2020ted演讲稿(4篇)

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ted发言稿

ted发言稿

ted发言稿尊敬的听众们,大家好!我很荣幸站在这里,与你们分享我对于这个世界的一些思考和观点。

在短暂的演讲时间内,我希望能够为大家提供一些关于人类发展的新思路。

我相信,只有探索未知的领域,我们才能找到真正的进步。

首先,我想和大家探讨的话题是教育。

教育是人类社会发展的核心驱动力之一。

然而,传统的教育模式已经无法满足当今快速变化的世界。

我们应该反思:我们的教育制度是不是只培养了适应规则的机器人,而没有真正发掘每个人潜在的创造力和激情?我认为,教育的目标应该是培养学生的创造性思维和创新精神。

我们应该鼓励学生质疑现有的常识和思维模式,并勇敢地尝试新的理念和方法。

只有通过培养学生的创造力和创新能力,我们才能培养出具有全球竞争力的人才,推动社会的进步。

其次,我想讨论的话题是科技的发展。

科技是改变世界的最强大的力量之一。

然而,科技的发展也带来了一些问题。

例如,人工智能的崛起让许多人担心将来人类是否会被替代。

但是,我认为我们不应该害怕科技的发展,而是要善于利用科技为我们的生活带来积极的影响。

我们需要建立一个人与科技相互协作的生态系统。

科技可以帮助我们解决许多重大问题,例如环境保护、医疗健康等。

但是,我们不能完全依赖科技,而忽视人类的智慧和创造力。

人类和科技应该共同合作,共同推动社会的进步和发展。

此外,我认为对待环境问题是当下非常重要的课题。

我们的地球正面临着气候变化、资源枯竭等严峻的挑战。

我们不能再对待环境问题视而不见,而是要采取行动,改变我们的生活方式。

我们应该重视可再生能源的开发和利用,减少污染物的排放,保护生态系统的平衡。

最后,我想谈谈人与人之间的关系。

在这个快速变化的世界中,人与人之间的联系变得越来越重要。

然而,我们也面临着种族、宗教、文化差异等各种障碍。

我认为,我们应该向着构建一个包容、平等的社会努力。

我们应该尊重不同文化和宗教的存在,倡导多元化和包容性。

只有当每个人都被平等对待和尊重,我们才能创造一个和谐的社会,迈向真正的发展。

2024年ted大学生活演讲稿(五篇)

2024年ted大学生活演讲稿(五篇)

2024年ted大学生活演讲稿尊敬的教师,亲爱的同学们:大家好!“我的热情犹如一把火,燃烧了整个沙漠……”我想大家对费翔的这首《热情的沙漠》并不陌生,我今日的演讲主题就是关于热情,题为《点燃热情》。

我曾读到这样一句话:“我今正值青春,应展翅翱翔。

”此刻,我想再添一句:“更应热情如炽。

”的确,我们这些刚刚踏上大学旅途的青年,拥有青春的活力,拥有无尽的潜力,理应展翅高飞,让我们的生活燃烧起来!我来自陕西,之前对“hz师范学院”并无了解,但选择这所大学是我心之所向,我愿承担起这个决定的责任。

我历经汽车转火车,火车再转汽车,共历时数十小时的旅程。

我一路欣赏风景,构想我将在hz度过的精彩大学生活,怀揣热情,我来到了hz师院。

这里,将成为我挥洒热情,奋力拼搏的舞台。

我们每个人都是承载着父母的期望、亲人的祝福、教师的教诲和同学的鼓励来到大学的。

我想知道,是否每个人心中都燃烧着与我一样的热情。

真的,我内心激动无比。

学长学姐们的亲切接待和热情帮助,让我感到温暖,远离家乡的困扰逐渐消散,虽然有些水土不服,但并无大碍。

当我得知这是学长学姐们代代相传的精神时,我兴奋地回应:“是这样吗?那么明年我也会以学姐的身份去迎接新生了!”或许有人会觉得我天真,但“学姐”这个称呼让我充满期待,也让我充满动力。

在老师和学长学姐的帮助下,我迅速适应了新环境,充满活力地开始了我的大学生活。

短短一个多月的大学时光,我学到了很多,也明白了很多。

hz是历史悠久的江南水乡,宁静宜人,有着“笔墨江南,清丽hz”的美誉。

hz师范学院是近年来快速崛起的学府,环境优美,校园生活丰富多彩。

虽然她无法与繁华的大都市或我心中的理想学府相提并论,但她却以其独特的魅力,让人在学习和生活中享受乐趣,独享一份自然之美。

我最初是被调剂到新闻专业的,但这并未消减我对学习和生活的热情。

虽然暂时偏离了我心中的梦想,但学习新闻也是一件富有挑战和趣味的事,我可以借此机会培养新的兴趣,学习新的知识和技能。

ted演讲稿范文4篇_演讲稿

ted演讲稿范文4篇_演讲稿

ted演讲稿范文4篇i was one of the only kids in college who had a reason to go to the p.o. box at the end of the day, and that was mainly because my mother has never believed in email, in facebook, in texting or cell phones in general. and so while other kids were bbm-ing their parents, i was literally waiting by the mailbox to get a letter from home to see how the weekend had gone, which was a little frustrating when grandma was in the hospital, but i was just looking for some sort of scribble, some unkempt cursive from my mother.and so when i moved to new york city after college and got completely sucker-punched in the face by depression, i did the only thing i could think of at the time. i wrote those same kinds of letters that my mother had written me for strangers, and tucked them all throughout the city, dozens and dozens of them.i left them everywhere, in cafes and in libraries, at the u.n., everywhere. i blogged about those letters and the days when they were necessary, and i posed a kind of crazy promise to the internet: that if you asked me for a hand-written letter, i would write you one, no questions asked. overnight, my inbox 1 / 42morphed into this harbor of heartbreak -- a single mother in sacramento, a girl being bullied in rural kansas, all asking me, a 22-year-old girl who barely even knew her own coffee order, to write them a love letter and give them a reason to wait by the mailbox.well, today i fuel a global organization that is fueled by those trips to the mailbox, fueled by the ways in which we can harness social media like never before to write and mail strangers letters when they need them most, but most of all, fueled by crates of mail like this one, my trusty mail crate, filled with the scriptings of ordinary people, strangers writing letters to other strangers not because they're ever going to meet and laugh over a cup of coffee, but because they have found one another by way of letter-writing.but, you know, the thing that always gets me about these letters is that most of them have been written by people that have never known themselves loved on a piece of paper. they could not tell you about the ink of their own love letters. they're the ones from my generation, the ones of us that have grown up into a world where everything is paperless, and where some of our best conversations have happened upon a screen. we 2 / 42have learned to diary our pain onto facebook, and we speak swiftly in 140 characters or less.but what if it's not about efficiency this time? i was on the subway yesterday with this mail crate, which is a conversation starter, let me tell you. if you ever need one, just carry one of these. (laughter) and a man just stared at me, and he was like, "well, why don't you use the internet?" and i thought, "well, sir, i am not a strategist, nor am i specialist. i am merely a storyteller." and so i could tell you about a woman whose husband has just come home from afghanistan, and she is having a hard time unearthing this thing called conversation, and so she tucks love letters throughout the house as a way to say, "come back to me. find me when you can." or a girl who decides that she is going to leave love letters around her campus in dubuque, iowa, only to find her efforts ripple-effected the next day when she walks out onto the quad and finds love letters hanging from the trees, tucked in the bushes and the benches. or the man who decides that he is going to take his life, uses facebook as a way to say goodbye to friends and family. well, tonight he sleeps safely with a stack of letters just like this one tucked beneath his pillow, 3 / 42scripted by strangers who were there for him when.these are the kinds of stories that convinced me that letter-writing will never again need to flip back her hair and talk about efficiency, because she is an art form now, all the parts of her, the signing, the scripting, the mailing, the doodles in the margins. the mere fact that somebody would even just sit down, pull out a piece of paper and think about someone the whole way through, with an intention that is so much harder to unearth when the browser is up and the iphone is pinging and we've got six conversations rolling in at once, that is an art form that does not fall down to the goliath of "get faster," no matter how many social networks we might join. we still clutch close these letters to our chest, to the words that speak louder than loud, when we turn pages into palettes to say the things that we have needed to say, the words that we have needed to write, to sisters and brothers and even to strangers, for far too long. thank you. (applause) (applause)TED英语演讲稿:让我们来谈谈死亡ted演讲稿范文(2) | 简介:我们无法控制死亡的到来,但也许我们可以选择用何种态度来面对它。

ted演讲稿范文

ted演讲稿范文

TED演讲稿范文1. 演讲开始大家好,我很荣幸能够站在这里与大家分享我的想法和经验。

我相信,通过TED这个平台,我们可以一起探讨并找到解决方案,努力实现自我价值,创造美好的未来。

2. 引入话题今天,我想和大家谈论的是人类的创造力和无限的潜能。

在我们生活的这个世界上,每个人都天生具备不同的天赋和能力。

然而,我们常常被限制在固有的思维模式中,很难发挥出自己的真正潜力。

3. 讲述个人故事让我先来分享一个关于我的个人经历。

在我年轻的时候,我从小就对音乐深感兴趣。

然而,由于我所在的家庭环境以及教育制度的限制,我没有机会接受专业的音乐训练。

因此,我从事了其他行业,但音乐的梦想一直在我心中。

4. 探索创造力的重要性创造力是人类独特的优势,它是我们与其他物种的一大区别。

通过发挥自己的创造力,我们能够解决问题、创造价值、推动社会发展。

然而,由于各种原因,很多人并没有意识到自己的创造力,或者被固有的观念所束缚。

5. 跳出舒适区要释放自己的创造力,我们首先需要跳出舒适区。

舒适区是指我们习惯的生活模式和思维方式,它限制了我们的视野和想象力。

我们需要敢于面对挑战,勇于尝试新事物,才能发现自己的潜力。

6. 培养创造力的方法下面,我将和大家分享一些培养创造力的方法,希望能够给大家一些启发:•多样化的学习:不要局限于某一个领域,多学习不同的知识和技能,融会贯通,拓宽思维。

