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奧巴馬開學演講稿(中英文對照)奧巴馬開學演講稿(中英文對照)奧巴馬開學演講稿(中英文對照)奧巴馬開學演講稿(中英文對照)編制僅供參考審核批準生效日期地址:電話:傳真:郵編:早晨偶然在報紙上看到了9月8日美國開學日的時候,奧巴馬總統給全國從幼兒園到高中生做的一個開學演講,非常感動.想把這個東西與大家分享一下,于是上網找到了中英文全文兩個版本.我對照了一下,翻譯得基本上做到了信、達、雅。奧巴馬總統講演的風格很口語化,講道理深入淺出,很有感染力.
論壇里的朋友相信有很多都是已經為人父母了,我的孩子上周也進入小學一年級,踏上了漫長的求學之路.如何教育孩子,激勵孩子,可能是每個家長最頭痛的問題.我建議你親自給你的孩子讀一下這篇講演,跟他(她)討論一下,讓孩子理解一下他(她)身上所承擔的對自己,對國家的責任.
發這個貼之前,躊躇再三,畢竟講教育的主題跟股市大家談的主旨有些不合,但我覺得從投資角度而言,教育上面花費的時間、精力,金錢的投資,不管是投向自己,還是孩子,都是我們一生中所能做出的最好的,永遠都不會后悔的投資選擇之一.畢竟,一個更好的未來,一個更強大的國家,一個更美,更和諧的世界愿景都要依靠我們的孩子們去實現.
弗吉尼亞州,阿林頓市,2009年9月8日
嗨,大家好!你們今天過得怎么樣我現在和弗吉尼亞州阿林頓郡韋克菲爾德高中的學生們在一起,全國各地也有從幼兒園到高三的眾多學生們通過電視關注這里,我很高興你們能共同分享這一時刻。
我知道,對你們中的許多人來說,今天是開學的第一天,你們中的有一些剛剛進入幼兒園或升上初高中,對你們來說,這是在新學校的第一天,因此,假如你們感到有些緊張,那也是很正常的。我想也會有許多畢業班的學生們正自信滿滿地準備最后一年的沖刺。不過,我想無論你有多大、在讀哪個年級,許多人都打心底里希望現在還在放暑假,以及今天不用那么早起床。
我可以理解這份心情。小時候,我們家在印度尼西亞住過幾年,而我媽媽沒錢送我去其他美國孩子們上學的地方去讀書,因此她決定自己給我上課——時間是每周一到周五的凌晨4點半。
顯然,我不怎么喜歡那么早就爬起來,很多時候,我就這么在廚房的桌子前睡著了。每當我埋怨的時候,我媽總會用同一副表情看著我說:“小鬼,你以為教你我就很輕松”
所以,我可以理解你們中的許多人對于開學還需要時間來調整和適應,但今天我站在這里,是為了和你們談一些重要的事情。我要和你們談一談你們每個人的教育,以及在新的學年里,你們應當做些什么。
我做過許多關于教育的講話,也常常用到“責任”這個詞。
我談到過教師們有責任激勵和啟迪你們,督促你們學習。
我談到過家長們有責任看管你們認真學習、完成作業,不要成天只會看電視或打游戲機。
我也很多次談到過政府有責任設定高標準嚴要求、協助老師和校長們的工作,改變在有些學校里學生得不到應有的學習機會的現狀。
但哪怕這一切都達到最好,哪怕我們有最盡職的教師、最好的家長、和最優秀的學校,假如你們不去履行自己的責任的話,那么這一切努力都會白費。——除非你每天準時去上學、除非你認真地聽老師講課、除非你把父母、長輩和其他大人們說的話放在心上、除非你肯付出成功所必需的努力,否則這一切都會失去意義。
而這就是我今天講話的主題:對于自己的教育,你們中每一個人的責任。首先,我想談談你們對于自己有什么責任。
你們中的每一個人都會有自己擅長的東西,每一個人都是有用之材,而發現自己的才能是什么,就是你們要對自己擔起的責任。教育給你們提供了發現自己才能的機會。
或許你能寫出優美的文字——甚至有一天能讓那些文字出現在書籍和報刊上——但假如不在英語課上經常練習寫作,你不會發現自己有這樣的天賦;或許你能成為一個發明家、創造家——甚至設計出像今天的iPhone一樣流行的產品,或研制出新的藥物與疫苗——但假如不在自然科學課程上做上幾次實驗,你不會知道自己有這樣的天賦;或許你能成為一名議員或最高法院法官,但假如你不去加入什么學生會或參加幾次辯論賽,你也不會發現自己的才能。
