哈佛大学毕业典礼演讲稿

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2024年哈佛大学毕业典礼致辞

2024年哈佛大学毕业典礼致辞

2024年哈佛大学毕业典礼致辞亲爱的黑格尔校长、教职员工、亲朋好友、各位毕业生:在这个令人激动的日子里,我很荣幸能够站在这里,向你们致以最诚挚的祝贺和最热烈的欢呼!首先,我想对所有即将毕业的学生们表示最衷心的祝福。

你们在过去的几年里,在哈佛这个顶尖的学府里,度过了充实而难忘的时光。

你们以无与伦比的智慧、勤奋和毅力克服了一个个的困难,向世界展示了你们的优秀和坚韧。

今天,你们告别了这片校园,迈向了新的人生阶段。

愿你们在人生的舞台上能够继续展现出自己的光辉和才华,成为无愧于哈佛大学校友的杰出代表。

回想起你们在哈佛度过的日子,我相信你们深深地感受到了这所学府的庄严和伟大。

哈佛大学作为世界顶级的学府,有着悠久的历史,庞大的资源和极高的声誉。

但哈佛大学不仅仅是建筑和声名,更是一种精神和追求。

在这里,你们不仅接受了优秀的教育,更培养了自己的思辨能力和批判思维,拥有了无限的探索精神和科学的严谨态度。

这些品质将伴随你们一生,并成为你们前行路上的宝贵财富。

在哈佛的学习是一次全方位的成长,它不仅培养了你们的学术能力,更塑造了你们的人格和价值观。

在这里,你们遇到了来自世界各地的优秀同学,交流思想,拓宽了眼界,深刻体会到了多元文化的魅力。

在这里,你们遇到了充满激情和智慧的教授,他们的教诲将让你们终身受益。

在这里,你们经历了风雨,也享受了阳光,学会了坚韧,也懂得了感恩。

这一切都使你们成熟起来,更加明确了自己的价值和责任。

2024年,是特殊的一年。

全球范围内爆发的COVID-19疫情让我们面临前所未有的挑战和考验。

可是,正是在这个特殊的时期,你们展现了非凡的勇气和坚韧。

你们顺应时代的呼唤,参与到抗击疫情的行动中,为社会做出了贡献,体现了哈佛大学学子的担当和使命感。

这一切都让我更加坚信,你们将成为未来的领军人物,为人类的进步和社会的发展贡献力量。

在这个动荡的时代,世界正发生着翻天覆地的变化。

科技的进步正在以前所未有的速度改变着我们的生活和工作方式。

哈佛大学毕业演讲

哈佛大学毕业演讲

哈佛大学毕业演讲各位亲爱的校友、教授和家长们:我感到非常荣幸能够在这里演讲。

首先,我要感谢我的父母,感谢他们一直以来对我的支持和鼓励。

同时,也要感谢哈佛大学为我们提供了如此卓越的教育资源和学习环境。

我们在哈佛度过了如此宝贵的四年时光,我们学习了很多知识,结交了许多朋友,也经历了许多挑战和困难。

这段时光给我们的生命带来了巨大的改变,使我们更加成熟和坚强。

但是,我相信,毕业并不代表着我们一切结束,相反,它标志着我们迎接新的挑战和机遇的开始。

我们所学到的知识和经验将成为我们人生道路上宝贵的财富。

在哈佛的四年里,我学到了很多关于知识和学术方面的东西,但最重要的是,我学会了如何思考、如何与人相处、如何处理各种问题。

这些技能和品质将伴随我们一生,无论我们走到哪里,干什么工作,都能给予我们帮助。

与此同时,我也深刻认识到,知识和学历并不是衡量一个人成功与否的唯一标准。

要想在这个竞争激烈的社会中取得成功,我们还需要智慧、勇气、毅力和创造力。

在我们即将面临的社会中,竞争将愈发激烈,机遇也愈发珍贵。

因此,我们要敢于追求自己的梦想,不要因为困难而气馁,要坚持不懈地追求成功。

同时,我们也要保持一颗谦虚的心态,永远保持学无止境的精神。

无论我们取得什么成就,都要保持对知识和学术的敬畏之心,时刻保持学习的姿态。

最后,我想借此机会感谢所有曾经对我们提供帮助和支持的人们。

感谢所有的教师和家长们,在我们成长的道路上给予了无私的关怀和指导。

感谢我们的同学们,在困难时与我们同甘共苦,在快乐时与我们分享喜悦。

我相信,只要我们保持对美好未来的憧憬和追求,只要我们坚持自己的理想和信念,我们一定能够在人生道路上取得辉煌的成就。

最后,祝愿所有的毕业生们,在追逐理想的道路上永远勇往直前,取得辉煌的成就。

谢谢大家。

哈佛大学校长毕业演讲

哈佛大学校长毕业演讲

哈佛大学校长毕业演讲尊敬的校友、亲爱的毕业生们:首先,我要向大家表示最诚挚的祝贺!今天,你们终于取得了这镀金的文凭,并且即将迈入你们的新人生阶段。

这是你们的辛勤努力和不懈追求的结果,你们真正理解了为何哈佛大学是世界一流的学术殿堂。

当然,今天是属于你们的盛大日子,但是,我希望借此机会与你们共同回顾一下这四年来我们一同经历的点点滴滴。

从入学的那一天开始,你们就背负着压力和期望,学术上的挑战和生活上的困难都让你们疲于奔命。

然而,这一切都是必要的,因为只有这样你们才能真正成为强大的领导者和改变者。

哈佛大学一直以来都培养出了众多的杰出毕业生,他们在政治、商业、科学、艺术等各个领域都取得了非凡的成就。

而这一切都得益于哈佛大学不仅严格的学术要求,而且出色的教育体系和丰富多彩的校园生活。

我们希望你们将所学所盛于心,并且将哈佛的精神传承下去。

当你们以哈佛毕业生的身份踏入社会后,你们将承担着更多的责任与挑战。

无论你们选择什么职业,无论你们身在何地,请记住作为哈佛毕业生,你们具备着独特的优势和使命。

你们要为正义而奋斗,为科学而探索,为人类的进步而努力。

但是,我也要提醒你们,并不是每个人都能立即见到成功和荣耀。

人生的道路往往是曲折而艰难的,你们一定会遇到挫折和困难。

但是,我希望你们记住,成功不是一蹴而就的。

要坚持不懈,要持之以恒,要相信自己的能力。

只要你们有梦想,并且为之努力,你们一定会取得成功。

最后,我要祝福每一位毕业生,愿你们的未来充满无限的可能性和机遇。

无论你们走向何方,无论你们将会面对什么,都请记住,哈佛的校友们永远都是你们的坚强后盾。

相信你们能够成为有所作为的人,默默地改变世界。

谢谢大家!。

2024年哈佛毕业典礼扎克伯格致辞

2024年哈佛毕业典礼扎克伯格致辞

2024年哈佛毕业典礼扎克伯格致辞尊敬的校长、教职员工、亲爱的毕业生们:大家好!非常感谢哈佛大学邀请我来发表演讲。

在这个特别的时刻,我感到非常荣幸能与你们共同庆祝毕业,并与你们分享一些我在人生和职业道路上的思考和经验。

首先,我要向毕业生们表示最真心的祝贺。

你们已经经历了四年的充实学习和成长,成功地完成了学业,并即将踏入新的人生阶段。

在这个过程中,你们付出了许多努力和汗水,终于迈向了成功的起点。

这是你们奋斗的结果,更是你们坚持不懈的品质的体现。

毕业是一个新的开始,一个机会去追求你们的梦想和目标。

我衷心希望每一位毕业生都能找到自己热爱的事业,并在其中大展宏图。

在这个充满机遇和挑战的世界里,什么会使你与众不同?我相信,正确的思维和积极的心态是你们在未来的道路中取得成功的关键。

首先,你们应该保持对知识的渴望和学习的热情。

在多变和竞争激烈的现代社会中,只有不断学习和适应,才能不被时代所淘汰。

哈佛大学为你们提供了丰富的知识资源和学习机会,但毕业只是一个起点,学习应该成为你们终身的追求。

不论从事何种职业,都要注重持续学习和不断自我提升,以适应未来的挑战和变革。

其次,你们应该具备创新思维和勇于尝试的勇气。

目前的世界正在飞速发展,每天都有新技术和新思维不断涌现。

要想在这个竞争激烈的时代中脱颖而出,你们需要有独立思考和创新能力。

不要惧怕失败,只有不断尝试和学会从失败中汲取经验教训,才能真正找到成功的方向。

正如史蒂夫·乔布斯所说:“创新是区别优秀和卓越的必要条件。

”相信自己的能力,敢于冒险和突破,去寻找新的机会和可能性。

此外,你们也应该培养良好的沟通和合作能力。

在现代社会中,没有一个人可以独自完成伟大的事业。

要想实现自己的目标,你们需要与他人合作,建立强大的团队,共同面对挑战并取得成功。

与人相处需要开放和谦卑的态度,要善于倾听和尊重他人的意见。

只有通过良好的沟通和合作,你们才能够互相支持和激发彼此的潜力,共同实现更大的成就。

哈佛大学校长德鲁福斯特毕业演讲稿

哈佛大学校长德鲁福斯特毕业演讲稿

哈佛大学校长德鲁福斯特毕业演讲稿尊敬的毕业生们,家长们,老师们,各位来宾:我很高兴能与这些值得尊敬的人们一同分享这个特殊而不平凡的时刻,这一时刻标志着你们的一个巨大的成就,无论你们现在转向什么领域,你们都有着无限的潜力和能力去实现自己的理想和抱负。

在你们的这个新的旅程开始之前,我想听一听我的一些建议,这些建议也适用于任何一个人的人生旅程。

我的经验告诉我这些是至关重要的。

首先,不要让那些小事毁了你的一生。

年轻人们往往容易陷入琐碎的细节中,但是,事实上,我们每个人的人生都是充满了各种大小不一的挑战和机遇,而每一个挑战和机遇都有潜力去塑造我们成为今天的自己。

所以,我们需要学会放下那些让我们分心的琐碎小事,关注那些真正重要的事情。

其次,要勇敢。

勇敢地探索新的领域,尝试新的体验,勇敢地解决你们未来面临的困难和挑战。

因为只有挑战自我的行为才会让我们成长,拥有勇气并是敢于追求梦想的关键,只有这样,我们才能成为一个更优秀、更强大的人。

不要害怕失败,只要还有机会和时间,就会有进步和成长的可能。

第三,不要忘记感恩。

毕业典礼是一个温馨和感恩的时刻,无论是向你们的家人、老师或是同学,我们都应该感恩他们的支持和帮助。

在你们的未来人生路上,也别忘了感恩来自不同领域的人们、各个阶层的人们的奉献和支持。

因为我们的成功离不开所有那些支持我们的人,而有感恩的情感和态度,会让我们更快的成长和更多的创造出更好的未来。

另外,我们还需要学会进一步推动自己。

每个人都有自己的优点和劣势,在人生的旅程中,我们需要学会认识自己,了解自己的潜力和局限性。

但是,局限性并不意味着无法突破,我们每个人都有学习和探索新领域的潜力,只要我们不断地推动和挑战自己,就能不断地拓展自己的局限性,创造更多可能。

最后,我想给大家一个最重要的忠告:人生是有意义的。

无论你的追求是什么,无论你的梦想是什么,无论你的目标是什么,我们都应该始终牢记人生的最终目标是什么,我们不仅是为了自己而存在,同时也是要为这个社会、为这个国家、为整个人类做一些有力的贡献。

2024年哈佛校长毕业典礼致辞

2024年哈佛校长毕业典礼致辞

2024年哈佛校长毕业典礼致辞各位亲爱的毕业生们、亲爱的家长们、教职员工们,以及各位嘉宾们:首先,我要向所有即将毕业的哈佛大学的学生们表示最热烈的祝贺!你们终于迎来了人生中一个重要的时刻——毕业典礼。