•对问题进行思考:学会提出问题,并尝试不同的解决方法,激发创造力。

•保持好奇心:主动探索未知领域,勇于尝试新事物。

•与他人合作:与他人进行合作与交流,从他们的经验中学习,激发创新想法。

7. 激励他人释放潜力除了开发自己的创造力,我们还可以通过激励他人释放他们的潜力。

每个人都拥有独特的优点和能力,我们可以通过鼓励和支持,帮助他们发现自己的价值和潜力。

8. 结语在结束之前,我想再次强调创造力的重要性。

我们每个人都拥有无限的潜能,只有发挥自己的创造力,才能实现自我价值,为社会做出贡献。

ted演讲稿中英文 合集2020

ted演讲稿中英文 合集2020

ted演讲稿中英文合集2020TED演讲稿中英文合集2020Chapter 1: Introduction to TED TalksTED Talks have become a global phenomenon, captivating audiences with their powerful messages, innovative ideas, and inspiring stories. Since its inception in 1984, TED (Technology, Entertainment, Design) has evolved into a platform for sharing ideas worth spreading. In this chapter, we will explore the origins of TED Talks and their impact on our world.Chapter 2: The Power of StorytellingStorytelling lies at the heart of every great TED Talk. From personal anecdotes to scientific breakthroughs, speakers use stories to engage and connect with their audience. This chapter delves into the art of storytelling, highlighting techniques that TED speakers employ to make their talks memorable and impactful.Chapter 3: Innovations that Shape the FutureTED Talks have become a platform for showcasing groundbreaking innovations that shape our world. In this chapter, we will explore some of the most influential talks that discuss technological advancements, scientific discoveries, and social innovations. From artificial intelligence to renewable energy, TED speakers are at the forefront of shaping our future.Chapter 4: Inspiring Personal JourneysMany TED Talks feature speakers who have overcome incredible challenges and embarked on inspiring personal journeys. This chapter focuses on talks that share stories of resilience, determination, and personal growth. These speakers remind us that no obstacle is insurmountable and inspire us to pursue our dreams.Chapter 5: The Role of EducationEducation is a recurring theme in TED Talks, as speakers discuss innovative approaches to teaching and learning. This chapter delves into talks that challenge traditional educational models and explore ideas such as online learning, personalized education, and lifelong learning. TED speakers are reshaping the way we think about education.Chapter 6: Environmental SustainabilityWith growing concerns about climate change and environmental degradation, TED Talks have become a platform for discussing sustainable practices and solutions. This chapter highlights talks that address issues such as renewable energy, conservation, and sustainable living. TED speakers are driving conversations about protecting our planet.Chapter 7: Social Justice and EqualityTED Talks play a crucial role in raising awareness about social justice and equality. In this chapter, we explore talks that tackle topics such as gender equality, racial discrimination, LGBTQ+ rights, and human rights. TED speakers are catalysts for change, inspiring us to create a more inclusive and just society.Chapter 8: Health and Well-beingHealth and well-being are fundamental aspects of our lives. This chapter focuses on TED Talks that discuss mental health, physical fitness,nutrition, and overall well-being. Speakers share their expertise and personal experiences, providing insights and inspiration for living a balanced and healthy life.Chapter 9: Future OutlookIn this final chapter, we reflect on the impact of TED Talks and look towards the future. We examine the role of technology in spreading ideas, the evolving themes in TED Talks, and the potential for global collaboration. TED Talks continue to shape our world and inspire positive change.ConclusionTED Talks have revolutionized the way ideas are shared and have become a source of inspiration and knowledge for millions of people worldwide. From storytelling to innovation, personal journeys to social justice, these talks have the power to reshape our thinking and drive positive change. As we enter a new decade, let us continue to embrace the power of TED Talks and be inspired by the remarkable individuals who share their ideas with the world.。

ted演讲稿4篇_演讲稿

ted演讲稿4篇_演讲稿

ted演讲稿4篇_演讲稿《探索未知,追求卓越》尊敬的各位听众:大家好!今天,我非常荣幸能够站在这里,与大家分享我对探索未知和追求卓越的一些思考和感悟。

探索未知,是人类进步的动力源泉。

从远古时代的人类对火的探索,到现代社会对宇宙的探索,我们一直在不断地挑战自我,超越极限。

正是这种对未知的好奇心和探索精神,推动了人类社会的不断发展和进步。

追求卓越,是我们每个人应该具备的品质。

无论是在学习、工作还是生活中,我们都应该追求卓越,不断提高自己的能力和水平。

只有这样,我们才能在激烈的竞争中立于不败之地,实现自己的人生价值。

探索未知和追求卓越是相辅相成的。

只有不断地探索未知,我们才能发现新的领域和机会,从而为追求卓越提供更多的可能性。

同时,只有追求卓越,我们才能在探索未知的过程中不断提高自己的能力和水平,从而更好地实现自己的目标和梦想。

那么,如何才能探索未知和追求卓越呢?首先,我们要保持好奇心和求知欲。

好奇心是探索未知的动力源泉,只有保持好奇心,我们才能不断地发现新的问题和挑战,从而激发我们的探索欲望。

其次,我们要勇于尝试和创新。

探索未知往往需要我们走出舒适区,尝试新的方法和思路。

只有勇于尝试和创新,我们才能在探索未知的过程中不断取得新的突破和进展。

最后,我们要坚持不懈和持之以恒。

探索未知和追求卓越是一个长期的过程,需要我们付出大量的时间和精力。

只有坚持不懈和持之以恒,我们才能在这个过程中不断积累经验和知识,从而更好地实现自己的目标和梦想。

在探索未知和追求卓越的过程中,我们也会遇到各种各样的困难和挑战。

但是,我们不能因此而放弃自己的目标和梦想。

相反,我们应该把这些困难和挑战看作是我们成长和进步的机会,勇敢地面对它们,努力地克服它们。

只有这样,我们才能在探索未知和追求卓越的道路上不断前进,实现自己的人生价值。

最后,我想用一句话来结束我的演讲:“探索未知,追求卓越,让我们的人生更加精彩!”谢谢大家!。

ted演讲稿(热门4篇)

ted演讲稿(热门4篇)