而且,我可以向你保證,不管你將來想要做什么,你都需要相應的教育。——你想當名醫生、當名教師或當名警官你想成為護士、成為建筑設計師、律師或軍人無論你選擇哪一種職業,良好的教育都必不可少,這世上不存在不把書念完就能拿到好工作的美夢,任何工作,都需要你的汗水、訓練與學習。
不僅僅對于你們個人的未來有重要意義,你們的教育如何也會對這個國家、乃至世界的未來產生重要影響。今天你們在學校中學習的內容,將會決定我們整個國家在未來迎接重大挑戰時的表現。
你們需要在數理科學課程上學習的知識和技能,去治療癌癥、艾滋那樣的疾病,和解決我們面臨的能源問題與環境問題;你們需要在歷史社科課程上培養出的觀察力與判斷力,來減輕和消除無家可歸與貧困、犯罪問題和各種歧視,讓這個國家變得更加公平和自由;你們需要在各類課程中逐漸累積和發展出來的創新意識和思維,去創業和建立新的公司與企業,來制造就業機會和推動經濟的增長。
我們需要你們中的每一個人都培養和發展自己的天賦、技能和才智,來解決我們所面對的最困難的問題。假如你不這么做——假如你放棄學習——那么你不僅是放棄了自己,也是放棄了你的國家。
當然,我明白,讀好書并不總是件容易的事。我知道你們中的許多人在生活中面臨著各種各樣的問題,很難把精力集中在專心讀書之上。
我知道你們的感受。我父親在我兩歲時就離開了家庭,是母親一人將我們拉扯大,有時她付不起帳單,有時我們得不到其他孩子們都有的東西,有時我會想,假如父親在該多好,有時我會感到孤獨無助,與周圍的環境格格不入。
因此我并不總是能專心學習,我做過許多自己覺得丟臉的事情,也惹出過許多不該惹的麻煩,我的生活岌岌可危,隨時可能急轉直下。
但我很幸運。我在許多事上都得到了重來的機會,我得到了去大學讀法學院、實現自己夢想的機會。我的妻子——現在得叫她第一夫人米歇爾奧巴馬了——也有著相似的人生故事,她的父母都沒讀過大學,也沒有什么財產,但他們和她都辛勤工作,好讓她有機會去這個國家最優秀的學校讀書。
你們中有些人可能沒有這些有利條件,或許你的生活中沒有能為你提供幫助和支持的長輩,或許你的某個家長沒有工作、經濟拮據,或許你住的社區不那么安全,或許你認識一些會對你產生不良影響的朋友,等等。
但歸根結底,你的生活狀況——你的長相、出身、經濟條件、家庭氛圍——都不是疏忽學業和態度惡劣的借口,這些不是你去跟老師頂嘴、逃課、或是輟學的借口,這些不是你不好好讀書的借口。
你的未來,并不取決于你現在的生活有多好或多壞。沒有人為你編排好你的命運,在美國,你的命運由你自己書寫,你的未來由你自己掌握。
而在這片土地上的每個地方,千千萬萬和你一樣的年輕人正是這樣在書寫著自己的命運。
例如德克薩斯州羅馬市的賈斯敏佩雷茲(Jazmin
Perez)。剛進學校時,她根本不會說英語,她住的地方幾乎沒人上過大學,她的父母也沒有受過高等教育,但她努力學習,取得了優異的成績,靠獎學金進入了布朗大學,如今正在攻讀公共衛生專業的博士學位。
我還想起了加利福尼亞州洛斯拉圖斯市的安多尼舒爾茲(Andoni
Schultz),他從三歲起就開始與腦癌病魔做斗爭,他熬過了一次次治療與手術——其中一次影響了他的記憶,因此他得花出比常人多幾百個小時的時間來完成學業,但他從不曾落下自己的功課。這個秋天,他要開始在大學讀書了。
又比如在我的家鄉,伊利諾斯州芝加哥市,身為孤兒的香特爾史蒂夫(Shantell
Steve)換過多次收養家庭,從小在治安很差的地區長大,但她努力爭取到了在當地保健站工作的機會、發起了一個讓青少年遠離犯罪團伙的項目,很快,她也將以優異的成績從中學畢業,去大學深造。
賈斯敏、安多尼和香特爾與你們并沒有什么不同。和你們一樣,他們也在生活中遭遇各種各樣的困難與問題,但他們拒絕放棄,他們選擇為自己的教育擔起責任、給自己定下奮斗的目標。我希望你們中的每一個人,都能做得到這些。