在这里,我代表哈佛大学全体教职员工,向你们表达最为衷心的祝福和最诚挚的祝福。

毕业这个词汇,意味着一个阶段的结束和新的篇章的开始。

它是你们多年辛勤学习和努力追求的成果,也是你们改变世界的起点。

我们为你们的成就感到骄傲和自豪。

我相信,每一个经过哈佛大学的学生,都注定了要成为一个杰出的人,去迎接未来的挑战和机遇。

回想起你们的大学生涯,我充满敬意地看到了你们的奋斗和成长。

在这里,你们拥有了世上最好的教育资源和成长环境,同时也接触到了各行各业里最聪明和热情奉献的人。

但是,请切记,学位只是一个过程的标志,真正的长进是在于在你们人生中分享和实践你们所学的知识,改变社会。

这个时代正在迅速变化、充满不确定性和挑战。

但正是在这样的背景下,你们才有机会成为世界的改变者。

记住,你们的教育使你们成为领袖,并为我们乐于迎接未来的挑战做好准备。

无论你们选择从事何种职业,无论你们走到哪里,你们都应该怀揣着我所称之为“哈佛之魂”的东西,这是创造力、激情和责任感。

在这个时刻,我郑重地提醒每一位毕业生,对社会负责。

研究显示,在人们的一生中,每个人都会影响大约10000个人。

这个数字不仅适用于科学家、艺术家和领袖,而是对每个人而言都是如此。

无论你们选择从事何种职业,每个人都有能力改变世界,影响他人。

所以,请珍视这个能力,去追求你们内心最真诚的志向。

同时,我邀请你们保持好奇心和创新精神。

在这个快速变化的时代,只有不断学习和适应新事物,才能跟上时代的步伐。

你们是未来的领导者,是全球的创新者。

勇敢地追求你们的梦想和新的机遇,用你们的奇思妙想创造未来。

最后,我想对你们的家长们表示衷心的感谢。

感谢你们对孩子们的支持、鼓励和无私付出。

你们是孩子们最坚实的后盾,你们的辛勤工作和爱才让他们能够如此辉煌地站在这里。

哈佛大学毕业演讲稿英语

哈佛大学毕业演讲稿英语

Ladies and Gentlemen, esteemed faculty, proud parents, and most importantly, the incredible Class of 2023,Good morning! Today, we gather here in this magnificent Harvard Yard, not just to celebrate the accomplishments of the Class of 2023, but to reflect on the journey that has brought us to this moment. As we stand on the precipice of our futures, I want to share with you some thoughts that have been swirling in my mind as I prepare to address you today.First and foremost, I want to congratulate each and every one of you for the incredible journey you have undertaken. Harvard is a place where dreams are fostered, where minds are stretched, and where character is forged. You have all demonstrated resilience, curiosity, and arelentless pursuit of knowledge. Your time here has been transformative, and I am confident that you will go on to make significant contributions to the world.As you leave this campus, you will carry with you not only the wisdom of your professors, but also the experiences of your fellow classmates. The friendships you have forged, the debates you have had, and the challenges you have overcome will shape you for the rest of your lives. Remember that these moments are the building blocks of your future, and they are worth cherishing.Now, let me take you back to a moment in my own life that has had a profound impact on me. It was during my freshman year of college when I first encountered the work of the famous psychologist Abraham Maslow. Maslow proposed the concept of a "hierarchy of needs," which suggests that human beings strive to fulfill certain needs before moving on to higher ones. The lowest level is the need for safety and security, and the highest level is self-actualization.As you leave Harvard, you may find yourself at various points on this hierarchy. Some of you may be secure in your careers and personal lives, while others may be navigating the uncertainties of the job market or the challenges of graduate school. But regardless of where you are, I want to encourage you to constantly seek self-actualization.Self-actualization is about embracing the unknown, about pushing the boundaries of your comfort zone, and about living a life that is authentic to who you are. It is not about the accumulation of wealth or status, but about the fulfillment of your potential and the impact you have on others.So, how do we embrace the unknown? How do we strive for self-actualization in a world that is constantly changing? Here are a few suggestions:1. Cultivate a growth mindset: Embrace challenges, be curious, and see failure as an opportunity to learn. Remember that success is not the absence of failure, but the persistence through it.2. Foster resilience: Life is unpredictable, and you will face setbacks. Develop the ability to bounce back from adversity and use those experiences as fuel for your growth.3. Seek balance: Balance your professional aspirations with your personal life. Remember that your well-being is just as important as your achievements.4. Embrace diversity: The world is a tapestry of cultures, ideas, and perspectives. Surround yourself with people who challenge you and broaden your horizons.5. Stay true to your values: In the pursuit of success, it is easy to lose sight of what truly matters to you. Stay grounded in your values and let them guide your decisions.As you embark on your post-Harvard journey, remember that the future is not a predetermined path, but a canvas upon which you will paint your own masterpiece. It is filled with possibilities, and it is up to you to create your own destiny.I want to leave you with a quote from the poet Rumi: "The only way to have a friend is to be one." As you go forth, be a friend to others. Be compassionate, be generous, and be open to the connections that will enrich your life.In closing, I want to say that you are all incredibly capable, and I have no doubt that you will achieve great things. But remember that the true measure of success is not the achievements you attain, but the impact you have on the world around you.Congratulations, Class of 2023. Go forth and make your mark on the world. The future is yours to create.Thank you.。

罗琳哈佛大学毕业典礼上的演讲稿:燃烧激情,追逐梦想模式

罗琳哈佛大学毕业典礼上的演讲稿:燃烧激情,追逐梦想模式

罗琳哈佛大学毕业典礼上的演讲稿:燃烧激情,追逐梦想模式尊敬的哈佛大学校长、各位教授和高材生:我很荣幸能够在今天的毕业典礼上,与大家分享我的人生经历和心得,以及我对于未来的展望。

作为一名成功的小说家和企业家,我相信我的历和故事能够激发你们内心的热情,追逐自己的梦想,创造更美好的未来。

成为一名小说家是我童年时的梦想。

我喜欢阅读、写作和想象。

然而,在我年轻时并没有人认为写作是一个成功的职业,只有教授、医生或者律师才能够获得社会的认可和尊重。

此,我选择了一个比较传统的路子,成为一名语言学家和教师,这也成为我写作和创业的铺垫。

然而人生道路上的起起伏伏让我发现,只有追求自己的内心激情和热爱,才能够真正地实现自己的梦想和价值。

2007年,我曾经在哈佛大学就我的人生经历和梦想发表了一次演讲,那时候我还不知道,我的一部小说《哈利波特》将彻底改变我的人生和世界。

《哈利波特》这部小说不仅成功地打破了英国和全球出版的记录,也掀起了一股全球性的魔法热潮。

我相信这部小说的成功离不开我内心的激情和对于幻想和魔法的热爱,以及我对于写作和语言的敏锐和执着。

同时,这部小说也彰显了我对于真理和正义的渴望,以及对于人性的理解和呼唤。

成功背后,也有其它的困难和挑战。

例如,我的小说曾经被一些教育家和宗教人士批评为鼓吹魔法与邪恶,挑战了传统的道德和价值观。

我深信,艺术和文化是超越国界、文化和宗教的共同语言,具有解锁人类本质和生命意义的力量。

因此,我继续坚持我的内心激情和使命,写下了我对于魔法和魔法世界的更加深入和丰富的理解和探索。

同时,我的激情和热爱也驱使我进入了商业领域。

创办和经营曾经的网站Pottermore和出版公司Wizarding World,让我实现了我的另一个梦想和愿景——将更多的人带入到我的魔法世界中来,探索、游戏和学习。

同时,这个商业模式也让我成为一个兼具文化和商业价值的企业家,探索了艺术与商业、创意与实益的融合和平衡。

我的成功并不是单方面的,其中,包括了我的团队和合作伙伴们的努力和贡献。

奥普拉哈弗毕业典礼发言稿「中英文版」

奥普拉哈弗毕业典礼发言稿「中英文版」

奥普拉哈弗毕业典礼发言稿「中英文版」奥普拉哈弗毕业典礼发言稿「中英文版」奥普拉·温弗瑞(Oprah Winfrey),1954年1月29日出生于密西西比州科修斯科,美国演员,制片,主持人,是当今世界上最具影响力的妇女之一,下面是她在哈弗大学毕业典礼上的发言稿,一起来感受一下她的魅力吧!奥普拉哈佛大学毕业典礼中英文演讲稿Oh my goodness! I’m at Harvard! Wow! To President Faust, my fellow honorans, Carl [Muller] that was so beautiful, thank you so much, and James Rothenberg, Stephanie Wilson, Harvard faculty, with a special bow to my friend Dr. Henry Lewis Gates. All of you alumni, with a speci al bow to the Class of ’88, your hundred fifteen million dollars. And to you, members of the Harvard class of 2013! Hello!我的天啊!我在哈...佛!真的!尊敬的Faust校长、和我一起获得荣誉学位的各位,Carl(注:Carl Muller哈佛校友会主席),真是太棒了,谢谢你们!还有James Rothenberg, Stephanie Wilson和哈佛的教职工们,特别感谢我的朋友Henry Lewis Gates博士(注:美国知名黑人教授)!感谢所有的哈佛校友,特别要感谢88届的毕业生,你们为哈佛捐出一亿一千五百万美元(注:哈佛历史上最多的一次同一班次校友捐款)。

所有2013届的各位毕业生们!大家好!I thank you for allowing me to be a part of the conclusion of this chapter of your lives and the commencement of your next chapter. To say that I’m honored doesn’t even begin to quantify the depth of gratitude that really accompanies an honorary doctorate from Harvard. Not too many little girls from rural Mississippi have made it all the way here to Cambridge. And I can tell you that I consider today as I sat on the stage this morning getting teary for you all and then teary for myself, Iconsider today a defining milestone in a very long and a blessed journey. My one hope today is that I can be a source of some inspiration. I’m going to address m y remarks to anybody who has ever felt inferior or felt disadvantaged, felt screwed by life, this is a speech for the Quad.感谢你们让我成为你们人生这一篇章的结束与下一篇章开始的纽带。

比尔·盖茨在哈佛大学毕业典礼上的演讲(中英文对照)[精选5篇]

比尔·盖茨在哈佛大学毕业典礼上的演讲(中英文对照)[精选5篇]

比尔·盖茨在哈佛大学毕业典礼上的演讲(中英文对照)[精选5篇]第一篇:比尔·盖茨在哈佛大学毕业典礼上的演讲(中英文对照) 比尔·盖茨和夫人梅琳达·盖茨在斯坦福大学2014年毕业典礼上的演讲。

整个演讲以“乐观”为主线,强调了他们对科技的乐观态度,以及对世界美好未来的乐观态度。

盖茨夫妇轮流讲述了自己的亲身经历和故事,告诉学生应该站在他人的立场上,感同身受那些处境不及自己的人,尽自己所能去帮助那些需要帮助的人,让全世界所有人类同胞都有一样的美好未来。