ted演讲稿(热门4篇)在开始演讲之前,准备好一份演讲稿是非常必要的。

这不仅有助于我们在演讲中表现更加出色,还可以通过演讲稿向听众传递正确的价值观和道德观念,影响他们追求的目标。

那么,如何写出一篇让大家满意的主题演讲稿呢?下面是编辑整理的有关“ted演讲稿”的相关内容,供有需要的朋友参考借鉴,希望对你有所帮助。

ted演讲稿(篇1)简介:残奥会短跑冠军aimee mullins天生没有腓骨,从小就要学习靠义肢走路和奔跑。

如今,她不仅是短跑选手、演员、模特,还是一位稳健的演讲者。

她不喜欢字典中“disabled”这个词,因为负面词汇足以毁掉一个人。

但是,坦然面对不幸,你会发现等待你的是更多的机会。

i'd like to share with you a discovery that i made a few months ago while writing an article for italian wired. i always keep my thesaurus handy whenever i'm writing anything, but i'd already finished editing the piece, and i realized that i had never once in my life looked up the word “disabled” to see what i'd find.let me read you the entry. “disabled, adjective: crippled, helpless, useless, wrecked, stalled, maimed, wounded, mangled, lame, mutilated, run-down, worn-out, weakened, impotent, castrated, paralyzed, handicapped, senile, decrepit, laid-up, done-up, done-for, done-in cracked-up, counted-out; see also hurt, useless and weak. an tonyms, healthy, strong, capable.” i was reading this list out loud to a friend and at first was laughing, it was so ludicrous, but i'd just gotten past “mangled,” and my voice broke, and i had to stop and collect myself from the emotional shock and impact that the assault from these words unleashed.you know, of course, this is my raggedy old thesaurus so i'm thinking this must be an ancient print date, right? but, in fact, the print date was the early 1980s, when i would have been starting primary school and forming an understanding of myself outside the family unit and as related to the other kids and the world around me. and, needless to say, thank god i wasn't using a thesaurus back then. i mean, from this entry, it would seem that i was born into a world that perceived someone like me to have nothing positive whatsoever going for them, when in fact, today i'm celebrated for the opportunities and adventures my life has procured.so, i immediately went to look up the __ online edition, e_pecting to find a revision worth noting. here's the updated version of this entry. unfortunately, it's not much better. i find the last two words under “near antonyms,” particularly unsettling: “whole” and “wholesome.”so, it's not just about the words. it's what we believe about people when we name them with these words. it's about the values behind the words, and how we construct those values. our language affects our thinking and how we view the world and how we view other people. in fact, many ancient societies, including the greeks and the romans, believed that to utter a curse verbally was so powerful, because to say the thing out loud brought it into e_istence. so, what reality do we want to call into e_istence: a person who is limited, or a person who's empowered? by casually doing something as simple as naming a person, a child, we might be putting lids and casting shadows on their power. wouldn't we want to open doors for them instead?one such person who opened doors for me was my childhood doctor at the a.i. dupont institute in wilmington,delaware. his name was dr. pizzutillo, an italian american, whose name, apparently, was too difficult for most americans to pronounce, so he went by dr. p. and dr. p always wore really colorful bow ties and had the very perfect disposition to work with children.i loved almost everything about my time spent at this hospital, with the e_ception of my physical therapy sessions. i had to do what seemed like innumerable repetitions of e_ercises with these thick, elastic bands -- different colors, you know -- to help build up my leg muscles, and i hated these bands more than anything -- i hated them, had names for them. i hated them. and, you know, i was already bargaining, as a five year-old child, with dr. p to try to get out of doing these e_ercises, unsuccessfully, of course. and, one day, he came in to my session -- e_haustive and unforgiving, these sessions -- and he said to me, “wow. aimee, you are such a strong and powerful little girl, i think you're going to break one of those bands. when you do break it, i'm going to give you a hundred bucks.”now, of course, this was a simple ploy on dr. p's part to get me to do the e_ercises i didn't want to do before the prospect of being the richest five-year-old in the second floor ward, but what he effectively did for me was reshape an awful daily occurrence into a new and promising e_perience for me. and i have to wonder today to what e_tent his vision and his declaration of me as a strong and powerful little girl shaped my own view of myself as an inherently strong, powerful and athletic person well into the future.this is an e_ample of how adults in positions of power can ignite the power of a child. but, in the previous instances of those thesaurus entries, our language isn't allowing us to evolve intothe reality that we would all want, the possibility of an individual to see themselves as capable. our language hasn't caught up with the changes in our society, many of which have been brought about by technology. certainly, from a medical standpoint, my legs, laser surgery for vision impairment, titanium knees and hip replacements for aging bodies that are allowing people to more fully engage with their abilities, and move beyond the limits that nature has imposed on them -- not to mention social networking platforms allow people to self-identify, to claim their own descriptions of themselves, so they can go align with global groups of their own choosing. so, perhaps technology is revealing more clearly to us now what has always been a truth: that everyone has something rare and powerful to offer our society, and that the human ability to adapt is our greatest asset.the human ability to adapt, it's an interesting thing, because people have continually wanted to talk to me about overcoming adversity, and i'm going to make an admission: this phrase never sat right with me, and i always felt uneasy trying to answer people's questions about it, and i think i'm starting to figure out why. implicit in this phrase of “overcoming adversity” is the idea that success, or happiness, is about emerging on the other side of a challenging e_perience unscathed or unmarked by the e_perience, as if my successes in life have come about from an ability to sidestep or circumnavigate the presumed pitfalls of a life with prosthetics, or what other people perceive as my disability. but, in fact, we are changed. we are marked, of course, by a challenge, whether physically, emotionally or both. and i'm going to suggest that this is a good thing. adversity isn't an obstacle that we need to get around in order to resume living our life. it's part of our life. and i tend to think of it like my shadow.sometimes i see a lot of it, sometimes there's very little, but it's always with me. and, certainly, i'm not trying to diminish the impact, the weight, of a person's struggle.there is adversity and challenge in life, and it's all very real and relative to every single person, but the question isn't whether or not you're going to meet adversity, but how you're going to meet it. so, our responsibility is not simply shielding those we care for from adversity, but preparing them to meet it well. and we do a disservice to our kids when we make them feel that they're not equipped to adapt. there's an important difference and distinction between the objective medical fact of my being an amputee and the subjective societal opinion of whether or not i'm disabled. and, truthfully, the only real and consistent disability i've had to confront is the world ever thinking that i could be described by those definitions.in our desire to protect those we care about by giving them the cold, hard truth about their medical prognosis, or, indeed, a prognosis on the e_pected quality of their life, we have to make sure that we don't put the first brick in a wall that will actually disable someone. perhaps the e_isting model of only looking at what is broken in you and how do we fi_ it, serves to be more disabling to the individual than the pathology itself.by not treating the wholeness of a person, by not acknowledging their potency, we are creating another ill on top of whatever natural struggle they might have. we are effectively grading someone's worth to our community. so we need to see through the pathology and into the range of human capability. and, most importantly, there's a partnership between those perceived deficiencies and our greatest creative ability. so it's not about devaluing, or negating, these more trying times assomething we want to avoid or sweep under the rug, but instead to find those opportunities wrapped in the adversity. so maybe the idea i want to put out there is not so much overcoming adversity as it is opening ourselves up to it, embracing it, grappling with it, to use a wrestling term, maybe even dancing with it. and, perhaps, if we see adversity as natural, consistent and useful, we're less burdened by the presence of it.this year we celebrate the 200th birthday of charles darwin, and it was 150 years ago, when writing about evolution, that darwin illustrated, i think, a truth about the human character. to paraphrase: it's not the strongest of the species that survives, nor is it the most intelligent that survives; it is the one that is most adaptable to change. conflict is the genesis of creation. from darwin's work, amongst others, we can recognize that the human ability to survive and flourish is driven by the struggle of the human spirit through conflict into transformation. so, again, transformation, adaptation, is our greatest human skill. and, perhaps, until we're tested, we don't know what we're made of. maybe that's what adversity gives us: a sense of self, a sense of our own power. so, we can give ourselves a gift. we can re-imagine adversity as something more than just tough times. maybe we can see it as change. adversity is just change that we haven't adapted ourselves to yet.i think the greatest adversity that we've created for ourselves is this idea of normalcy. now, who's normal? there's no normal. there's common, there's typical. there's no normal, and would you want to meet that poor, beige person if they e_isted? (laughter) i don't think so. if we can change this paradigm from one of achieving normalcy to one of possibility -- or potency, to be even a little bit more dangerous -- we can release the power of somany more children, and invite them to engage their rare and valuable abilities with the community.anthropologists tell us that the one thing we as humans have always required of our community members is to be of use, to be able to contribute. there's evidence that neanderthals, 60,000 years ago, carried their elderly and those with serious physical injury, and perhaps it's because the life e_perience of survival of these people proved of value to the community. they didn't view these people as broken and useless; they were seen as rare and valuable.a few years ago, i was in a food market in the town where i grew up in that red zone in northeastern pennsylvania, and i was standing over a bushel of tomatoes. it was summertime: i had shorts on. i hear this guy, his voice behind me say, “well, if it isn't aimee mullins.” and i turn around, and it's this older man. i have no idea who he is.and i said, “i'm sorry, sir, have we met? i don't remember meeting you.”he said, “well, you wouldn't remember meeti ng me. i mean, when we met i was delivering you from your mother's womb.” (laughter) oh, that guy. and, but of course, actually, it did click.this man was dr. kean, a man that i had only known about through my mother's stories of that day, because, of course, typical fashion, i arrived late for my birthday by two weeks. and so my mother's prenatal physician had gone on vacation, so the man who delivered me was a complete stranger to my parents. and, because i was born without the fibula bones, and had feet turned in, and a few toes in this foot and a few toes in that, he had to be the bearer -- this stranger had to be the bearer of bad news.he said to me, “i had to give this prognosis to your parents that you would never walk, and you would never have the kind of mobility that other kids have or any kind of life of independence, and you've been making liar out of me ever since.” (laughter) (applause)the e_traordinary thing is that he said he had saved newspaper clippings throughout my whole childhood, whether winning a second grade spelling bee, marching with the girl scouts, you know, the halloween parade, winning my college scholarship, or any of my sports victories, and he was using it, and integrating it into teaching resident students, med students from hahnemann medical school and hershey medical school. and he called this part of the course the _ factor, the potential of the human will. no prognosis can account for how powerful this could be as a determinant in the quality of someone's life. and dr. k ean went on to tell me, he said, “in my e_perience, unless repeatedly told otherwise, and even if given a modicum of support, if left to their own devices, a child will achieve.”see, dr. kean made that shift in thinking. he understood that there's a difference between the medical condition and what someone might do with it. and there's been a shift in my thinking over time, in that, if you had asked me at 15 years old, if i would have traded prosthetics for flesh-and-bone legs, i wouldn't have hesitated for a second. i aspired to that kind of normalcy back then. but if you ask me today, i'm not so sure. and it's because of the e_periences i've had with them, not in spite of the e_periences i've had with them. and perhaps this shift in me has happened because i've been e_posed to more people who have opened doors for me than those who have put lids and cast shadows on me.see, all you really need is one person to show you the epiphany of your own power, and you're off. if you can hand somebody the key to their own power -- the human spirit is so receptive -- if you can do that and open a door for someone at a crucial moment, you are educating them in the best sense. you're teaching them to open doors for themselves. in fact, the e_act meaning of the word “educate” comes from the root word “educe.” it means “to bring forth what is within, to bring out potential.” so again, which potential do we want to bring out?there was a case study done in 1960s britain, when they were moving from grammar schools to comprehensive schools. it's called the streaming trials. we call it “tracking” here in the states. it's separating students from a, b, c, d and so on. and the “a students” get the tougher curriculum, the best teachers, etc. well, they took, over a three-month period, d-level students, gave them a's, told them they were “a's,” told them they were bright, and at the end of this three-month period, they were performing at a-level.and, of course, the heartbreaking, flip side of this study, is that they took the “a students” and told them they were “d's.” and that's what happened at the end of that three-month period. those who were still around in school, besides the people who had dropped out. a crucial part of this case study was that the teachers were duped too. the teachers didn't know a switch had been made. they were simply told, “these are the 'a-students,' these are the 'd-students.'” and that's how they went about teaching them and treating them.so, i think that the only true disability is a crushed spirit, a spirit that's been crushed doesn't have hope, it doesn't see beauty, it no longer has our natural, childlike curiosity and ourinnate ability to imagine. if instead, we can bolster a human spirit to keep hope, to see beauty in themselves and others, to be curious and imaginative, then we are truly using our power well. when a spirit has those qualities, we are able to create new realities and new ways of being.i'd like to leave you with a poem by a fourteenth-century persian poet named hafiz that my friend, jacques dembois told me about, and the poem is called “the god who only knows four words”: “every child has known god, not the god of names, not the god of don'ts, but the god who only knows four words and keeps repeating them, saying, 'come dance with me. come, dance with me. come, dance with me.'”ted演讲稿(篇2)一直以来,我都是同学、家长眼中“别人家的孩子”,但大家有所不知的是,我一直在与一个“病魔”作斗争,它就是拖延症。

