英语演讲稿

时间:2023-01-15 09:59:52 发言稿 我要投稿

英语演讲稿(集合15篇)

  演讲稿具有观点鲜明,内容具有鼓动性的特点。在发展不断提速的社会中,演讲稿对我们的作用越来越大,写起演讲稿来就毫无头绪?下面是小编整理的英语演讲稿,希望能够帮助到大家。

英语演讲稿(集合15篇)

英语演讲稿1

  In the past decade alone, we’ve seen historic hurricanes devastate islands across the Caribbean. We’ve seen ‘1,000-year floods’ hit the Midwestern and Southern United States multiple times in a decade. And we’ve seen record-breaking wildfires ravage California and record-breaking typhoons kill thousands in the Philippines.

  This is a true crisis. And if we fail to rise to the occasion, your generation, your children, and grandchildren will pay a terrible price. So scientists know there can be no delay in taking action – and many government and political leaders around the world are starting to understand that.

  Yet here in the United States, our federal government is seeking to become the only country in the world to withdraw from the Paris Climate Agreement – the only one. Not even North Korea is doing that.

  Those in Washington who deny the science of climate change are no more based in reality than those who believe the moon landing was faked. And while the moon landing conspiracy theorists are relegated to the paranoid corners of talk radio, climate skeptics occupy the highest positions of power in the United States government.

  Now, in the administration’s defense, climate change, they say, is only a theory – yeah, like gravity is only a theory.

  People can ignore gravity at their own risk, at least until they hit the ground. But when they ignore the climate crisis, they are not only putting themselves at risk, they are putting all humanity at risk.

英语演讲稿2

  I have a wonderful dream in my heart。 It's to speak English very well。Since English is everything for me。 English is my best friend.English is mysoul。 English is my power。 Without English,I'm nothing at all。 Nothing。 Now,Ican think in English,speak in English,and write in English. Some people thinkI'm an Indian。 Some people regard I'm a Pakistan. And some people even considerthat I'm an Egyptian. But if I could speak English as good as an American,myfuture would be brilliant. So I work very hard.

英语演讲稿3

尊敬的各位领导、老师:

  大家下午好!我叫xx,原来在xx小学工作,近几年来一直从事小学英语的教学,今年因工作调动,调整到我们xx小学工作,我感到非常的高兴,同时,也非常感谢我们学校领导能给我这样一次展示自我、成就自我的机会。我今天我竞聘的岗位是三、四年级的英语教学。

  首先我说一下自己的基本情况和工作业绩:我xx年毕业于xx师专数学系,后分配到xx中学从事数学教学,xx年开始改教初中英语,xx年因身体状况,调入小学从事小学英语教学至今,xx年自考大学本科毕业,xx年被评为中学一级教师。

  自工作以来,我一直兢兢业业,勤奋工作,所教科目成绩一直据全镇前列,特别是近几年来从事小学英语教学,所教班级多次获得全镇第一名,个人也多次被评为镇教育先进工作者、优秀教师,区优秀教师,个人年考核优秀等次的荣誉称号,并有多篇论文在市级报纸发表。

  下面我谈一下,我竞聘英语教师的几个优势和条件:

  1。有良好的师德

  我为人处事的原则是:老老实实做人,认认真真工作,开开心心生活。自己一贯注重个人品德素质的培养,努力做到尊重领导,团结同志,工作负责,办事公道,不计较个人得失,对工作对同志有公心,爱心,平常心和宽容心。自从参加工作以来,我首先在师德上严格要求自己,要做一个合格的人民教师!认真学习和领会上级教育主管部门的文件精神,与时俱进,爱岗敬业,为人师表,热爱学生,尊重学生,争取让每个学生都能享受到最好的.教育,都能有不同程度的发

  2。有较高的专业水平

  我从xx师专数学系毕业后曾到xx师范大学进修英语教学培训,系统而又牢固地掌握了英语教学的专业知识。多年来始终在教学第一线致力于小学英语教学及研究,使自己的专业知识得到进一步充实、更新和扩展。

  3。有较强的教学能力

  从选择教师这门职业的第一天起,我最大的心愿就是做一名受学生欢迎的好老师,为了这个心愿,我一直在不懈努力着。要求自己做到牢固掌握本学科的基本理论知识。

  熟悉相关学科的文化知识,不断更新知识结构,精通业务,精心施教,把握好教学的难点重点,认真探索教学规律,钻研教学艺术,努力形成自己的教学特色。我的教学风格和教学效果普遍受到学生的认可和欢迎。