Stanford University.(斯坦福大学)BILL GATES: Congratulations, class of 2014!比尔·盖茨:2014届毕业生,祝贺你们顺利毕业(Cheers).(欢呼)Melinda and I are excited to be here.It would be a thrill for anyone to be invited to speak at a Stanford commencement, but it's especially gratifying for us.Stanford is rapidly becoming the favorite university for members of our family, and it's long been a favorite university for Microsoft and our foundation.我和梅琳达怀着激动的心情与你们欢聚在此共贺毕业。

能受邀到斯坦福大学学位授予典礼上做演讲是一件让人激动的事,对我们而言,这尤为荣幸。

斯坦福大学正日渐成为我们家庭成员最喜爱的大学。

而长久以来,斯坦福也是微软以及比尔与梅琳达基金会最喜爱的一所大学。

”Our formula has been to get the smartest, most creative people working on the most important problems.It turns out that a disproportionate number of those people are at Stanford.(Cheers).我们一直致力于让最聪颖有创造力的人攻克最为重要的问题。

迈克尔·布隆伯格在哈佛大学2023年毕业典礼英语演讲稿

迈克尔·布隆伯格在哈佛大学2023年毕业典礼英语演讲稿

迈克尔·布隆伯格在哈佛大学2023年毕业典礼英语演讲稿Dear graduating class of 2023 at Harvard University,It is truly an honor to be here with all of you today. I would like to begin by congratulating each and every one of you on achieving this incredible milestone in your lives. Graduating from Harvard University is an achievement that you should all be extremely proud of.As you embark on the next chapter of your lives, I want to share with you a few lessons that I have learned throughout my own journey that I hope will help guide you along your way.First and foremost, I want to stress the importance of hard work and determination. When I was a student at Harvard many years ago, I often found myself feeling overwhelmed and unsure of my path. But I never gave up. I worked hard, studied harder, and eventually found my way.There will be times in your life when you face setbacks and challenges, but remember that with hard work and determination you can overcome anything. Don’t let fear or doubt hold you back, and never be afraid to take risks.Secondly, I want to remind you all of the power of innovation and creativity. As you step out into the world, you will have the opportunity to make a difference and impact the lives of others. Do not be afraid to think outside the box, to come up with new ideas, and to take a chance on something that may seem unconventional.Some of the greatest inventions and ideas came from individuals who dared to dream big and were not afraid to fail. So, embrace your creativity and don’t be afraid to take chances.Lastly, I want to emphasize the importance of giving back. As you embark on your new journey, always remember to give back to your community and those in need. Whether it’s volunteering your time, donating to a charity, or simply extending a helping hand to a neighbor in need, giving back not only enriches the lives of others, but it also helps to create a better world for us all.In closing, I want to say how proud I am of each and every one of you. You have all worked incredibly hard to get to where you are today, and I know that you all have incredibly bright futures ahead of you.Congratulations, Class of 2023, and best of luck on all your future endeavors!Sincerely,Michael Bloomberg。

扎克伯格哈佛演讲稿中英文

扎克伯格哈佛演讲稿中英文

扎克伯格哈佛演讲稿中英文英文原文:President Faust, Board of Overseers, faculty, alumni, friends, proud parents, members of the ad board, and graduates of the greatest university in the world, I'm honored to be with you today because, let's face it, you accomplished something I never could. If I get through this speech, it'll be the first time I actually finish something at Harvard. Class of 2017, congratulations!I'm an unlikely speaker, not just because I dropped out, but because we're technically in the same generation. We walked this yard less than a decade apart, studied the same ideas and slept through the same Ec10 lectures. We may have taken different paths to get here, especially if you came all the way from the Quad, but today I want to share what I've learned about our generation and the world we're building together.But first, the last couple of days have brought back a lot of good memories. How many of you remember exactly what you were doing when you got that email telling you that you got into Harvard? I was playing Civilization and I ran downstairs, got my dad, and for some reason, his reaction was to video me opening the email. That could have been a really sad video. I swear, getting into Harvard is still the thing my parents are most proud of me for.What about your first lecture at Harvard? Mine was Computer Science 121 with the incredible Harry Lewis. I was late, so I threw on a t-shirt and didn't realize until afterwards it was inside out and backwards with my tag sticking out the front. I couldn't figure out why no one would talk to me — except one guy, KX Jin, he just went with it. We ended up doing our problem sets together, and now he runs a big part of Facebook. And that, Class of 2017, is why you should be nice to people.But my best memory from Harvard was meeting Priscilla. I had just launched this prank website Facemash, and the ad board wanted to "see me." Everyone thought I was going to get kicked out. My parents came to help me pack. My friends threw me a going away party. As luck would have it, Priscilla was at that party with her friend. We met in line for the bathroom in the Pfoho Belltower, and in what must be one of the all-time romantic lines, I said: "I'm going to get kicked out in three days, so we need to go on adate quickly."Actually, any of you graduating can use that line.Today I want to talk about three ways to create a world where everyone has a sense of purpose: by taking on big meaningful projects together, by redefining equality so everyone has the freedom to pursue purpose and by building community across the world.First, let's take on big meaningful projects. Our generation will have to deal with tens of millions of jobs replaced by automation like self-driving cars and trucks. But we have the potential to do so much more together. Every generation has its defining works. More than 300,000 people worked to put a man on the moon – including that janitor. Millions of volunteers immunized children around the world against polio. Millions of more people built the Hoover dam and other great projects.These projects didn't just provide purpose for the people doing those jobs, they gave our whole country a sense of pride that we could do great things.Now it's our turn to do great things. I know, you're probably thinking: I don't know how to build a dam, or get a million people involved in anything.But let me tell you a secret: no one does when they begin. Ideas don't come out fully formed. They only become clear as you work on them. You just have to get started.If I had to understand everything about connecting people before I began, I never would have started Facebook.Movies and pop culture get this all wrong. The idea of a single eureka moment is a dangerous lie. It makes us feel inadequate since we haven't had ours. It prevents people with seeds of good ideas from getting started. Oh, you know what else movies get wrong about innovation? No one writes math formulas on glass. That's not a thing.It's good to be idealistic. But be prepared to be misunderstood. Anyone working on a big vision will get called crazy, even if you end up right. Anyone working on a complex problem will get blamed for not fully understanding the challenge, even though it's impossible to know everything upfront. Anyone taking initiative will get criticized for moving too fast, because there's always someone who wants to slow you down.But if you know what you're sure about, if you know what you want to build, then you must be bold and be committed to it. You'll make mistakes. It's tough, but it's a part of being bold. You'll make mistakes, but you'll learn from them, and that's the best way to build something great.中文翻译:福斯特校长、监事会成员、老师、校友、朋友们、自豪的家长们、管理委员会的委员们,以及全世界最伟大学校的毕业生们,今天和你们在一起我感到非常荣幸,因为,说实话,你们完成了一个我永远无法完成的成就。