ted中关于成功的演讲稿2020

ted中关于成功的演讲稿2020

ted中关于成功的演讲稿2020成功是一个因人而异的概念。

有的人把升官发财看作成功,有的人把算计别人赚点便宜看作成功,有的人把家庭和睦工作快乐看作成功。

一起来看看ted中关于成功的演讲稿2020,欢迎查阅!ted中关于成功的演讲稿1尊敬的领导、敬爱的老师、亲爱的同学们:大家好!今天我演讲的题目是“成功需要无比坚定的信念”。

首先我先给大家讲一个真实的故事吧:台湾有个年青人,经过数年的拼搏后赚了不少钱。

他准备到欧州旅游,入住一酒店,第一天早上醒过来,听到一阵敲门声。

门一打开后有个侍应生很热情地跟他说:“good morning sir。

”他没听懂。

按照中国人的惯性思维,他在想:“是不是问我叫什么名字。

”于是他大声在说:“我叫陈阿土。

”第二天早上他又听到一阵敲门声,门一打开后又见昨天的侍应生,这个侍应生又跟他说了一句:“goodmorningsir。

”他有点生气了,“怎么这么笨呢?”于是他更大声地说:“我叫陈阿土。

”第三天早上令人恐惧的事情还是发生了。

他又听到一阵敲门生,这个侍应生又跟他说了一句:“goodmorningsir”,他非常气愤地说:“我叫陈阿土。

”当天晚上他睡不着了,他想弄个明白。

于是他问旅游团的团长。

团长说:“你才是笨蛋呢?人家问你早上好呢!”他突然觉得很羞愧,我赚了那么多钱,怎么文化水平这么低呢?于是他准备学英语,他学的第一句话就是:goodmorningsir。

第四天早上他在焦急地等待侍应生的敲门,因为他要把这句话用出来。

所以当侍应生一敲门,门一打开后他立刻对侍应生说:“goodmorningsir”,侍应生听完后立刻说:“我叫陈阿土。

”这是为什么吗?因为在这个世界上不是你影响了别人就是别人影响了你。

成功需要无比坚定的信念。

信仰没有正确与否,只要适合你的,就是最好的。

我要送给大家第一句话,这句话是一个信念,那就是今天我必须成功。

记住,是今天,不是明天,更不是高考。

因为所有人生的成功,只能今天成功了,人生才有可能成功。

ted中英文演讲稿(范文6篇)

ted中英文演讲稿(范文6篇)

ted中英文演讲稿(范文6篇)本站小编为你整理了多篇相关的《ted中英文演讲稿(范文6篇)》,但愿对你工作学习有帮助,当然你在本站还可以找到更多《ted中英文演讲稿(范文6篇)》。

第一篇:ted演讲稿2022when i was nine years old i went off to summer camp for the first time. andmy mother packed me a suitcase full of books, which to me seemed like aperfectly natural thing to do. because in my family, reading was the primarygroup activity. and this might sound antisocial to you, but for us it was reallyjust a different way of being social. you have the animal warmth of your familysitting right ne_t to you, but you are also free to go roaming around theadventureland inside your own mind. and i had this idea that camp was going tobe just like this, but better. (laughter) i had a vision of 10 girls sitting ina cabin cozily reading books in their matching nightgowns.当我九岁的时候我第一次去参加夏令营我妈妈帮我整理好了我的行李箱里面塞满了书这对于我来说是一件极为自然的事情因为在我的家庭里阅读是主要的家庭活动听上去你们可能觉得我们是不爱交际的但是对于我的家庭来说这真的只是接触社会的另一种途径你们有自己家庭接触时的温暖亲情家人静坐在你身边但是你也可以自由地漫游在你思维深处的冒险乐园里我有一个想法野营会变得像这样子,当然要更好些(笑声) 我想象到十个女孩坐在一个小屋里都穿着合身的女式睡衣惬意地享受着读书的过程(laughter)(笑声)camp was more like a keg party without any alcohol. and on the very firstday our counselor gathered us all together and she taught us a cheer that shesaid we would be doing every day forthe rest of the summer to instill campspirit. and it went like this: "r-o-w-d-i-e, that's the way we spell rowdie.rowdie, rowdie, let's get rowdie." yeah. so i couldn't figure out for the lifeof me why we were supposed to be so rowdy, or why we had to spell this wordincorrectly. (laughter) but i recited a cheer. i recited a cheer along witheverybody else. i did my best. and i just waited for the time that i could gooff and read my books.野营这时更像是一个不提供酒水的派对聚会在第一天的时候呢我们的顾问把我们都集合在一起并且她教会了我们一种今后要用到的庆祝方式在余下夏令营的每一天中让“露营精神”浸润我们之后它就像这样继续着r-o-w-d-i-e 这是我们拼写“吵闹"的口号我们唱着“噪音,喧闹,我们要变得吵一点” 对,就是这样可我就是弄不明白我的生活会是什么样的为什么我们变得这么吵闹粗暴或者为什么我们非要把这个单词错误地拼写(笑声) 但是我可没有忘记庆祝。

TED演讲稿(5篇范文)

TED演讲稿(5篇范文)

TED演讲稿(5篇范文)第一篇:TED演讲稿Now, I want to start with a question: When was the last time you were called childish? For kids like me, being called childish can be a frequent occurrence.Every time we make irrational demands, exhibit irresponsible behavior, or display any other signs of being normal American citizens, we are called childish, which really bothers me.After all, take a look at these events: Imperialism and colonization, world wars, George W.Bush.Ask yourself: Who's responsible? Adults.首先我要问大家一个问题:上一回别人说你幼稚是什么时候?像我这样的小孩,可能经常会被人说成是幼稚。

每一次我们提出不合理的要求,做出不负责任的行为,或者展现出有别于普通美国公民的惯常行为之时,我们就被说成是幼稚。

这让我很不服气。

首先,让我们来回顾下这些事件:帝国主义和殖民主义,世界大战,小布什。

请你们扪心自问下:这些该归咎于谁?是大人。

Now, what have kids done? Well, Anne Frank touched millions with her powerful account of the Holocaust, Ruby Bridges helped end segregation in the United States, and, most recently, Charlie Simpson helped to raise 120,000 pounds for Haiti on his little bike.So, as you can see evidenced by such examples, age has absolutely nothing to do with it.The traits the word childish addresses are seen so often in adults that we should abolish this age-discriminatory word when it comes to criticizing behavior associated with irresponsibility and irrational thinking.(Applause)而小孩呢,做了些什么?安妮·弗兰克(Anne Frank)对大屠杀强有力的叙述打动了数百万人的心。

ted城市演讲稿5篇2020

ted城市演讲稿5篇2020

ted城市演讲稿5篇2020城市建设的开展不仅仅有利于现在城市人们的生活,也是影响子孙后代。

一起来看看ted城市演讲稿5篇2020,欢迎查阅!ted城市演讲稿1文明城市是一个地区物质文明、精神文明、政治文明和生态文明的和谐统一,是城市形象和发展水平的重要体现,也是居民整体素质、文明水平的体现。

县委、县政府着眼全局,顺应时代潮流和经济社会发展规律作出了开展省级文明城市创建活动重大决策。

我们务必站在战略高度,充分认识创建的重大意义,增强做好创建工作的责任感和使命感。

笔者认为,我们必须凝聚共识创文明,真抓实干治环境,全力做好以下四个方面的工作。

一、深入宣传教育,营造文明创建氛围。

市民是城市的主人,是文明创建的实践者和受益者,只有调动全民积极性,才能为创建文明城市提供持久动力;只有从根本上提高广大市民的素质,文明城市创建才能取得成效。

因此,我们必须把宣传教育作为主线,贯穿文明创建工作的始终。

一是加强社会宣传。

通过广播、电视、报纸、网络,散发宣传资料等形式,全方位,多层面宣传新《环境保_》和创建文明城市的重要性和必要性,营造良好的社会氛围。

二是强化社会监督。

公开环境质量、环境管理、环境行为等信息,维护公众的环境知情权,参与权和监督权。

动员市民靠自己辛勤努力,共同创建美好家园。

三是文明创建进村入户。

深入开展文明创建进机关、进学校、进企业、进乡村、进社区等活动,提升全民的法治意识和环境意识,增强全民争当文明市民的自觉性和主动性。

二、狠抓环境整治,大力改善城市形象。

环境面貌是城市文明程度的直接反映,也是文明创建的重要内容,我们必须坚决依法行政,集中开展城区环境整治,改善城市形象,提升城市品位。

今年,根据县委、县政府的部署,我镇以社区为单位,开展了环境卫生大排查。

归纳起来,当前县城存在“三乱”、“三污染”现象。

“三乱”是车辆停放乱,摊点摆设乱,广告张贴乱;“三污染”是水污染,气污染,垃圾污染。

针对县城环境现状,我们要集中开展“五项”大整治。

2020简短的ted演讲稿【精品】

2020简短的ted演讲稿【精品】

TED(指technology, entertainment, design在英语中的缩写,即技术、娱乐、设计)是美国的一家私有非营利机构,在TED上可是有很多著名的演讲哦。