  以上所述情况,是我竞聘英语教师的优势条件,假如我有幸竞聘上岗,这些优势条件将有助于我更好的开展英语教学工作。

  如果我有幸竞聘成功,能担任三四年级英语教师的话,我将从以下方面开展工作。

  一是认真贯彻执行党的教育路线、方针、政策和学校的各项决定,加强学习,积极进取,求真务实,开拓创新,不断提高自己的综合素质、创新能力,用自己的勤奋加智慧,完成好教学任务。使我校的英语教学上一个大的台阶。

  二是做一个科研型的教师。教师的从教之日,正是重新学习之时。新时代要求教师具备的不只是操作技巧,还要有直面新情况、分析新问题、解决新矛盾的本领。进行目标明确、有针对性解决我校的英语教学难题。

  做一个理念新的教师

  目前,新一轮的基础教育改革早已在我市全面推开,作为新课改的实践者,要在认真学习新课程理念的基础上,结合自己所教的学科,积极探索有效的教学方法。大力改革教学,积极探索实施创新教学模式。把英语知识与学生的生活相结合,为学生创设一个富有生活气息的真实的学习情境,同时注重学生的探究发现,引导学生在学习中学会合作交流,提高学习能力。

  做一个富有爱心的老师

  “不爱学生就教不好学生”,“爱学生就要爱每一个学生”。作为一名教师,要无私地奉献爱,处处播洒爱,使我的学生在爱的激励下,增强自信,勇于创新,不断进取,成长为撑起祖国一片蓝天的栋梁。用质朴的心爱护学生,用诚挚的情感染学生,用精湛的教学艺术熏陶学生,用忘我的工作态度影响学生。

  尊敬的各位领导,各位老师,我会珍惜现有的每一个机会,努力工作,发挥出自己的最大能力,以高尚的情操、饱满的热情上好自己的英语课程,享受我的教学乐趣!

  最后我想说:做教师,我无悔!做英语教师,我快乐!

英语演讲稿4

  I had the privilege of helping to celebrate members of our community who were recently sworn in as new United States citizens – graduates of the Harvard Bridge Program. Through their own hard work, and with the generous help of volunteer student and alumni tutors, they can now enjoy the full rights and privileges of citizenship – and the full sense of belonging that comes with it. It was truly an inspiring ceremony.

  At a time when so many people are dispirited by the deep divisions in our country, when our politics seem so dysfunctional, our graduates are taking up the cause of public service by running for office in record numbers. The world needs them, and their willingness to serve gives me hope.

  As Margaret noted, this past year, I traveled to meet alumni who are helping to strengthen communities in Detroit, Dallas, and Houston; in Miami, Phoenix, and New York; in Los Angeles, San Francisco, and San Diego – in China, Japan, and England – people who are not only launching and building businesses and creating opportunity, but people who are also teaching, volunteering, advancing important legislation, working for non-profits, and serving the public good.

英语演讲稿5

  Thank you. Thank you.

  Good morning, Class of 20xx!

  Thank you, President Tessier-Lavigne, for that very generous introduction. I’ll do my best to earn it.

  Before I begin, I want to recognize everyone whose hard work made this celebration possible, including the groundskeepers, ushers, volunteers and crew. Thank you.

  I’m deeply honored and frankly a little astonished to be invited to join you for this most meaningful of occasions.

  Graduates, this is your day. But you didn’t get here alone.

  Family and friends, teachers, mentors, loved ones, and, of course, your parents, all worked together to make you possible and they share your joy today. Here on Father’s Day, let’s give the dads in particular a round of applause.

  Stanford is near to my heart, not least because I live just a mile and a half from here.

  Of course, if my accent hasn’t given it away, for the first part of my life, I had to admire this place from a distance.

  I went to school on the other side of the country, at Auburn University, in the heart of landlocked Eastern Alabama.

英语演讲稿6

  We see it every day now, with every data breach, every privacy violation, every blind eye turned to hate speech. Fake news poisoning our national conversation. The false miracles in exchange for a single drop of your blood. Too many seem to think that good intentions excuse away harmful outcomes.

  But whether you like it or not, what you build and what you create define who you are.

  It feels a bit crazy that anyone should have to say this. But if you’ve built a chaos factory, you can’t dodge responsibility for the chaos. Taking responsibility means having the courage to think things through.

  And there are few areas where this is more important than privacy.