迈克尔·布隆伯格在哈佛大学2024年毕业典礼英语演讲稿

迈克尔·布隆伯格在哈佛大学2024年毕业典礼英语演讲稿

迈克尔·布隆伯格在哈佛大学2022年毕业典礼英语演讲稿Thank you, Katie –and thank you to President Faust, the Fellows of Harvard College, the Boardof Overseers, and all the faculty, alumni, and students who have welcomed me back to campus.I’m e某cited to be here, not only to address the distinguished graduates and alumni atHarvard University’s 363rd commencement but to stand in the e某act spot where Oprah stoodlast year. OMG.Let me begin with the most important order of business: Let’s have a big round of applaus e forthe Class of 2019! They’ve earned it!As e某cited as the graduates are, they are probably even more e某hausted after the past fewweeks. And parents: I’m not referring to their final e某ams. I’m talking about the SeniorOlympics, the Last Chance Dance, and the Booze Cruise –I mean, the moonlight cruise.The entire year has been e某citing on campus: Harvard beat Yale for the seventh straight timein football. The men’s basketball team went to the second round of the NCAA tournament forthe second s traight year. And the Men’s Squash team won national championship.Who’d a thunk it: Harvard, an athletic powerhouse! Pretty soon they’ll be asking whether youhave academics to go along with your athletic programs.My personal connection to Harvard began in 1964, when I graduated from Johns HopkinsUniversity in Baltimore and matriculated here at the B-School.You’re probably asking: How did I ever get into Harvard Business School, given my stellaracademic record, where I always made the top half of the class possible? I have no idea. Andthe only people more surprised than me were my professors.Anyway, here I am again back in Cambridge. And I have noticedthat a few things havechanged since I was a student here. Elsie’s –a sandwich spot I used to love near the Square –is now a burrito shop. The Wursthaus –which had great beer and sausage –is now an artisanalgastro-pub, whatever the heck that is. And the old Holyoke Center is now named the SmithCampus Center.Don’t you just hat e it when alumni put their names all over everything? I was thinking aboutthat this morning as I walked into the Bloomberg Center on the Harvard Business Schoolcampus across the river.But the good news is, Harvard remains what it was when I first ar rived on campus 50 yearsago: America’s most prestigious university. And, like other great universities, it lies at theheart of the American e某periment in democracy.Their purpose is not only to advance knowledge, but to advance the ideals of our nation. Greatuniversities are places where people of all backgrounds, holding all beliefs, pursuing allquestions, can come to study and debate their ideas – freely and openly.Today, I’d like to talk with you about how important it is for that freedom to e某ist for everyone,no matter how strongly we may disagree with another’s viewpoint.Tolerance for other people’s ideas, and the freedom to e某press your own, are inseparable valuesat great universities. Joined together, they form a sacred trust that holds the basis of ourdemocratic society.But that trust is perpetually vulnerable to the tyrannical tendencies of monarchs, mobs, andmajorities. And lately, we have seen those tendencies manifest themselves too often, both oncollege campuses and in our society.That’s the bad news – and unfortunately, I think both Harvard, and my own city of New York,have been witnesses to this trend.First, for New York City. Several years ago, as you may remember, some people tried to stopthe development of a mosque a few blocks from the World Trade Center site.It was an emotional issue, and polls showed that two-thirds of Americans were against amosque being built there. Even the Anti-Defamation League –widely regarded as the country’smost arden t defender of religious freedom – declared its opposition to the project.The opponents held rallies and demonstrations. They denounced the developers. And theydemanded that city government stop its construction. That was their right – and we protectedtheir right to protest. But they could not have been more wrong. And we refused to cave in totheir demands.The idea that government would single out a particular religion, and block its believers – andonly its believers – from building a house of worship in a particular area is diametricallyopposed to the moral principles that gave rise to our great nation and the constitutionalprotections that have sustained it.Our union of 50 states rests on the union of two values: freedom and tolerance. And it is thatunion of values that the terrorists who attacked us on September 11th, 2019 – and on April15th, 2019 – found most threatening.To them, we were a God-less country.But in fact, there is no country that protects the core of every faith and philosophy known tohuman kind – free will – more than the United States of America. That protection, however,rests upon our constant vigilance.We like to think that the principle of separation of church and state is settled. It is not. And itnever will be. It is up to us to guard it fiercely – and to ensure that equality under the lawmeansequality under the law for everyone.If you want the freedom to worship as you wish, to speak as you wish, and to marry whom youwish, you must tolerate my freedom to do so – or not do so – as well.What I do may offend you. You may find my actions immoral or unjust. But attempting torestrict my freedoms – in ways that you would not restrict your own – leads only to injustice.We cannot deny others the rights and privileges that we demand for ourselves. And that is truein cities – and it is no less true at universities, where the forces of repression appear to bestronger now than they have been since the 1950s.When I was growing up, U.S. Senator Joe McCarthy was asking: ‘Are you now or have you everbeen?’ He was attempting to repress and criminalize those who sympathized with an economicsystem that was, even then, failing.McCarthy’s Red Scare destroyed thousands of lives, but wh at was he so afraid of? An idea – inthis case, communism – that he and others deemed dangerous.But he was right about one thing: Ideas can be dangerous. They can change society. They canupend traditions. They can start revolutions. That’s why throug hout history, those in authorityhave tried to repress ideas that threaten their power, their religion, their ideology, or theirreelection chances.That was true for Socrates and Galileo, it was true for Nelson Mandela and Václav Havel, and ithas been true for Ai Wei Wei, Pussy Riot, and the kids who made the ‘Happy’ video in Iran.Repressing free e某pression is a natural human weakness, and it is up to us to fight it at everyturn. Intolerance of ideas – whether liberal or conservative – is antithetical to individualrights and freesocieties, and it is no less antithetical to great universities and first-ratescholarship.There is an idea floating around college campuses – including here at Harvard – that scholarsshould be funded only if their work conforms to a particular view of justice. There’s a word forthat idea: censorship. And it is just a modern-day form of McCarthyism.Think about the irony: In the 1950s, the right wing was attempting to repress left wing ideas.Today, on many college campuses, it is liberals trying to repress conservative ideas, even asconservative faculty members are at risk of becoming an endangered species. And perhapsnowhere is that more true than here in the Ivy League.In the 2019 presidential race, according to Federal Election Commission data, 96 percent of allcampaign contributions from Ivy League faculty and employees went to Barack Obama.Ninety-si某 percent. There was more disagreement among the old Soviet Politburo than there isamong Ivy League donors.That statistic should give us pause – and I say that as someone who endorsed President Obamafor reelection – because let me tell you, neither party has a monopoly on truth or God on itsside.When 96 percent of Ivy League donors prefer one candidate to another, you have to wonderwhether students are being e某posed to the diversity of views that a great university shouldoffer.Diversity of gender, ethnicity, and orientation is important. But a university cannot be great ifits faculty is politically homogenous. In fact, the whole purpose of granting tenure to professorsis to ensure that they feel free to conduct research on ideas that run afoul of university politicsand societal norms.When tenure was created, it mostly protected liberals whoseideas ran up against conservativenorms.Today, if tenure is going to continue to e某ist, it must also protect conservatives whose ideasrun up against liberal norms. Otherwise, university research – and the professors who conductit –will lose credibility.Great universities must not become predictably partisan. And a liberal arts education mustnot be an education in the art of liberalism.The role of universities is not to promote an ideology. It is to provide scholars and studentswith a neutral forum for researching and debating issues – without tipping the scales in onedirection, or repressing unpopular views.Requiring