下面是为你整理的几篇简短的ted演讲稿,希望能帮到你哟。

布琳.布朗致力于研究人与人的关系--我们感同身受的能力、获得归属感的能力、爱的能力。

在TED休斯敦一次富有感染力的幽默谈话中,她跟我们分享了她的研究发现,一个让她更想深入了解自己以及人类的发现,洞悉人性也更了解自己。

同时建议父母,全心全意去爱,即使没有回报、即使很困难,也要勇敢面对,因为感到脆弱代表我还活着,我们要相信自己够好,绝对值得被爱。

那我就这么开始吧:几年前,一个活动策划人打电话给我,因为我当时要做一个演讲。

她在电话里说:“我真很苦恼该如何在宣传单上介绍你。

”我心想,怎么会苦恼呢? 她继续道:“你看,我听过你的演讲,我觉得我可以称你为研究者,可我担心的是,如果我这么称呼你,没人会来听,因为大家普遍认为研究员很无趣而且脱离现实。

” (笑声) 好。

然后她说:“但是我喜欢你的演讲,就跟讲故事一样很吸引人。

我想来想去,还是觉得称你为讲故事的人比较妥当。

”而那个做学术的,感到不安的我脱口而出道:“你要叫我什么?”她说:“我要称你为讲故事的人。

" 我心想:”为什么不干脆叫魔法小精灵?“ (笑声) 我说:”让我考虑一下。

“我试着鼓起勇气。

我对自己说,我是一个讲故事的人。

我是一个从事定性研究的科研人员。

我收集故事;这就是我的工作。

或许故事就是有灵魂的数据。

或许我就是一个讲故事的人。

于是我说:”听着,要不你就称我为做研究兼讲故事的人。

“她说:”哈哈,没这么个说法呀。

“ (笑声) 所以我是个做研究兼讲故事的人,我今天想跟大家谈论的-- 我们要谈论的话题是关于拓展认知-- 我想给你们讲几个故事是关于我的一份研究的,这份研究从本质上拓宽了我个人的认知,也确确实实改变了我生活、爱、工作还有教育孩子的方式。

2024年ted演讲稿青春样本(4篇)

2024年ted演讲稿青春样本(4篇)

2024年ted演讲稿青春样本尊敬的教师们,亲爱的同学们:大家下午好。

今天是一个非同寻常的日子,因为它标志着我们即将步入一个新的阶段,踏上人生的新征程,放飞我们的青春梦想,书写我们的青春篇章。

五月,情怀弥漫,信念升腾。

14根蜡烛照亮了青春的里程碑,我们在青春的起跑线上约定,为这段韶华岁月立下无悔的誓言,整装待发。

童年虽美好,但无法永恒停留。

父母和教师的爱伴随我们成长,但他们终将逐渐淡出我们的成年生活。

我们终将独立,学会面对生活的挑战。

过去的____年,我们多数时间在家庭和学校的关爱与帮助下学习、生活、成长。

父母的无微不至,教师的教诲,让我们在知识的海洋中,也懂得了人生的真谛。

我们习惯于接受,却忘记了自己也应该去付出,去感恩。

青春如旭日东升,充满活力与希望。

我们在操场上奔跑,散发成熟的魅力,青春的活力激发着每一个细胞。

无论何时何地,我们都要肩负起责任,心怀感恩。

青春与责任,看似矛盾,却在我们青年的身上得以统一。

孝敬父母,尊重教师,帮助同学,努力学习,这些都是我们的责任。

我们要以优异的中考成绩回报父母和教师的辛勤付出,这是对他们最好的感激,也是我们对自己未来的负责。

无论未来我们身处何处,从事何种工作,道德修养始终是我们的首要任务。

人格的健全,品行的端正,将引领我们的人生走向。

因此,我们必须始终遵守规则,提升自我,成为对个人、家庭和社会都有益的公民。

在人生的道路上,坚韧不拔的精神是我们成功的秘诀。

有些同学可能过于依赖,缺乏自信。

请始终保持自信,任何尝试都可能成为成功的起点。

相信自己,相信未来,我们的舞台广阔无垠。

青春的我们,用不懈的努力,无尽的追求,展现青春的力量。

青春短暂,但其美丽无比。

我们懂得珍惜,感悟时光的流转。

青春的我们充满活力,怀揣对生活的向往。

我们要有攀登高峰的决心,用理性塑造青春的基石,张扬我们的个性。

困难和挫折只会激励我们奋发向前,成为我们青春的旋律:竹密岂妨流水过,山高怎阻野云飞?青春赋予我们智慧,我们用知识充实自己,积蓄生命的能量。

ted演讲稿4篇范文稿

ted演讲稿4篇范文稿

ted演讲稿4篇last year when i was here, i was speaking to you about a swim which i did across the north pole.去年,当我站在这里的时候,我在谈论我横跨北极的游泳。

and while that swim took place three years ago, i can remember it as if it was yesterday.那还是发生在3年前,对我则好像是昨天一般。

i remember standing on the edge of the ice, about to dive into the water, and thinking to myself, i have never ever seen any place on this earth which is just so frightening.我还记得我站在冰层的边缘,就要扎进水里,然后我自己想到,我再也再也不要看到地球上的这个地方,这里是如此的让人恐惧。

the water is completely black.the water is minus 1.7 degrees centigrade, or 29 degrees fahrenheit.it's flipping freezing in that water.那里的水是全黑色。

水的温度是负1.7摄氏度,华氏29度。

那水里就是翻动的冰块。

and then a thought came across my mind: if things go pear-shaped on this swim, how long will it take for my frozen body to sink the four and a half kilometers to the bottom of the ocean?然后一个念头在我脑中划过:如果这场泳出了点问题,我这冰冻的身体要花多长时间才能沉到这4500米的底部呢?and then i said to myself, i've just got to get this thought out of my mind as quickly as possible.然后我告诫我自己,我要把这个念头尽快的抛在我的脑后。

ted演讲稿(优秀4篇)

ted演讲稿(优秀4篇)