因此,在今天,我號召你們每一個人都為自己的教育定下一個目標——并在之后,盡自己的一切努力去實現它。你的目標可以很簡單,像是完成作業、認真聽講或每天閱讀——或許你打算參加一些課外活動,或在社區做些志愿工作;或許你決定為那些因為長相或出身等等原因而受嘲弄或欺負的孩子做主、維護他們的權益,因為你和我一樣,認為每個孩子都應該能有一個安全的學習環境;或許你認為該學著更好的照顧自己,來為將來的學習做準備……當然,除此之外,我希望你們都多多洗手、感到身體不舒服的時候要多在家休息,免得大家在秋冬感冒高發季節都得流感。
不管你決定做什么,我都希望你能堅持到底,希望你能真的下定決心。
我知道有些時候,電視上播放的節目會讓你產生這樣那樣的錯覺,似乎你不需要付出多大的努力就能腰纏萬貫、功成名就——你會認為只要會唱rap、會打籃球或參加個什么真人秀節目就能坐享其成,但現實是,你幾乎沒有可能走上其中任何一條道路。
因為,成功是件難事。你不可能對要讀的每門課程都興趣盎然,你不可能和每名帶課教師都相處順利,你也不可能每次都遇上看起來和現實生活有關的作業。而且,并不是每件事,你都能在頭一次嘗試時獲得成功。
但那沒有關系。因為在這個世界上,最最成功的人們往往也經歷過最多的失敗。.羅琳的第一本《哈利波特》被出版商拒絕了十二次才最終出版;邁克爾喬丹上高中時被學校的籃球隊刷了下來,在他的職業生涯里,他輸了幾百場比賽、投失過幾千次射籃,知道他是怎么說的嗎“我一生不停地失敗、失敗再失敗,這就是我現在成功的原因。”
他們的成功,源于他們明白人不能讓失敗左右自己——而是要從中吸取經驗。從失敗中,你可以明白下一次自己可以做出怎樣的改變;假如你惹了什么麻煩,那并不說明你就是個搗蛋貴,而是在提醒你,在將來要對自己有更嚴格的要求;假如你考了個低分,那并不說明你就比別人笨,而是在告訴你,自己得在學習上花更多的時間。
沒有哪一個人一生出來就擅長做什么事情的,只有努力才能培養出技能。任何人都不是在第一次接觸一項體育運動時就成為校隊的代表,任何人都不是在第一次唱一首歌時就找準每一個音,一切都需要熟能生巧。對于學業也是一樣,你或許要反復運算才能解出一道數學題的正確答案,你或許需要讀一段文字好幾遍才能理解它的意思,你或許得把論文改上好幾次才能符合提交的標準。這都是很正常的。
不要害怕提問。不要不敢向他人求助。——我每天都在這么做。求助并不是軟弱的表現,恰恰相反,它說明你有勇氣承認自己的不足、并愿意去學習新的知識。所以,有不懂時,就向大人們求助吧——找個你信得過的對象,例如父母、長輩、老師、教練或輔導員——讓他們幫助你向目標前進。
你要記住,哪怕你表現不好、哪怕你失去信心、哪怕你覺得身邊的人都已經放棄了你——永遠不要自己放棄自己。因為當你放棄自己的時候,你也放棄了自己的國家。
美國不是一個人們遭遇困難就輕易放棄的國度,在這個國家,人們堅持到底、人們加倍努力,為了他們所熱愛的國度,每一個人都盡著自己最大的努力,不會給自己留任何余地。
250年前,有一群和你們一樣的學生,他們之后奮起努力、用一場革命最終造就了這個國家;75年前,有一群和你們一樣的學生,他們之后戰勝了大蕭條、贏得了二戰;就在20年前,和你們一樣的學生們,他們后來創立了Google、Twitter和Facebook,改變了我們人與人之間溝通的方式。
因此,今天我想要問你們,你們會做出什么樣的貢獻你們將解決什么樣的難題你們能發現什么樣的事物二十、五十或百年之后,假如那時的美國總統也來做一次開學演講的話,他會怎樣描述你們對這個國家所做的一切?
你們的家長、你們的老師和我,每一個人都在盡最大的努力,確保你們都能得到應有的教育來回答這些問題。例如我正在努力為你們提供更安全的教室、更多的書籍、更先進的設施與計算機。但你們也要擔起自己的責任。因此我要求你們在今年能夠認真起來,我要求你們盡心地去做自己著手的每一件事,我要求你們每一個人都有所成就。請不要讓我們失望——不要讓你的家人、你的國家和你自己失望。你們要成為我們驕傲,我知道,你們一定可以做到。