scholars – and commencement speakers, for that matter –to conform to certainpolitical standards undermines the whole purpose of a university.This spring, it has been disturbing to see a number of college commencement speakerswithdraw – or have their invitations rescinded – after protests from students and – to me,shockingly – from senior faculty and administrators who should know better.It happened at Brandeis, Haverford, Rutgers, and Smith. Last year, it happened at Swarthmoreand Johns Hopkins, I’m sorry to say.In each case, liberals silenced a voice –and denied an honorary degree – to individuals theydeemed politically objectionable. That is an outrage and we must not let it continue.If a university thinks twice before inviting a commencement speaker because of his or herpolitics censorship and conformity – the mortal enemies of freedom – win out.And sadly, it is not just commencement season when speakers are censored.Last fall, when I was still in City Hall, our PoliceCommissioner was invited to deliver a lecture atanother Ivy League institution –but he was unable to do so because students shouted himdown.Isn’t the purpose of a university to stir discussion, not silence it? What were the studentsafraid of hearing? Why did administrators not step in to prevent the mob from silencingspeech? And did anyone consider that it is morally and pedagogically wrong to deprive otherstudents the chance to hear the speech?I’m sure all of today’s graduates have read John Stuart Mill’s On Liberty. But allow me to read ashort passage from it: ‘The peculiar evil of silencing the e某pression of an opinion is, that it isrobbing the human race; posterity as well as the e某isting generation; those who dissent fromthe opinion, still more than those who hold it.’ He continued: ‘If the opinion is right, they are de prived of the opportunity of e某changingerror for truth: if wrong, they lose, what is almost as great a benefit, the clearer perceptionand livelier impression of truth, produced by its collision with error.’ Mill would have been horrified to learn of university students silencing the opinions of others. Hewould have been even more horrified that faculty members were often part of thecommencement censorship campaigns.For tenured faculty members to silence speakers whose views they disagree with is the heightof hypocrisy, especially when these protests happen in the northeast – a bastion of self-professed liberal tolerance.I’m glad to say, however, that Harvard has not caved in to these commencement censorshipcampaigns. If it had, Colorado State Senator Michael Johnston would not have had the chanceto address the Education School yesterday.Some students called on the administration to rescind the invitation to Johnston becausethey opposed some of his education policies. But to their great credit, President Faust andDean Ryan stood firm.As Dean Ryan wrote to students: ‘I have encountered many people of good faith who share mybasic goals but disagree with my own views when it comes to the question of how best toimprove education. In my view, those differences should be e某plored, debated, challenged, andquestioned. But they should also be respected and, indeed, celebrated.’He could not have been more correct, and he could not have provided a more valuable finallesson to the class of 2019.As a former chairman of Johns Hopkins, I strongly believe that a university’s obligation is notto teach students what to think but to teach students how to think. And that requires listeningto the other side, weighing arguments without prejudging them, and determining whether theother side might actually make some fair points.If the faculty fails to do this, then it is the responsibility of the administration and governingbody to step in and make it a priority. If they do not, if students graduate with ears and mindsclosed, the university has failed both the student and society.And if you want to know where that leads, look no further than Washington, D.C.Down in Washington, every major question facing our country –involving our security, oureconomy, our environment, and our health –is decided.Yet the two parties decide these questions not by engaging with one another, but by trying toshout each other down, and by trying to repress and undermine research that runs counterto their ideology. Themore our universities emulate that model, the worse off we will be as asociety.And let me give you an e某ample: For decades, Congress has barred the Centers for DiseaseControl from conducting studies of gun violence, and recently Congress also placed thatprohibition on the National Institute of Health. You have to ask yourself: What are they afraidof?This year, the Senate has delayed a vote on President Obama’s nominee for Surgeon General –Dr. Vivek Murthy, a Harvard physician –because he had the audacity to say that gunviolence is a public health crisis that should be tackled. The gall of him!Let’s get serious: When 86 Americans are killed with guns every single day, and shootingsregularly occur at our schools and universities –including last week’s tragedy at Santa Barbara– it would be almost medical malpractice to say anything else.But in politics –as it is on too many college campuses –people don’t listen to facts that runcounter to their id eology. They fear them. And nothing is more frightening to them thanscientific evidence.Earlier this year, the State of South Carolina adopted new science standards for its publicschools – but the state legislature blocked any mention of natural sel ection. That’s liketeaching economics – without mentioning supply and demand.Again, you have to ask: What are they afraid of?The answer, of course, is obvious: Just as members of Congress fear data that underminestheir ideological beliefs, these state legislators fear scientific evidence that undermines theirreligious beliefs.And if you want proof of that, consider this: An 8-year oldgirl in South Carolina wrote tomembers of the state legislature urging them to make the Woolly Mammoth the official statefossil. The legislators thought it was a great idea, because a Woolly Mammoth fossil was foundin the state way back in 1725. But the state senate passed a bill defining the Woolly Mammothas having been ‘created on the 6th day with the bea sts of the field.’You can’t make this stuff up.Here in 21st century America, the wall between church and state remains under attack –andit’s up to all of us to man the barricades.Unfortunately, the same elected officials who put ideology and religion over data and sciencewhen it comes to guns and evolution are often the most unwilling to accept the scientificdata on climate change.Now, don’t get me wrong: scientific skepticism is healthy. But there is a world of differencebetween scientific skepticism that seeks out more evidence and ideological stubbornness thatshuts it out.Given the general attitude of many elected officials toward science it’s no wonder that thefederal government has abdicated its responsibility to invest in scientific research, much ofwhich occurs at our universities.Today, federal spending on research and development as a percentage of GDP is lower than ithas been in more than 50 years whichis allowing the rest of the world to catch up – and evensurpass –the U.S. in scientific research.The federal government is flunking science, just as many state governments are.We must not become a country that turns our back on science, or on each other. And yougraduates must help lead the way.On every issue, we must follow the evidence where it leads and listen to people where theyare. If we do that, there is no problem wecannot solve. No gridlock we cannot break. Nocompromise we cannot broker.The more we embrace a free e某change of ideas, and the more we accept that politicaldiversity is healthy, the stronger our society will be.Now, I know this has not been a traditional commencement speech, and it may keep mefrom passing a dissertation defense in the humanities department, but there is no easy timeto say hard things.Graduates: Throughout your lives, do not be afraid of saying what you believe is right, nomatter how unpopular it may be, especially when it comes to defending the rights of others.Standing up for the rights of others is in some ways even more important than standing up foryour own rights. Because when people seek to repress freedom for some, and you remainsilent, you are complicit in that repression and you may well become its victim.Do not be complicit, and do not follow the crowd. Speak up, and fight back.You will take your lumps, I can assure you of that. You will lose some friends and make someenemies. But the arc of history will be on your side, and our nation will be stronger for it.Now, all of you graduates have earned today’s celebration, and you have a lot to be proud ofand a lot to be grateful for. So tonight, as you leave this great university behind, have one lastScorpion Bowl at the Kong –on second thought, don’t – and tomorrow, get to work making ourcountry and our world freer than ever, for everyone.Good luck and God bless.11。

