the sudden intense understanding of our shared humanity and of the preciousness and fragility of our blue planet.
50 years later, those lessons feel more urgent than ever, and i believe that, as members of the great global family of mit, we must do everything in our power to help make a better world. so it is in that spirit that i deliver my charge to you.
i’m going to use a word that feels very comfortable at mit, although it has taken on a troubling new meaning elsewhere. but i know that our graduates will know what i mean.
after you depart for your new destinations, i want to ask you to hack the world until you make the world a little more like mit – more daring and more passionate, more rigorous, inventive and ambitious, more humble, more respectful, more generous, more kind.
and because the people of mit also like to fix things that are broken, as you strive to hack the world, please try to heal the world, too.
应届毕业典礼简洁三分钟英语演讲稿篇三
in the next few weeks, you will encounter all sorts of moon-landing hoopla. so she wants to make sure that every one of you as well equipped with precisely engineered conversation deflectors. that way, when people start talking on and on about nasa and houston and the great vision of president kennedy, you can steer the conversation right back to mit.
if you listen carefully to our commencement speaker lecture, you’ll know how to answer what’s coming next because i’m going to give you one final little prep quiz. i’ll read the question, and you fill in the blank. and please, make it loud. and to the parents and grandparents, texting them the answer is not allowed.
question one:
in 1961, nasa realized that the moon landing required the invention of a computer-guidance system that was miniaturized, foolproof, and far more powerful than any the world had ever seen. so nasa did not call harvard. nasa called –
mit.
i know you would be good at this.
question two:
the first person to walk on the moon was a man, but at mit, among the very first programmers hired for the apollo project was not a man but a –
woman.
yes, a woman. you got it. her name is margaret hamilton. she played a key role in developing the software that made the moon landing possible. and by the way, margaret hamilton was also one of the first to argue that computer programming deserved as much respect as computer hardware. so she insisted on describing her work with a brand-new term, software engineering.
ok, just one more.
应届毕业典礼简洁三分钟英语演讲稿篇四
in the past decade alone, we’ve seen historic hurricanes devastate islands across the caribbean. we’ve seen ‘1,000-year floods’ hit the midwestern and southern united states multiple times in a decade. and we’ve seen record-breaking wildfires ravage california and record-breaking typhoons kill thousands in the philippines.
this is a true crisis. and if we fail to rise to the occasion, your generation, your children, and grandchildren will pay a terrible price. so scientists know there can be no delay in taking action – and many government and political leaders around the world are starting to understand that.
yet here in the united states, our federal government is seeking to become the only country in the world to withdraw from the paris climate agreement – the only one. not even north korea is doing that.
those in washington who deny the science of climate change are no more based in reality than those who believe the moon landing was faked. and while the moon landing conspiracy theorists are relegated to the paranoid corners of talk radio, climate skeptics occupy the highest positions of power in the united states government.
now, in the administration’s defense, climate change, they say, is only a theory – yeah, like gravity is only a theory.
people can ignore gravity at their own risk, at least until they hit the ground. but when they ignore the climate crisis, they are not only putting themselves at risk, they are putting all humanity at risk.
应届毕业典礼简洁三分钟英语演讲稿篇五
two weeks ago, i was in spain. i made a pilgrimage to visit the home of one my great heroes, the catalan cellist pablo casals. he was 97 years old when i was a freshman in college. he had lived through world war i, the spanish civil war, world war ii.
i was so lucky to have played for him when i was 7 years old. he said i was talented. his advice to me then: make sure you have time to play baseball.
and i’ll let you imagine how that might have worked out.
but in reality, that wise counsel, “to make time for baseball,” was a profound reflection of the philosophy that motivated his life. casals always thought of himself as a human being first, as a musician second, and only then a cellist. it’s a philosophy that i’ve held close to my heart for most of my own life.
now, i had always known casals as a great advocate for human dignity. but standing in his home two weeks ago, i understood what it meant for him to live that philosophy, what it meant for him to be a human being first. i began to understand just a few of the thousands of actions he took every day, every month. each was in the service of his fellow human beings.
i saw letters of protest he wrote to newspapers from london to tokyo. i saw meticulous, handwritten accounts of his enormous financial contributions to countless refugees fleeing the carnage of the spanish civil war – evidence of a powerful, humanistic life.
应届毕业典礼简洁三分钟英语演讲稿篇六
thank you. thank you.
good morning, class of 20xx!
thank you, president tessier-lavigne, for that very generous introduction. i’ll do my best to earn it.
before i begin, i want to recognize everyone whose hard work made this celebration possible, including the groundskeepers, ushers, volunteers and crew. thank you.
i’m deeply honored and frankly a little astonished to be invited to join you for this most meaningful of occasions.
graduates, this is your day. but you didn’t get here alone.
family and friends, teachers, mentors, loved ones, and, of course, your parents, all worked together to make you possible and they share your joy today. here on father’s day, let’s give the dads in particular a round of applause.
stanford is near to my heart, not least because i live just a mile and a half from here.
of course, if my accent hasn’t given it away, for the first part of my life, i had to admire this place from a distance.
i went to school on the other side of the country, at auburn university, in the heart of landlocked eastern alabama.
应届毕业典礼简洁三分钟英语演讲稿篇七
taken together, these four elements of beyond carbon will be the largest coordinated assault on the climate crisis that our country has ever undertaken.
thank you. we will work to empower and expand the volunteers and activists fighting these battles community by community, state by state. it’s a process that our foundation and i have proved can succeed. after all, this isn’t the first time we’ve done an end run around washington.
a decade ago, no one would have believed that we could take on the coal industry and close half of all u.s. plants, but we have.
a decade ago, no one would have believed we could take on the nra and pass stronger gun safety laws in states like florida, colorado, and nevada, but we have.
two decades ago, no one would have believed that we could take on the tobacco industry and spread new york city’s smoking ban to most of america and to countries around the world, but we have.
and now, we will take on the fossil fuel industry to accelerate the transition to a clean energy economy. i believe we will succeed again – but only if one thing happens, and that is: you have to help lead the way by raising your voices, by joining an advocacy group, by knocking on doors, by calling your elected officials, by voting, and getting your friends and family to join you.
back in the 1960s, when scientists here at mit were racing to the moon, there was a populist saying that went: if you’re not part of the solution, you’re part of the problem. today, washington is a very, very big part of the problem.
应届毕业典礼简洁三分钟英语演讲稿篇八
here’s my corollary: “your mentors may leave you prepared, but they can’t leave you ready.”
when steve got sick, i had hardwired my thinking to the belief that he would get better. i not only thought he would hold on, i was convinced, down to my core, that he’d still be guiding apple long after i, myself, was gone.
then, one day, he called me over to his house and told me that it wasn’t going to be that way.
even then, i was convinced he would stay on as chairman. that he’d step back from the day to day but always be there as a sounding board.
but there was no reason to believe that. i never should have thought it. the facts were all there.
and when he was gone, truly gone, i learned the real, visceral difference between preparation and readiness.
it was the loneliest i’ve ever felt in my life. by an order of magnitude. it was one of those moments where you can be surrounded by people, yet you don’t really see, hear or feel them. but i could sense their expectations.