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关于选择的英语演讲稿
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Over the past Spring
Festival, I got involved in
a
family
dispute.
Right
before
I
got
home,
four
satellite
channels
of
CCTV
were
added
to
the
14
channels
we
had already had. In prime time at night, they all
had interesting shows. Therefore, the
five of us-my
parents, my sisters and
I-had to argue over what to
watch.
Finally,
we
agreed
that
we
should
watch
the
interesting
was.
However, all of
us there remember that for a long
time
after
we
had
TV,
there
were
only
one
or
two
channels
available.
The
increase
in
options
reveals
an
important
change in our life: the abundance of
choice.
Fifteen
years ago we all dressed in one style and
in one colour. Today, we select from a
wide variety of
designs and shades.
Fifteen years
ago, we read few newspapers. Today,
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让每个人平等地提升自我
we
read
English
newspapers
like
the
China
Daily
and
the
21st
Century, as well as various Chinese newspapers.
Fifteen
years
ago,
English
majors
took
only
courses
in
language
and
literature.
Today,
we
also
study
Western
culture,
journalism,
business
communications,
international relations, and computer
science.
The
emergence of choices marks the beginning of a
new era in China's history; an era of
diversity, of
material
and
cultural
richness,
and
an
era
of
the
rebirth of
the Chinese nation.
We enjoy the abundance of choice. But
this has not
come easily.
About 150 years ago, China
was forced to open up
its door by
Western canons and gunboats. It has been
through
the
struggle
and
sacrifice
of
generations
that
we finally have gained the opportunity
to choose for
ourselves. The policy of
reform and openness is the
choice that
has made all the difference.
Like
others
of
my
age,
I'm
too
young
to
have
experienced the time when the Chinese
people had no
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让每个人平等地提升自我
right
to
choose.
However,
as
the
next
century
draws
near,
it is
time to ask: What does choice really mean to us
young people?
Is choice a game that relies on chance
or luck? Is
choice
an
empty
promise
that
never
materializes?
Or
is
choice a puzzle so
difficult that we have to avoid it?
First,
I
would
like
to
say:
To
choose
means
to
claim
opportunities.
I
am
a
third-year
English
major.
An
important
choice
for
me,
of
course,
is
what
to
do
upon
graduation.
I can go to
graduate school, at home or abroad. I can
go to work as a teacher, a translator,
a journalist,
an
editor
and
a
diplomat.
Actually,
the
system
of
mutual
selection
has
allowed
me
to
approach
almost
every
career opportunity in
China.
Indeed,
this is not going to be an easy choice. I
would love to work in such big cities
as Beijing or
Shanghai or Shenzhen. I
would also love to return to
my
hometown,
which
is
intimate,
though
slightly
lagging
in
development.
I
would
love
to
stay
in
the
coastal
area
where
life
is
exciting
and
fast-paced.
I
would
also
love
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