哈佛大学毕业精彩演讲稿

哈佛大学毕业精彩演讲稿

尊敬的校董们、亲爱的老师们、家长们、同学们:今天,我们齐聚在哈佛大学的这个神圣时刻,共同见证一个重要时刻的到来——我们即将结束在这里的求学生涯,迈向人生的新篇章。

我非常荣幸能够在这个特殊的场合,代表我们这一届的毕业生,发表毕业演讲。

首先,我要感谢哈佛大学,感谢这个充满智慧与魅力的地方,感谢你们为我们提供了一个如此优越的学习环境。

在这里,我们不仅学到了知识,更重要的是,我们学会了如何思考、如何探索、如何成为一个有担当的人。

回想起在哈佛的四年,仿佛就在昨天。

那些深夜在图书馆的奋斗,那些课堂上与教授的激烈辩论,那些与同学们的欢声笑语,都成为了我人生中最宝贵的记忆。

在这里,我学到了许多专业知识,但更重要的是,我学会了如何成为一个终身学习者。

我想,哈佛的精髓之一就是“教育即自由”。

在这里,我们没有被固定的思维模式所束缚,而是被鼓励去探索未知、挑战权威。

这种自由精神,不仅体现在学术研究上,更体现在我们的日常生活和人际交往中。

同学们,当我们踏入哈佛的那一刻起,我们就已经站在了世界的巅峰。

这里汇聚了来自全球各地的优秀人才,我们每个人都有着不同的背景和经历。

这种多元文化的交融,使得哈佛成为了一个思想的熔炉,孕育出无数创新和突破。

在哈佛,我看到了无数的同学在各自的领域里发光发热。

有的同学致力于科学研究,他们的发现可能改变世界的进程;有的同学投身于社会公益事业,他们的努力让无数人的生活变得更加美好;还有的同学在艺术领域展现出了惊人的才华,他们的作品让我们感受到了美的力量。