謝謝大家,上帝保佑你們,上帝保佑美國。
本文來自學習網,
美國總統奧巴馬9月8日開學演講
英文全文
For
Immediate
Release
September
8,
2009
REMARKS
BY
THE
PRESIDENT
IN
A
NATIONAL
ADDRESS
TO
AMERICA'S
SCHOOLCHILDREN
Wakefield
High
School
Arlington,
Virginia
THE
PRESIDENT:
Hello,
everybody!
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
Thank
you,
everybody.
All
right,
everybody
go
ahead
and
have
a
seat.
How
is
everybody
doing
today
(Applause.)
How
about
Tim
Spicer
(Applause.)
I
am
here
with
students
at
Wakefield
High
School
in
Arlington,
Virginia.
And
we've
got
students
tuning
in
from
all
across
America,
from
kindergarten
through
12th
grade.
And
I
am
just
so
glad
that
all
could
join
us
today.
And
I
want
to
thank
Wakefield
for
being
such
an
outstanding
host.
Give
yourselves
a
big
round
of
applause.
(Applause.)
I
know
that
for
many
of
you,
today
is
the
first
day
of
school.
And
for
those
of
you
in
kindergarten,
or
starting
middle
or
high
school,
it's
your
first
day
in
a
new
school,
so
it's
understandable
if
you're
a
little
nervous.
I
imagine
there
are
some
seniors
out
there
who
are
feeling
pretty
good
right
now
--
(applause)
--
with
just
one
more
year
to
go.
And
no
matter
what
grade
you're
in,
some
of
you
are
probably
wishing
it
were
still
summer
and
you
could've
stayed
in
bed
just
a
little
bit
longer
this
morning.
I
know
that
feeling.
When
I
was
young,
my
family
lived
overseas.
I
lived
in
Indonesia
for
a
few
years.
And
my
mother,
she
didn't
have
the
money
to
send
me
where
all
the
American
kids
went
to
school,
but
she
thought
it
was
important
for
me
to
keep
up
with
an
American
education.
So
she
decided
to
teach
me
extra
lessons
herself,
Monday
through
Friday.