ted演讲稿(优秀4篇)ted中文演讲稿篇一(一)三月的洛阳,点乱红山碎杏发,铺平绿水新苹生,十里湖光千世梦,花语雨初嬉笑回。

而那年的三月,白雁翅低仍重飞,黄鹂舌涩未成语,纵使是旷世迁客骚人也难揄扬曾经这如仙境般的美景。

他们的眼中只是,泥上飘零许多愁,落水边花未随流;只是,感时残花溅血泪,恨别憔鸟惊恨心。

那年,国家天下,内外忧患,人心惶惶。

那年,朝廷政权摇摇欲坠,动荡不安,眼看着这曾经盛世民族如今将逢灭顶之灾。

那年,朝中,权臣当道,把持朝政。

新帝幼小,是非不分。

边境,四面临敌,千里报急。

朝廷却迟迟不肯发兵救援。

守边大将叶护一人难敌万众,被困敌军,生死未卜。

权臣说服幼帝让将军之子叶寒下洛阳,寻找传说中的绝世宝剑,传说,“宝剑一出,无与争锋,以一敌万,救民水火。

”那年,叶寒来到洛阳。

阴沉沉的风刮过洛阳边界,天空中有无数只鸟雀盘旋哀鸣,浓烈的悲哀从叶寒狼眼般狭长深邃的眼睛中渐渐渗出。

突逢家变,年少的他,挑起家主的负担。

背负国仇,无援的他,担起救国的重任。

谁来怜惜,这个昔日冷漠倔犟的少年。

多日的跋涉,身心双疲的他,两眼一黑,重重的倒在地上,晕了过去。

不知多久,褥席上,叶寒躺着,嘴角微微上扬,不知他在梦中遇到了谁。

微瞬间,叶寒醒了。

睁开眼,发现自己躺在一张干净的床上,身边是一个清秀的少年。

“我是言幽,是我救了你。

你的身体很弱,需要休息。

”少年对着叶寒说。

“嗯?恩!”话虽短,却是温暖。

叶寒笑了,这种感觉好像父亲。

“来,喝药。

”黑黢黢的药水,泛着波痕。

叶寒斜觑着言幽,那双眼睛似乎与梦中的人影重叠,一样的光彩熠熠,似夜空中的星,折射出柔和的颜色,却带着点点忧愁。

“父亲……”叶寒低头不知在自语什么。

(二)数月过去,天地景物,宛若迷雾。

山涧四季,水面涟漪,草际烟光,月下花容,杲杲云彩,风中飘逸。

那天晚上,赤橙色的星辰点缀着墨蓝色的天空,夜弥漫着温馨的颜色。

那天山上,磷光莹莹,萤火虫闪着模糊地绿光,连缀起一片绿色,好似夜空的倒影,迷茫而又清晰。

ted关于坚持的演讲稿2020年

ted关于坚持的演讲稿2020年

ted关于坚持的演讲稿2020年坚持就是要持之以恒,只有持之以恒才能坚持,只要坚持再难的困难也能克服下来。

一起来看看ted关于坚持的演讲稿2020年,欢迎查阅!ted关于坚持的演讲稿1各位老师,各位同学,大家上午好!今天我发言的主题是《品尝坚持的力量》。

我们一直认为团结就是力量,这句话至今已经成了许多人的座右铭。

团结,一切困难都可以迎刃而解;团结,任何敌人都可以战胜。

不可否认,这句话对于集体而言是正确的,但是在我们个人的学习和生活中往往是坚持起着决定性的作用。

约翰逊说:“伟大的作品不是靠力量,而是靠坚持来完成的。

”钱学森说:“不要失去信心,只要坚持不懈,就终会有成果。

”巴斯德说:“告诉你使我达到目标的奥秘吧,我唯一的力量就是我的坚持精神。

”这三句话,告诉我们一个道理:坚持就是力量。

惟有坚持才是踏向成功的基石。

雨果坚持写作,用了六十年的时间才写成了不朽之作《悲惨世界》;曹雪芹坚持用了十年的光景才写下了不朽的《红楼梦》;李时珍用了三十载的时间才坚持完成了《本草纲目》的撰写;王羲之练字用光了一大缸墨水,最后他的《兰亭集序》流芳百世。

无数人用自己的亲身经历向我们诠释了这样一个道理:坚持就是力量,坚持就是通向成功不可获缺的精神力量。

开学第一课我们都看了,其中的__给我留下了深刻的印象。

同学们,我们总是认为我们基础差,学习成绩赶不上别人,有如此多的困难无法克服,那就想想___吧。

一个没有双臂的人,在离开学校两年后重返校园,经过自己不懈的努力,于20__年,以优异的成绩被中山大学录取。

相比杨孟衡而言,我们至少还有健全的双手。

在我校,又有谁在学习上的困难会超过杨孟衡呢?有些人在埋怨基础不好,英语单词记不了。

你知道吗?高考词汇量大约只有3500个,其中高中词汇大约2100个。

如果我们用三年的时间记住这2100个单词的话,我们只用坚持每天记住2个单词。

对大多数的同学而言,每天记住两个单词,是小菜一碟,而难就难在这种容易的事情你要坚持做1095天。

ted演讲认识自己演讲稿2020

ted演讲认识自己演讲稿2020

ted演讲认识自己演讲稿2020ted演讲认识自己演讲稿1世界上最可怕的不是敌手,而是你自己,你脆弱的心是你最可怕的敌人。

而在你的生活中,有一个人需要你的支持、鼓励和理解,有一个人是你最可信赖的人,这个人是谁呢,又是你自己。

你有没有想过,在生活中,人们最先注意的是自己,还是别人?“当然是自己。

”你毫无疑义地说。

你说得很对,拿到一张集体照,每个人的目光首当其冲不就是落在自己身上吗。

可是人们经常会发生不认识自己的现象:“我怎么会做出这种事,说出这种话,简直不可思议。

”有些人在碰到意外打击不能自拔时,会一下失去自我。

“我心已碎,我已心灰意冷,我依然怕黑,无人给我安慰,我到底是谁啊?是恶魔?是天使?”着名画家保罗。

高更曾画过一幅震动世界的经典作品:“我是谁?我从哪里来?我到哪里去?”表达了一些现代人对自我的迷惑和茫然。

因此在科学技术迅速发展的今天,很多人对自己的认识和了解仍然像幼儿园里的孩子,不会去开发自己身上的个性特长。

也不知道自己的人格缺陷在哪里?由此产生的种种人间悲剧也就屡见不鲜。

不管是历史写照,还是文学作品,悲剧人物都可以从个性失衡,失去自我中寻找到缘由。

如果没有镜子,不去河边、并且照照,人类可能永远不会知道自己的模样。

同样,人不去自观自己,内视自己,不去认认真真坐下来想一想,要是难以了解自己那变化莫测的思维、情绪和自我表现。

当你在失败和挫折中,自己看不上自己,自己和自己赌气,摔东西、骂人、捶打脑袋、无休止地长吁短叹时,你有没有想过,这并没有解脱你的失败,减轻挫折。

你有没有想过:是谁在阻挠你取得成功呢?这个人正是你自己。

世界上最可怕的不是敌手,而是你自己。

如果为自己长得不好看而发愁,那你只会越来越丑;老是怀疑自己学习能不能搞上去,你只能忍受失败的煎熬。

和美女去比,你的五官永远是有缺陷的。

但每个人都以自己独立的个体而存在,你只能以自己的方式去唱歌。

你有你的特长,你有睿智的头脑,善解人意的情怀,发挥自己的长处,施展自己的才华,你那双小眼睛就会被看作是智慧的象征。

ted关于教育的演讲稿2020

ted关于教育的演讲稿2020

ted关于教育的演讲稿2020教育的根本价值,就是给国家提供具有崇高信仰、道德高尚、诚实守法、技艺精湛、博学多才、多专多能的人才,培养和养育经济与社会发展需要的劳动力,培养合格公民,为国、为家、为社会创造科学知识和物质财富。

一起来看看ted关于教育的演讲稿2020,欢迎查阅!ted关于教育的演讲稿1尊敬的各位领导、各位老师:大家好!我是初三年级的老师。

很高兴能够站在这里,和大家一起分享自己的教育心得与教学体会。

我今天演讲的题目是《有一种教育叫爱的力量》。

有一种教育叫爱的力量,就像一座巍巍屹立的灯塔,为每一位迷失路途的孩子找回前进的方向。

有一种教育叫爱的力量,就像久旱之后的甘霖雨露,给每一位遭遇困境的学生带来春天般的希望。

有一种教育叫爱的力量,就像一曲朴实真挚的歌谣,涌动着的不仅仅是感激,更是一份光明与辉煌!《爱的教育》,亚米契斯用他最质朴的笔触奏响了时代的最强音。

《爱的教育》,它展现的是一幅幅动人的画面,它震撼的是一代又一代全球各地的教育工作者。

我永远无法忘记,当奈利的母亲激动地抱着卡罗内的双肩,“摸索”着要找礼物送给他的时候,那种简单而又复杂的神情湿润了我的双眼。

我能够体会到一位母亲对自己那驼背、瘦小的儿子的担心与忧虑,我能够体会到一位母亲对保护自己儿子的卡罗内发自肺腑的感激与感谢。

我永远无法忘记,朱利亚为了帮助父亲抄写公文而累坏了身体。

面对父亲的责怪和家人的不理解,朱利亚忍受了下来,并坚持帮助父亲抄写公文。

当父亲最终明白事情的原委之时,父子俩痛哭着抱在了一起。

此时此刻,所有的文字在他们面前都显得苍白无力。

大爱无言,最纯真的感动迸发出最温馨的光芒。

我永远无法忘记,年仅13岁的小马克孤身一人,长途跋涉,去寻找自己的母亲。

是对母亲的爱给了小马克巨大的精神动力,克服了常人难以想象的困难,最终挽救了思乡心切、正处于死亡边缘的母亲。

为了爱与被爱,她要活着!为了爱与被爱,她要坚强地活下去!《爱的教育》,正如其书名所暗示的,它宣扬了人世间最伟大的爱。

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2020ted演讲稿(4篇)本文是关于2020ted演讲稿(4篇),仅供参考,希望对您有所帮助,感谢阅读。