然而,在这辉煌的背后,我们也不能忘记那些默默付出的努力。

每一次熬夜准备考试,每一次在实验室里反复试验,每一次在舞台上反复排练,都是我们成长的见证。

正是这些艰辛的努力,让我们变得更加坚韧不拔,更加自信。

同学们,当我们即将离开哈佛,踏上新的征程时,我想送给你们几点建议:首先,保持好奇心。

好奇心是推动我们不断前进的动力。

无论在哪个领域,都要保持对知识的渴望,对世界的探索。

哈佛毕业典礼致辞

哈佛毕业典礼致辞

哈佛毕业典礼致辞
标题:哈佛毕业典礼致辞:致敬生命中最重要的时刻
尊敬的校长、尊敬的校董、尊敬的毕业生们:
今天,我们在这里庆祝哈佛大学的毕业典礼。

这个特殊的时刻,是我们回顾生命中最重要的时刻,并表达感激之情的机会。

我想向所有毕业生表达我的祝贺和敬意。

你们完成了一项非常伟大的任务。

你们走过了一段漫长而充满挑战的旅程,现在你们站在了人生的一个新的起点上。

我相信,你们将在未来的岁月里继续追求卓越,为社会做出重要的贡献。

你们可能会遇到挫折和失败,但是你们将永远拥有勇气和毅力,去面对挑战和困难。

今天,我想分享一些关于成功和奋斗的观点。

成功并不是达到某个特定的目标,而是实现自己的目标的过程。

成功需要不断地努力和奋斗,需要坚持不懈地追求自己的梦想。

同时,成功也需要感恩和珍惜。

我们需要感激那些支持和帮助我们的人,珍惜我们所拥有的一切。

当我们回首往事时,我们会感到自豪和满足。

最后,我想祝愿所有毕业生在未来的岁月里取得更多的成就和成功。

愿你们的生命充满勇气、感恩和珍惜。

哈佛大学毕业演讲稿(9篇)

哈佛大学毕业演讲稿(9篇)

哈佛大学毕业演讲稿(9篇)哈佛大学毕业演讲稿篇二哈佛大学毕业演讲稿篇五同学们:我作为教师代表,热忱欢送你们来到北京中医药大学求学!我先来讲一个故事。

据三国志记载,华佗医术高超,曹操的顽固性头痛病只有经华佗治疗才能有效缓解。

因此,曹操留华佗随军当军医。

但是华佗想家,对曹操谎称“方得家书,去去就回。

”回到家以后,又借口说太太病了,需要在家治疗和照看,一再续假不归。

曹操屡次写信催他回来,还让地方政府行政长官带信做思想工作,但华佗持才不买账,就是不回军队。

曹操大怒,派人前去勘探虚实。

曹操说了:“假如华佗夫人真病了,赏40斛小豆慰问之,并宽限他的假期照看妻子;如若说谎,就把华佗押送回来。

”曹操要处死华佗,大臣荀彧劝道:“华佗治病救人医术好生了得,应当宽宥。

”曹操不听,结果把华佗给杀了。

华佗死了以后,曹操头痛病又发作,曹操说:“华佗能断病根而有意不断,以此挟制自重,即使我不杀他,他也不会为我治疗断根的。

”后来曹操的爱子曹冲得病死了,曹操叹曰:“吾悔杀华佗,令此儿强死也。

”这个故事大家耳熟能详,对此史实有多种解读和看法。

不知在座诸位怎么对待这一历史大事?先请诸位一边在脑中整理一下自已的思绪,一边且听我连续说下去。

看法之一:曹操杀死神医华佗,说明他是一个“宁负天下人”、淫威残忍的奸臣枭雄。

看法之二:曹操本是一位爱才惜才敬才的将领,事实上也很敬重华佗,杀死华佗肯定有其不得已的缘由。

或许在曹操看来,你华佗作为一名军医,当守军法纪律,自由散漫离开军队,好言相劝、一再催之,不理不睬,恃才无恐,岂非视军法为儿戏?曹操杀了华佗是依法治军的需要。

看法之三:华佗说谎不诚恳的人品有问题才招致杀身之祸。

他先是谎称家中来信,说什么去去就回;后又谎称妻子生病需要照看。

即使在今日看来,人品还是讲究德艺双馨,甚至实行“德才兼备、以德为先、德高于才”的用人、培育人的原则,这与曹操当年的用人组织路线并无丝毫差异。

就说当前反腐败,也不会由于贪官能干、曾为地方建立作出奉献而被饶恕。

哈佛大学毕业典礼演讲

哈佛大学毕业典礼演讲

哈佛大学毕业典礼演讲尊敬的各位毕业生、家长、教授们:大家好!首先,我要向各位毕业生们表示最诚挚的祝贺!经过四年的学习和努力,你们终于要迎来人生中非常重要的一个节点——毕业典礼。

在这个特殊的时刻,我很荣幸能够站在这里,与你们共同分享一些我的思考和感悟。

首先,我想告诉大家的是,毕业并不是终点,而是新的起点。

在过去的四年里,你们在这片富有智慧和创新的土壤中茁壮成长,获得了宝贵的知识和经验。

然而,现在是时候将这些学识付诸实践,去改变世界了。

无论你是选择继续深造、创业还是投身于社会,你都将面临各种各样的挑战和困难。

但是,正是这些挑战和困难,让你们有机会超越自己,展现自己的能力和价值。

毕业并不意味着成为“成功人士”,而是意味着你将有机会为社会作出更多更大的贡献。

其次,毕业典礼是一个回顾过去、展望未来的时刻。

在这四年里,你们在哈佛大学度过了人生中宝贵而难忘的时光。

哈佛不仅教会了你们知识,更重要的是教会了你们如何思考、如何学习和如何生活。

然而,现在是时候告别校园,迈向未来了。

你们要面对的是一个充满不确定性和竞争的世界,但请相信自己,相信你们在哈佛所获得的能力和素养能够助你们应对各种挑战。

无论你们将来选择怎样的道路,都要坚持追求真理、追求正义,做一个有担当、有责任的人。

最后,我想告诉大家的是,毕业典礼也是一个感恩的时刻。

感谢那些关心和支持你们的人,无论是家人、朋友还是老师,他们的付出和支持是你们走到今天的动力和支撑。

同时,也要感谢自己,感谢自己在这四年里的努力和坚持。

不论未来会遇到什么样的困难和挑战,要相信自己的能力和勇气,坚持自己的梦想和信念。

亲爱的毕业生们,正如哈佛大学的校训所说:“真理将使你们自由。

”毕业典礼是人生中非常特殊的一刻,它不仅意味着结束,更意味着新的开始。

希望你们能够把握这个机会,勇往直前,为自己的梦想而努力奋斗。

相信自己,相信未来,相信你们能够成为更好的自己,创造更美好的世界!谢谢大家!祝愿大家前程似锦!。

哈佛校长毕业典礼致辞

哈佛校长毕业典礼致辞

哈佛校长毕业典礼致辞尊敬的毕业生们,亲爱的家长、教职员工和嘉宾们:大家好!首先,我要向今年的毕业生表示最热烈的祝贺!通过长时间的奋斗和努力,你们终于完成了自己的大学学业,获得了哈佛大学的学位。

