演讲稿的内容要根据具体情境、具体场合来确定,要求情感真实,尊重观众。在现在社会,演讲稿在我们的视野里出现的频率越来越高,为了让您在写演讲稿时更加简单方便,以下是小编精心整理的英语比赛演讲稿,欢迎阅读与收藏。
英语比赛演讲稿1
尊敬的各位老师、同学们:
大家早上好!
我的名字叫xxx,今年12岁了。这一次,我获得了“全国中小学生英语口语大赛”一等奖,感到非常辛运,在这里,我要感谢我的父母,是他们给我创造了安静的环境让我更好的练习口语;感谢我所在的三义里小学,是这所学校给我了这次参赛的机会;感谢我的班主任程老师,是她精心指导我怎样说英语;感谢我们办的全班同学,是他们一直在支持我,鼓励我。谢谢你们!
我从英语是全班最差的同学,变成了一个获得过“全国中小学生英语口语大赛”一等奖的英语小天才,我无数次的不想再坚持练下去,我用自己与同学们玩的时间,在练字。我是多么希望像别的同学一样,快活的玩着。我就像一个还没有完全学会走路的小孩,一路走的磕磕绊绊,可是,我用自己的毅力克服了自己,慢慢的我去认真地走好每一步,最终我是成功的,我是快乐的!
此时此刻我捧着手中的奖,心里感慨万千。虽然并不多,但我想这每一个奖的背后都是各位同学日夜苦战,用自己的勤奋努力和老师家长们的.付出换来的。我不想说我们累,更不想说我们苦。因为我们是青春、潇洒的90后,风雨过后我们依然会展露笑容,今日的累是为了我们明日的辉煌,为了我们肩上那不可推卸的历史重任。我相信我们会做的更好。
不过,获得了奖并不意味着就达到了我们的目标而可以停滞不前。在人生旅途中,获奖只是一种助推器,而不是最根本的动力器。我们要如何前进?答案就掌握在我们自己的手中。所以,奖并不是我们最终的目标,而是我们前进路途中的一股动力。我们应正确看待这种奖励和荣誉。不能因为一时取得好的成绩而骄傲,也不能因为成绩一时不理想而气馁。学习就如逆水行舟,不进则退。只有不断地努力,不骄不躁,认真对待学习,不轻言放弃,看淡得失。以一颗平常心,踏实勤奋。才能取得更优异的成绩,才能创造更美好的未来。当然,没有获得奖的同学更不能放弃。要努力起来,哪怕最终没有成功,最起码自己努力了,也无愧于心。
作为一名学生,面对获奖,我除了些许的紧张和好奇,更多的是一份坦然,我们相信努力就会成功。在此,我也想送上我衷心的祝福,希望你们能放飞自己的理想,创出更美的辉煌。谢谢大家!
谢谢大家!
英语比赛演讲稿2
okay, number two: go to the wilderness. be like buddha, have your own revelations. i'm not saying that we all have to now go off and build our own cabins in the woods and never talk to each other again, but i am saying that we could all stand to unplug and get inside our own heads a little more often.
number three: take a good look at what's inside your own suitcase and why you put it there. so extroverts, maybe your suitcases are also full of books. or maybe they're full of champagne glasses or skydiving equipment. whatever it is, i hope you take these things out every chance you get and grace us with your energy and your joy. but introverts, you being you, you probably have the impulse to guard very carefully what's inside your own suitcase. and that's okay. but occasionally, just occasionally, i hope you will open up your suitcases for other people to see, because the world needs you and it needs the things you carry.
so i wish you the best of all possible journeys and the courage to speak softly.
thank you very much.
(applause)
thank you. thank you.
英语比赛演讲稿3
so i just published a book about introversion, and it took me about seven years to write. and for me, that seven years was like total bliss, because i was reading, i was writing, i was thinking, i was researching. it was my version of my grandfather's hours of the day alone in his library. but now all of a sudden my job is very different, and my job is to be out here talking about it, talking about introversion. (laughter) and that's a lot harder for me, because as honored as i am to be here with all of you right now, this is not my natural milieu.
so i prepared for moments like these as best i could. i spent the last year practicing public speaking every chance i could get. and i call this my “year of speaking dangerously.“ (laughter) and that actually helped a lot. but i'll tell you, what helps even more is my sense, my belief, my hope that when it comes to our attitudes to introversion and to quiet and to solitude, we truly are poised on the brink on dramatic change. i mean, we are. and so i am going to leave you now with three calls for action for those who share this vision.
number one: stop the madness for constant group work. just stop it. (laughter) thank you. (applause) and i want to be clear about what i'm saying, because i deeply believe our offices should be encouraging casual, chatty cafe-style types of interactions -- you know, the kind where people come together and serendipitously have an exchange of ideas. that is great. it's great for introverts and it's great for extroverts. but we need much more privacy and much more freedom and much more autonomy at work. school, same thing. we need to be teaching kids to work together, for sure, but we also need to be teaching them how to work on their own. this is especially important for extroverted children too. they need to work on their own because that is where deep thought comes from in part.
英语比赛演讲稿4
everybody attention
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 i was growing up, partly because it was filled with his very gentle, very courtly presence and partly because it was filled with books. i mean literally every table, every chair in this apartment had yielded its original function to now serve as a surface for swaying stacks of books. just like the rest of my family, my grandfather's favorite thing to do in the whole world was to read.
but he also loved his congregation, and you could feel this love in the sermons that he gave every week for the 62 years that he was a rabbi. he would takes the fruits of each week's reading and he would weave these intricate tapestries of ancient and humanist thought. and people would come from all over to hear him speak.
but here's the thing about my grandfather. underneath this ceremonial role, he was really modest and really introverted -- so much so that when he delivered these sermons, he had trouble making eye contact with the very same congregation that he had been speaking to for 62 years. and even away from the podium, when you called him to say hello, he would often end the conversation prematurely for fear that he was taking up too much of your time. but when he died at the age of 94, the police had to close down the streets of his neighborhood to accommodate the crowd of people who came out to mourn him. and so these days i try to learn from my grandfather's example in my own way.
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