when i was seven years old and my sister was just five years old, we were playing on top of a bunk bed. i was two years older than my sister at the time -- i mean, i'm two years older than her now -- but at the time it meant she had to do everything that i wanted to do, and i wanted to play war. so we were up on top of our bunk beds. and on one side of the bunk bed, i had put out all of my g.i. joe soldiers and weaponry. and on the other side were all my sister's my little ponies ready for a cavalry charge.there are differing accounts of what actually happened that afternoon, but since my sister is not here with us today, let me tell you the true story -- (laughter) -- which is my sister's a little bit on the clumsy side. somehow, without any help or push from her older brother at all, suddenly amy disappeared off of the top of the bunk bed and landed with this crash on the floor. now i nervously peered over the side of the bed to see what had befallen my fallen sister and saw that she had landed painfully on her hands and knees on all fours on the ground.i was nervous because my parents had charged me with making sure that my sister and i played as safely and as quietly as possible. and seeing as how i had accidentally broken amy's arm just one week before ... (laughter) ... heroically pushing her out of the way of an oncoming imaginary sniper bullet, (laughter) for which i have yet to be thanked, i was trying as hard as i could -- she didn't even see it coming -- i was trying as hard as i could to be on my best behavior.and i saw my sister's face, this wail of pain and suffering and surprise threatening to erupt from her mouth and threatening to wake my parents from the long winter's nap for which they had settled. so i did the only thingmy little frantic seven year-old brain could think to do to avert this tragedy. and if you have children, you've seen this hundreds of times before.i said, "amy, amy, wait. don't cry. don't cry. did you see how you landed? no human lands on all fours like that. amy, i think this means you're a unicorn."(laughter)now that was cheating, because there was nothing in the world my sister would want more than not to be amy the hurt five year-old little sister, but amy the special unicorn. of course, this was an option that was open to her brain at no point in the past. and you could see how my poor, manipulated sister faced conflict, as her little brain attempted to devote resources to feeling the pain and suffering and surprise she just experienced, or contemplating her new-found identity as a unicorn. and the latter won out. instead of crying, instead of ceasing our play, instead of waking my parents, with all the negative consequences that would have ensued for me, instead a smile spread across her face and she scrambled right back up onto the bunk bed with all the grace of a baby unicorn ... (laughter) ... with one broken leg.what we stumbled across at this tender age of just five and seven -- we had no idea at the time -- was something that was going be at the vanguard of a scientific revolution occurring two decades later in the way that we look at the human brain. what we had stumbled across is something called positive psychology, which is the reason that i'm here today and the reason that i wake up every morning.when i first started talking about this research outside of academia, out with companies and schools, the very first thing they said to never do is to start your talk with a graph. the very first thing i want to do is start my talk with a graph. this graph looks boring, but this graph isthe reason i get excited and wake up every morning. and this graph doesn't even mean anything; it's fake data. what we found is --(laughter)if i got this data back studying you here in the room, i would be thrilled, because there's very clearly a trend that's going on there, and that means that i can get published, which is all that really matters. the fact that there's one weird red dot that's up above the curve, there's one weirdo in the room -- i know who you are, i saw you earlier -- that's no problem. that's no problem, as most of you know, because i can just delete that dot.i can delete that dot because that's clearly a measurement error. and we know that's a measurement error because it's messing up my data.so one of the very first things we teach people in economics and statistics and business and psychology courses is how, in a statistically valid way, do we eliminate the weirdos. how do we eliminate the outliers so we can find the line of best fit? which is fantastic if i'm trying to find out how many advil the average person should be taking -- two. but if i'm interested in potential, if i'm interested in your potential, or for happiness or productivity or energy or creativity, what we're doing is we're creating the cult of the average with science.if i asked a question like, "how fast can a child learn how to read in a classroom?" scientists change the answer to "how fast does the average child learn how to read in that classroom?" and then we tailor the class right towards the average. now if you fall below the average on this curve, then psychologists get thrilled, because that means you're either depressed or you have a disorder, or hopefully both. we're hoping for both because our business model is, if you come into a therapy session with one problem, we want to make sure you leave knowing you have 10, so you keep coming back over and over again. we'll go back into your childhood if necessary, buteventually what we want to do is make you normal again. but normal is merely average.and what i posit and what positive psychology posits is that if we study what is merely average, we will remain merely average. then instead of deleting those positive outliers, what i intentionally do is come into a population like this one and say, why? why is it that some of you are so high above the curve in terms of your intellectual ability, athletic ability, musical ability, creativity, energy levels, your resiliency in the face of challenge, your sense of humor? whatever it is, instead of deleting you, what i want to do is study you. because maybe we can glean information -- not just how to move people up to the average, but how we can move the entire average up in our companies and schools worldwide.the reason this graph is important to me is, when i turn on the news, it seems like the majority of the information is not positive, in fact it's negative. most of it's about murder, corruption, diseases, natural disasters. and very quickly, my brain starts to think that's the accurate ratio of negative to positive in the world. what that's doing is creating something called the medical school syndrome -- which, if you know people who've been to medical school, during the first year of medical training, as you read through a list of all the symptoms and diseases that could happen, suddenly you realize you have all of them.i have a brother in-law named bobo -- which is a whole other story. bobo married amy the unicorn. bobo called me on the phone from yale medical school, and bobo said, "shawn, i have leprosy." (laughter) which, even at yale, is extraordinarily rare. but i had no idea how to console poor bobo because he had just gotten over an entire week of menopause.(laughter)see what we're finding is it's not necessarily the reality that shapesus, but the lens through which your brain views the world that shapes your reality. and if we can change the lens, not only can we change your happiness, we can change every single educational and business outcome at the same time.when i applied to harvard, i applied on a dare. i didn't expect to get in, and my family had no money for college. when i got a military scholarship two weeks later, they allowed me to go. suddenly, something that wasn't even a possibility became a reality. when i went there, i assumed everyone else would see it as a privilege as well, that they'd be excited to be there. even if you're in a classroom full of people smarter than you, you'd be happy just to be in that classroom, which is what i felt. but what i found there is, while some people experience that, when i graduated after my four years and then spent the next eight years living in the dorms with the students -- harvard asked me to; i wasn't that guy. (laughter) i was an officer of harvard to counsel students through the difficult four years. and what i found in my research and my teaching is that these students, no matter how happy they were with their original success of getting into the school, two weeks later their brains were focused, not on the privilege of being there, nor on their philosophy or their physics. their brain was focused on the competition, the workload, the hassles, the stresses, the complaints.when i first went in there, i walked into the freshmen dining hall, which is where my friends from waco, texas, which is where i grew up -- i know some of you have heard of it. when they'd come to visit me, they'd look around, they'd say, "this freshman dining hall looks like something out of hogwart's from the movie "harry potter," which it does. this is hogwart's from the movie "harry potter" and that's harvard. and when they see this, they say, "shawn, why do you waste your time studying happinessat harvard? seriously, what does a harvard student possibly have to be unhappy about?"embedded within that question is the key to understanding the science of happiness. because what that question assumes is that our external world is predictive of our happiness levels, when in reality, if i know everything about your external world, i can only predict 10 percent of your long-term happiness. 90 percent of your long-term happiness is predicted not by the external world, but by the way your brain processes the world. and if we change it, if we change our formula for happiness and success, what we can do is change the way that we can then affect reality. what we found is that only 25 percent of job successes are predicted by i.q. 75 percent of job successes are predicted by your optimism levels, your social support and your ability to see stress as a challenge instead of as a threat.i talked to a boarding school up in new england, probably the most prestigious boarding school, and they said, "we already know that. so every year, instead of just teaching our students, we also have a wellness week. and we're so excited. monday night we have the world's leading expert coming in to speak about adolescent depression. tuesday night it's school violence and bullying. wednesday night is eating disorders. thursday night is elicit drug use. and friday night we're trying to decide between risky sex or happiness." (laughter) i said, "that's most people's friday nights." (laughter) (applause) which i'm glad you liked, but they did not like that at all. silence on the phone. and into the silence, i said, "i'd be happy to speak at your school, but just so you know, that's not a wellness week, that's a sickness week. what you've done is you've outlined all the negative things that can happen, but not talked about the positive."the absence of disease is not health. here's how we get to health: we need to reverse the formula for happiness and success. in the last threeyears, i've traveled to 45 different countries, working with schools and companies in the midst of an economic downturn. and what i found is that most companies and schools follow a formula for success, which is this: if i work harder, i'll be more successful. and if i'm more successful, then i'll be happier. that undergirds most of our parenting styles, our managing styles, the way that we motivate our behavior.and the problem is it's scientifically broken and backwards for two reasons. first, every time your brain has a success, you just changed the goalpost of what success looked like. you got good grades, now you have to get better grades, you got into a good school and after you get into a better school, you got a good job, now you have to get a better job, you hit your sales target, we're going to change your sales target. and if happiness is on the opposite side of success, your brain never gets there. what we've done is we've pushed happiness over the cognitive horizon as a society. and that's because we think we have to be successful, then we'll be happier.but the real problem is our brains work in the opposite order. if you can raise somebody's level of positivity in the present, then their brain experiences what we now call a happiness advantage, which is your brain at positive performs significantly better than it does at negative, neutral or stressed. your intelligence rises, your creativity rises, your energy levels rise. in fact, what we've found is that every single business outcome improves. your brain at positive is 31 percent more productive than your brain at negative, neutral or stressed. you're 37 percent better at sales. doctors are 19 percent faster, more accurate at coming up with the correct diagnosis when positive instead of negative, neutral or stressed. which means we can reverse the formula. if we can find a way of becoming positive in the present, then our brains work even more successfully as we're ableto work harder, faster and more intelligently.what we need to be able to do is to reverse this formula so we can start to see what our brains are actually capable of. because dopamine, which floods into your system when you're positive, has two functions. not only does it make you happier, it turns on all of the learning centers in your brain allowing you to adapt to the world in a different way.we've found that there are ways that you can train your brain to be able to become more positive. in just a two-minute span of time done for 21 days in a row, we can actually rewire your brain, allowing your brain to actually work more optimistically and more successfully. we've done these things in research now in every single company that i've worked with, getting them to write down three new things that they're grateful for for 21 days in a row, three new things each day. and at the end of that, their brain starts to retain a pattern of scanning the world, not for the negative, but for the positive first.journaling about one positive experience you've had over the past 24 hours allows your brain to relive it. exercise teaches your brain that your behavior matters. we find that meditation allows your brain to get over the cultural adhd that we've been creating by trying to do multiple tasks at once and allows our brains to focus on the task at hand. and finally, random acts of kindness are conscious acts of kindness. we get people, when they open up their inbox, to write one positive email praising or thanking somebody in their social support network.and by doing these activities and by training your brain just like we train our bodies, what we've found is we can reverse the formula for happiness and success, and in doing so, not only create ripples of positivity, but create a real revolution.thank you very much.