  If we accept as normal and unavoidable that everything in our lives can be aggregated, sold, or even leaked in the event of a hack, then we lose so much more than data.

  We lose the freedom to be human.

英语演讲稿7

  At 19, I was just happy to have a job. But later through experience, trial, failure, I realized my true purpose was to be a force for good, to allow people to be themselves. so that becomes my legacy. I remember when I finished the [Oprah Winfrey Leadership Academy for Girls] school, and I went to my friend Maya Angelou’s house, and Maya was making biscuits and teaching me to make the biscuits. I said "I’m so sorry you weren’t able to be there to see the school ’s going to be my greatest legacy." And she put down what she was making and said "Baby, you have no idea what your legacy will be, because your legacy is every life that you touch."

  And that I repeat everywhere, because it’s true. It’s not one thing, it’s everything, and the most important thing is how you touch other people’s lives. Every day, you’re carving out the path, even when it looks like you’re not. Every action is creating equal and opposite reactions. How you think and what you do is being done unto you—that is my religion, I live by that. That is creating a blessed and spectacular life.

英语演讲稿8

  You may not know this, but I was on the sailing team all four years.

  It wasn’t easy. Back then, the closest marina was a three-hour drive away. For practice, most of the time we had to wait for a heavy rainstorm to flood the football field. And tying knots is hard! Who knew?

  Yet somehow, against all odds, we managed to beat Stanford every time. We must have gotten lucky with the wind.

  Kidding aside, I know the real reason I’m here, and I don’t take it lightly.

  Stanford and Silicon Valley’s roots are woven together. We’re part of the same ecosystem. It was true when Steve stood on this stage 14 years ago, it’s true today, and, presumably, it’ll be true for a while longer still.

  The past few decades have lifted us together. But today, we gather at a moment that demands some reflection.

  Fueled by caffeine and code, optimism and idealism, conviction and creativity, generations of Stanford graduates (and dropouts) have used technology to remake our society.

  But I think you would agree that, lately, the results haven’t been neat or straightforward.

英语演讲稿9

  The obscenity of apartheid came to an end. A young generation in Belfast and London have grown up without ever having to think about IRA bombs. In just the past 16 years, we’ve come from a world without marriage equality to one where it’s a reality in nearly two dozen countries. Around the world, more people live in democracies. We’ve lifted more than 1 billion people from extreme poverty. We’ve cut the child mortality rate worldwide by more than half.

  America is better. The world is better. And stay with me now – race relations are better since I graduated. That’s the truth. No, my election did not create a post-racial society. I don’t know who was propagating that notion. That was not mine. But the election itself – and the subsequent one – because the first one, folks might have made a mistake. (Laughter.) The second one, they knew what they were getting. The election itself was just one indicator of how attitudes had changed.

英语演讲稿10

  we have to be part of a solution through political activism that puts the screws to our elected officials. Let me reiterate, this has gone from a scientific challenge to a political one. And it’s time for all of us to recognize that climate change is the challenge of our time.

  As President Kennedy said 57 years ago on the moon mission, "we are willing to accept this challenge, we are unwilling to postpone it, and we intend to win it." We must again do what is hard. Dammit, I meant to say hard.

  Graduates, we need your minds and your creativity to achieve a clean energy future. But that’s not all. We need your voices. We need your votes. And we need you to help lead us where Washington will not. It may be a moonshot, but it’s the only shot we’ve got.

  As you leave this campus, I hope you will carry with you the MIT’s tradition of taking – and making – moonshots. Be ambitious in every facet of your life. And don’t ever let something stop you because people say it’s impossible. Let those words inspire you. Because just as trying to make the impossible possible can lead to achievements you’ve never dreamed of. And sometimes, you actually do land on the moon.

英语演讲稿11

  I realized this during the struggle of my life trying to build a network at the same time as running a show. I did not have the right leadership, and everything is about having the right people around you to support you. All of my mistakes were in the media—I can’t do anything privately. So when everything is about struggle-struggle, I had to say: What is this about? What is this here to show you? That is now my favorite question in crisis: What is this here to teach you or show you?

  Jack Canfield in Chicken Soup for the Soul says "The greatest wound we’ve all experienced is being rejected for being our authentic self. And then we try to be what we’re not to get approval, love, acceptance, the real need for all of us is to reconnect with the essence of who we really are…we all go around hiding parts of ourselves." He said he was with a Buddhist teacher years ago who said, "Here’s the secret: If you were to meditate for 20 years, here’s where you’d finally get to: Just be yourself, but be all of you."