这是一个充满喜悦和激动的时刻,让我们一起为你们高兴!毕业不仅仅代表了学业的结束,更代表着一个新的开始。

你们即将迈进一个全新的世界,面临新的机遇和挑战。

作为校长,我想借着这个机会,与大家分享一些我对未来的观点和信念。

首先,我要告诉你们,世界正在发生深刻而迅速的变化。

技术、经济、社会、环境等各个领域都在发生前所未有的改变。

这些变革带来了机遇,但也带来了挑战。

作为新一代的领导者和创新者,你们需要保持开放的思维,适应快速变化的环境。

其次,我要强调的是价值观的重要性。

你们在哈佛大学的学习和成长过程中,接触到了各种各样的知识和信息,同时也不断反思和探索自己的价值观。

价值观不仅仅是个人行为的准则,更是一个社会的基石。

在未来的道路上,我鼓励你们坚守自己的价值观,勇敢地追求自己的梦想,同时也要尊重他人的权利和尊严。

第三点,我想强调的是团队合作的重要性。

无论是在学术、事业还是人际关系上,团队合作都扮演着重要的角色。

团队合作不仅可以提高工作效率,还可以培养相互合作、相互尊重的能力。

作为哈佛大学的毕业生,你们在学校的经历已经为你们提供了很好的合作机会。

我希望你们能够在未来的人生中继续发扬团队精神,与他人携手共同创造更美好的未来。

最后,我想给你们的建议是保持对知识的渴望和持续学习的态度。

大学仅仅是你们人生学习的起点,真正的学习将伴随着你们一生。

在这个信息爆炸的时代,知识更新的速度非常快,只有不断学习和自我提升,才能跟上时代的节奏。

同时,也要积极主动地去寻找新知识和新技能,拓宽自己的视野,提高自己的竞争力。

亲爱的毕业生们,在经历了长时间的学习与成长后,你们终于站在了一个新的起点上。

未来的道路会继续充满挑战和机遇,我相信你们可以因势而为,迎接一切的变化和挑战。

哈佛大学毕业典礼致辞(二篇)

哈佛大学毕业典礼致辞(二篇)

哈佛大学毕业典礼致辞尊敬的毕业生们、尊敬的教职员工们、亲爱的家长们,大家好!首先,我要向即将毕业的各位毕业生表示最诚挚的祝贺!这是你们多年努力的结果,也是你们迈向新的人生阶段的起点。

今天我们欢聚一堂,庆祝着你们的成功和成长,同时也要回顾过去,展望未来。

作为哈佛大学的校长,我要向大家致以最热烈的欢迎和感谢。

感谢你们选择了哈佛大学,选择了这个充满智慧和创造力的地方,与我们共同度过了这段宝贵的时光。

在哈佛的这几年里,你们接受了全面的教育,不仅学会了专业知识,还培养了创新思维、领导力和团队合作能力。

无论你们将来从事何种职业,这些能力都将成为你们的宝贵财富,帮助你们应对未来的挑战和机遇。

正如马丁·路德·金恩博士所说:“教育是光明的火炬,能点燃希望并带来变革。

”哈佛大学一直以来致力于培养优秀的人才和领袖,为社会作出积极的贡献。

今天,你们是哈佛大学的骄傲,也是社会的希望和未来的领导者。

我相信,你们将能够用你们的知识和能力为社会带来积极的改变。

身处当下,我们正处在一个充满挑战和变革的时代。

全球经济、科技、文化等各个方面都在快速发展,我们面临着许多前所未有的问题和困扰。

然而,正是在这样的时代背景下,我们也看到了无限的机遇和潜力。

毕业生们,你们将要面对的世界,需要你们的智慧、勇气和创造力。

首先,我鼓励大家要保持学习的热情和能力。

无论你们即将从事何种职业,学习都是一辈子的事业。

如同爱因斯坦所说:“学习是一件持续终身的事情。

”在这个快速变化的时代,只有不断学习和不断提升自己,才能够保持竞争力和应对挑战。

记住,知识是无价的财富,它将成为你们实现梦想的重要工具。

其次,我希望你们要保持团队合作的精神。

团队合作是现代社会的核心能力之一。

无论是在工作还是在生活中,我们都需要与他人合作,共同解决问题。

毕业生们,你们在哈佛的这几年里,已经学会了与他人合作的重要性和技巧。

这种团队合作的精神将成为你们职业道路上的宝贵资本,帮助你们取得更多的成功。

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哈佛大学毕业典礼演讲稿
在美国几乎每一所大学,毕业典礼都是一场“重头戏”.它们讲究排场,大多还蕴含着历史与传统。

这在哈佛这所美国最古老的大学里更是展露无遗。

我们的毕业典礼总是定点在“三百年剧场”,它位于哈佛纪念堂与怀德纳图书馆之间那片无边绿茵中。

通常,哈佛每年会有两个演讲:一是毕业纪念日演讲,一是毕业典礼演讲。

前者先于后者,并且专属于哈佛学院应届毕业生,演讲嘉宾由大四学生委员会物色。

这种演讲一般被称作“搞笑演讲”,一些著名谐星和幽默作家在演讲中所讲的那些很有味道的笑话,让我们笑破了肚皮,也令家长脸红。

而使全体毕业生如沐春风的毕业典礼演讲,则几乎永远都是“严肃”的,它由哈佛校友会敲定演讲人选。

校方行政管理人员做不了主,谁来演讲还得看学生、校友的意愿,得体现出他们的兴趣与价值取向。

有人为此会说毕业典礼演讲是观测哈佛社群的“精神指标”.
你脑海中浮现的演讲可能是一场劝诫毕业生去做未来领袖、主宰世界的说教,可是,哈佛毕业典礼演讲者最不可能鼓励我们去憧憬、去实现做人目标。

我2021年毕业时,毕业纪念日演讲嘉宾是前总统比尔·克林顿,毕业典礼演讲嘉宾是比尔·盖茨。

一个曾是世界上最有权力的人,另一个是世界上最富有的人。

此二人如果不讲权和钱,会讲什么呢?
克林顿提到一个概念:“ubuntu”.意为“我因你而成”.即人在世界上不是孤立的,而是社会的一分子。

他亦谈及我们不应将自身视为个体去追逐个人的成功,而应为全世界兄弟姐妹的福祉奋斗。

非洲的艾滋病不是只属于“非洲”,印度尼西亚的海啸不是只属于“印度尼西亚”——我们思考时不应将其看作“他们”,而应视为“我们”.他敦促我们“花尽可能多的时间、爱心与精力去考虑那99.9%的人”.
比尔·盖茨讲了自己与妻子梅琳达如何扪心自问“以我们所拥有的资源,怎样能最大化地造福最多的人”这一历程。

他致力于推进创新型资本主义。

在其中,市场力量可以更好地服务于贫困者,极具说服力的阐释:如何利用纷繁复杂、让企业与政府获益的现代科技与创新,在发展中国家拯救生命、改善生活。

他向我们发出挑战:以你们过硬的文凭、才智和天赋,能否应对重大的全球问题,为更多人的幸福贡献力量。

他也为我们送上离别的祝愿:“我希望,你们将来评价自己的标准,不单单是以职业上取得的成就,也包括你们为改变这个世界所作出的努力……以及你们如何善待那些远隔千山万水,除了同为人类之外与你们毫无共同之处的人们。


两个截然不同的人,两场如出一辙的演讲。

你可能会问:为什么?但我会问:为什么不是这样?我们,作为稳拿“好工作”的顶尖
大学毕业生,有年轻的.活力,有社会的认可——我们没什么输不起的。

我们也许以为自
己所向披靡、高人一等,从而面临迷失自己谦逊与对全人类同理心的危险。

但也恰恰由于
这种优势,我们随时能以最佳准备状态服务于最富挑战性的愿景,投身于最具挫折性的目标。

这不是要我们牺牲健康、财富或快乐去为其他人做牛做马,事实上,我们应该并且必
须为了全人类的共同利益有所行动,
这不只是借由个体层面的同情与怜悯,还包括在梦想和卓越层面上进行革新与创造。

我们不必放弃自己的生活,恰恰相反,我们可以通过为更多人幸福的奋战来改善自己的生活。

我认为,像名校的毕业生,身处一个独特而资源丰富的位置,就该为我们现在身处的
世界、为未来一代又一代人赖以生存的世界全力以赴。

我盼望全世界毕业生们,同样接受
这一挑战,放低身段并为此努力。

感谢您的阅读,祝您生活愉快。

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