(applause)when i was nine years old i went off to summer camp for the first time. and my mother packed me a suitcase full of books, which to me seemed like a perfectly natural thing to do. because in my family, reading was the primary group activity. and this might sound antisocial to you, but for us it was really just a different way of being social. you have the animal warmth of your family sitting right next to you, but you are also free to go roaming around the adventureland inside your own mind. and i had this idea that camp was going to be just like this, but better. (laughter) i had a vision of 10 girls sitting in a cabin cozily reading books in their matching nightgowns.(laughter)camp was more like a keg party without any alcohol. and on the very first day our counselor gathered us all together and she taught us a cheer that she said we would be doing every day for the rest of the summer to instill camp spirit. and it went like this: "r-o-w-d-i-e, that's the way we spell rowdie. rowdie, rowdie, let's get rowdie." yeah. so i couldn't figure out for the life of me why we were supposed to be so rowdy, or why we had to spell this word incorrectly. (laughter) but i recited a cheer.i recited a cheer along with everybody else. i did my best. and i just waited for the time that i could go off and read my books.but the first time that i took my book out of my suitcase, the coolest girl in the bunk came up to me and she asked me, "why are you being so mellow?" -- mellow, of course, being the exact opposite of r-o-w-d-i-e. and then the second time i tried it, the counselor came up to me with a concerned expression on her face and she repeated the point about camp spirit and said we should all work very hard to be outgoing.and so i put my books away, back in their suitcase, and i put them undermy bed, and there they stayed for the rest of the summer. and i felt kind of guilty about this. i felt as if the books needed me somehow, and they were calling out to me and i was forsaking them. but i did forsake them and i didn't open that suitcase again until i was back home with my family at the end of the summer.now, i tell you this story about summer camp. i could have told you 50 others just like it -- all the times that i got the message that somehow my quiet and introverted style of being was not necessarily the right way to go, that i should be trying to pass as more of an extrovert. and i always sensed deep down that this was wrong and that introverts were pretty excellent just as they were. but for years i denied this intuition, and so i became a wall street lawyer, of all things, instead of the writer that i had always longed to be -- partly because i needed to prove to myself that i could be bold and assertive too. and i was always going off to crowded bars when i really would have preferred to just have a nice dinner with friends. and i made these self-negating choices so reflexively, that i wasn't even aware that i was making them.now this is what many introverts do, and it's our loss for sure, but it is also our colleagues' loss and our communities' loss. and at the risk of sounding grandiose, it is the world's loss. because when it comes to creativity and to leadership, we need introverts doing what they do best.a third to a half of the population are introverts -- a third to a half. so that's one out of every two or three people you know. so even if you're an extrovert yourself, i'm talking about your coworkers and your spouses and your children and the person sitting next to you right now -- all of them subject to this bias that is pretty deep and real in our society. we all internalize it from a very early age without even having a language for what we're doing.now to see the bias clearly you need to understand what introversion is. it's different from being shy. shyness is about fear of social judgment. introversion is more about, how do you respond to stimulation, including social stimulation. so extroverts really crave large amounts of stimulation, whereas introverts feel at their most alive and their most switched-on and their most capable when they're in quieter, more low-key environments. not all the time -- these things aren't absolute -- but a lot of the time. so the key then to maximizing our talents is for us all to put ourselves in the zone of stimulation that is right for us.but now here's where the bias comes in. our most important institutions, our schools and our workplaces, they are designed mostly for extroverts and for extroverts' need for lots of stimulation. and also we have this belief system right now that i call the new groupthink, which holds that all creativity and all productivity comes from a very oddly gregarious place.so if you picture the typical classroom nowadays: when i was going to school, we sat in rows. we sat in rows of desks like this, and we did most of our work pretty autonomously. but nowadays, your typical classroom has pods of desks -- four or five or six or seven kids all facing each other. and kids are working in countless group assignments. even in subjects like math and creative writing, which you think would depend on solo flights of thought, kids are now expected to act as committee members. and for the kids who prefer to go off by themselves or just to work alone, those kids are seen as outliers often or, worse, as problem cases. and the vast majority of teachers reports believing that the ideal student is an extrovert as opposed to an introvert, even though introverts actually get better grades and are more knowledgeable, according to research. (laughter) okay, same thing is true in our workplaces. now, most of us work in open plan offices, without walls, where we are subject to the constant noiseand gaze of our coworkers. and when it comes to leadership, introverts are routinely passed over for leadership positions, even though introverts tend to be very careful, much less likely to take outsize risks -- which is something we might all favor nowadays. and interesting research by adam grant at the wharton school has found that introverted leaders often deliver better outcomes than extroverts do, because when they are managing proactive employees, they're much more likely to let those employees run with their ideas, whereas an extrovert can, quite unwittingly, get so excited about things that they're putting their own stamp on things, and other people's ideas might not as easily then bubble up to the surface.now in fact, some of our transformative leaders in history have been introverts. i'll give you some examples. eleanor roosevelt, rosa parks, gandhi -- all these peopled described themselves as quiet and soft-spoken and even shy. and they all took the spotlight, even though every bone in their bodies was telling them not to. and this turns out to have a special power all its own, because people could feel that these leaders were at the helm, not because they enjoyed directing others and not out of the pleasure of being looked at; they were there because they had no choice, because they were driven to do what they thought was right.now i think at this point it's important for me to say that i actually love extroverts. i always like to say some of my best friends are extroverts, including my beloved husband. and we all fall at different points, of course, along the introvert/extrovert spectrum. even carl jung, the psychologist who first popularized these terms, said that there's no such thing as a pure introvert or a pure extrovert. he said that such a man would be in a lunatic asylum, if he existed at all. and some people fall smack in the middle of the introvert/extrovert spectrum, and we call these people ambiverts. and i often think that they have the best of all worlds. butmany of us do recognize ourselves as one type or the other.and what i'm saying is that culturally we need a much better balance. we need more of a yin and yang between these two types. this is especially important when it comes to creativity and to productivity, because when psychologists look at the lives of the most creative people, what they find are people who are very good at exchanging ideas and advancing ideas, but who also have a serious streak of introversion in them.and this is because solitude is a crucial ingredient often to creativity. so darwin, he took long walks alone in the woods and emphatically turned down dinner party invitations. theodor geisel, better known as dr. seuss, he dreamed up many of his amazing creations in a lonely bell tower office that he had in the back of his house in la jolla, california. and he was actually afraid to meet the young children who read his books for fear that they were expecting him this kind of jolly santa claus-like figure and would be disappointed with his more reserved persona. steve wozniak invented the first apple computer sitting alone in his cubical in hewlett-packard where he was working at the time. and he says that he never would have become such an expert in the first place had he not been too introverted to leave the house when he was growing up.now of course, this does not mean that we should all stop collaborating -- and case in point, is steve wozniak famously coming together with steve jobs to start apple computer -- but it does mean that solitude matters and that for some people it is the air that they breathe. and in fact, we have known for centuries about the transcendent power of solitude. it's only recently that we've strangely begun to forget it. if you look at most of the world's major religions, you will find seekers -- moses, jesus, buddha, muhammad -- seekers who are going off by themselves alone to the wilderness where they then have profound epiphanies and revelations that they thenbring back to the rest of the community. so no wilderness, no revelations.this is no surprise though if you look at the insights of contemporary psychology. it turns out that we can't even be in a group of people without instinctively mirroring, mimicking their opinions. even about seemingly personal and visceral things like who you're attracted to, you will start aping the beliefs of the people around you without even realizing that that's what you're doing.and groups famously follow the opinions of the most dominant or charismatic person in the room, even though there's zero correlation between being the best talker and having the best ideas -- i mean zero. so ... (laughter) you might be following the person with the best ideas, but you might not. and do you really want to leave it up to chance? much better for everybody to go off by themselves, generate their own ideas freed from the distortions of group dynamics, and then come together as a team to talk them through in a well-managed environment and take it from there.now if all this is true, then why are we getting it so wrong? why are we setting up our schools this way and our workplaces? and why are we making these introverts feel so guilty about wanting to just go off by themselves some of the time? one answer lies deep in our cultural history. western societies, and in particular the u.s., have always favored the man of action over the man of contemplation and "man" of contemplation. but in america's early days, we lived in what historians call a culture of character, where we still, at that point, valued people for their inner selves and their moral rectitude. and if you look at the self-help books from this era, they all had titles with things like "character, the grandest thing in the world." and they featured role models like abraham lincoln who was praised for being modest and unassuming. ralph waldo emerson called him "a man who does not offend by superiority."but then we hit the 20th century and we entered a new culture that historians call the culture of personality. what happened is we had evolved an agricultural economy to a world of big business. and so suddenly people are moving from small towns to the cities. and instead of working alongside people they've known all their lives, now they are having to prove themselves in a crowd of strangers. so, quite understandably, qualities like magnetism and charisma suddenly come to seem really important. and sure enough, the self-help books change to meet these new needs and they start to have names like "how to win friends and influence people." and they feature as their role models really great salesmen. so that's the world we're living in today. that's our cultural inheritance.now none of this is to say that social skills are unimportant, and i'm also not calling for the abolishing of teamwork at all. the same religions who send their sages off to lonely mountain tops also teach us love and trust. and the problems that we are facing today in fields like science and in economics are so vast and so complex that we are going to need armies of people coming together to solve them working together. but i am saying that the more freedom that we give introverts to be themselves, the more likely that they are to come up with their own unique solutions to these problems.so now i'd like to share with you what's in my suitcase today. guess what? books. i have a suitcase full of books. here's margaret atwood, "cat's eye." here's a novel by milan kundera. and here's "the guide for the perplexed" by maimonides. but these are not exactly my books. i brought these books with me because they were written by my grandfather's favorite authors.my grandfather was a rabbi and he was a widower who lived alone in a small apartment in brooklyn that was my favorite place in the world when。

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