  I’ve made a living—not a living but a real life—by being myself, using the energy of myself to serve the purpose of my soul. That purpose, I’m here to tell you, gets revealed to you daily. It is the thread that’s connecting the dots of who you are.

  I’ve made a living—not a living but a real life—by being myself.

英语演讲稿12

  Since that year – since the year I graduated – the poverty rate is down. Americans with college degrees, that rate is up. Crime rates are down. America’s cities have undergone a renaissance. There are more women in the workforce. They’re earning more money. We’ve cut teen pregnancy in half. We’ve slashed the African American dropout rate by almost 60 percent, and all of you have a computer in your pocket that gives you the world at the touch of a button. In 1983, I was part of fewer than 10 percent of African Americans who graduated with a bachelor’s degree. Today, you are part of the more than 20 percent who will. And more than half of blacks say we’re better off than our parents were at our age – and that our kids will be better off, America is better. And the world is better, too. A wall came down in Berlin. An Iron Curtain was torn asunder.

英语演讲稿13

  Don’t be frightened! When a Bennington student, 10 minutes before you come up to the podium hands you a mace, that he made,

  If you don’t bring it to the podium with you, you will never be Bennington.

  So I would like to thank you Ben for helping me put the fear of God in the audience tonight. But I have to put it down because I’m an actor, and I am really weak. That was heavy! It wasn’t like a prop. That shit was real!

  Thanks Ben.

  So now I’m going to read. And I’m not off book. So I might be looking down a lot.

  Thank you, President Coleman, Brian Conover, faculty, students, family, alumni, some of whom are dear friends of mine who have travelled all the way from the big city to see me hopefully not humiliate myself tonight.

  And especially thanks to you, the Graduating Class of 20xx.

  See, as a joke I wrote, hold for applause, and I was actually going to read that. So you kind of killed my joke!

英语演讲稿14

  In just the four years that you’ve been here at the Farm, things feel like they have taken a sharp turn.

  Crisis has tempered optimism. Consequences have challenged idealism. And reality has shaken blind faith.

  And yet we are all still drawn here.

  For good reason.

  Big dreams live here, as do the genius and passion to make them real. In an age of cynicism, this place still believes that the human capacity to solve problems is boundless.

  But so, it seems, is our potential to create them.

  That’s what I’m interested in talking about today. Because if I’ve learned one thing, it’s that technology doesn’t change who we are, it magnifies who we are, the good and the bad.

  Our problems – in technology, in politics, wherever – are human problems. From the Garden of Eden to today, it’s our humanity that got us into this mess, and it’s our humanity that’s going to have to get us out.

  First things first, here’s a plain fact.

  Silicon Valley is responsible for some of the most revolutionary inventions in modern history.

  From the first oscillator built in the Hewlett-Packard garage to the iPhones that I know you’re holding in your hands.

  Social media, shareable video, snaps and stories that connect half the people on Earth. They all trace their roots to Stanford’s backyard.

  But lately, it seems, this industry is becoming better known for a less noble innovation: the belief that you can claim credit without accepting responsibility.

英语演讲稿15

尊敬的评委,同学们:

  下午好!

  最近,在我们的社会中有一场激烈的辩论。大学生是一种罕见特权的受益者,他们在特殊的地方接受特殊的教育。但是,我们能够面对挑战,战胜一切困难吗?我们能够改善他人的生活吗?我们能接受建设国家未来的责任吗?

  愤世嫉俗者说,大学生是娇生惯养的失落的一代,他们会对最轻微的不适感到畏缩。但是愤世嫉俗者错了。我看到的大学生都在急切地学习如何独立生活。我们互相帮忙打扫宿舍,一起逛街砍价,兼职补充零花钱。

  愤世嫉俗者说我们只关心成绩;我们忽视了性格培养的需要。但愤世嫉俗者又错了。我们彼此深切关怀,我们珍惜自由,我们珍惜正义,我们追求真理。上周,我的数千名同学进行了血型测试,以便为患有血癌的儿童做出贡献。

  作为大学生,我们是处在人生关键转折点的青少年。我们都面临着一个根本性的选择:犬儒主义还是信仰,每一个都将深刻地影响我们的未来,甚至我们国家的未来。我相信我所有的同学。虽然我们仍然没有经验,甚至有点幼稚。我相信我们有勇气和信念去迎接任何挑战,承担我们的责任。我们正准备承担新的责任和任务,并利用我们接受的教育使我们的世界变得更美好。我相信我们的未来。

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