But
because
she
had
to
go
to
work,
the
only
time
she
could
do
it
was
at
4:30
in
the
morning.
Now,
as
you
might
imagine,
I
wasn't
too
happy
about
getting
up
that
early.
And
a
lot
of
times,
I'd
fall
asleep
right
there
at
the
kitchen
table.
But
whenever
I'd
complain,
my
mother
would
just
give
me
one
of
those
looks
and
she'd
say,
"This
is
no
picnic
for
me
either,
buster."
(Laughter.)
So
I
know
that
some
of
you
are
still
adjusting
to
being
back
at
school.
But
I'm
here
today
because
I
have
something
important
to
discuss
with
you.
I'm
here
because
I
want
to
talk
with
you
about
your
education
and
what's
expected
of
all
of
you
in
this
new
school
year.
Now,
I've
given
a
lot
of
speeches
about
education.
And
I've
talked
about
responsibility
a
lot.
I've
talked
about
teachers'
responsibility
for
inspiring
students
and
pushing
you
to
learn.
I've
talked
about
your
parents'
responsibility
for
making
sure
you
stay
on
track,
and
you
get
your
homework
done,
and
don't
spend
every
waking
hour
in
front
of
the
TV
or
with
the
Xbox.
I've
talked
a
lot
about
your
government's
responsibility
for
setting
high
standards,
and
supporting
teachers
and
principals,
and
turning
around
schools
that
aren't
working,
where
students
aren't
getting
the
opportunities
that
they
deserve.
But
at
the
end
of
the
day,
we
can
have
the
most
dedicated
teachers,
the
most
supportive
parents,
the
best
schools
in
the
world
--
and
none
of
it
will
make
a
difference,
none
of
it
will
matter
unless
all
of
you
fulfill
your
responsibilities,
unless
you
show
up
to
those
schools,
unless
you
pay
attention
to
those
teachers,
unless
you
listen
to
your
parents
and
grandparents
and
other
adults
and
put
in
the
hard
work
it
takes
to
succeed.
That's
what
I
want
to
focus
on
today:
the
responsibility
each
of
you
has
for
your
education.
I
want
to
start
with
the
responsibility
you
have
to
yourself.
Every
single
one
of
you
has
something
that
you're
good
at.
Every
single
one
of
you
has
something
to
offer.
And
you
have
a
responsibility
to
yourself
to
discover
what
that
is.
That's
the
opportunity
an
education
can
provide.
Maybe
you
could
be
a
great
writer
--
maybe
even
good
enough
to
write
a
book
or
articles
in
a
newspaper
--
but
you
might
not
know
it
until
you
write
that
English
paper
--
that
English
class
paper
that's
assigned
to
you.
Maybe
you
could
be
an
innovator
or
an
inventor
--
maybe
even
good
enough
to
come
up
with
the
next
iPhone
or
the
new
medicine
or
vaccine
--
but
you
might
not
know
it
until
you
do
your
project
for
your
science
class.
Maybe
you
could
be
a
mayor
or
a
senator
or
a
Supreme
Court
justice
--
but
you
might
not
know
that
until
you
join
student
government
or
the
debate
team.
And
no
matter
what
you
want
to
do
with
your
life,
I
guarantee
that
you'll
need
an
education
to
do
it.
You
want
to
be
a
doctor,
or
a
teacher,
or
a
police
officer
You
want
to
be
a
nurse
or
an
architect,
a
lawyer
or
a
member
of
our
military
You're
going
to
need
a
good
education
for
every
single
one
of
those
careers.
You
cannot
drop
out
of
school
and
just
drop
into
a
good
job.
You've
got
to
train
for
it
and
work
for
it
and
learn
for
it.
And
this
isn't
just
important
for
your
own
life
and
your
own
future.
What
you
make
of
your
education
will
decide
nothing
less
than
the
future
of
this
country.
The
future
of
America
depends
on
you.
What
you're
learning
in
school
today
will
determine
whether
we
as
a
nation
can
meet
our
greatest
challenges
in
the
future.
You'll
need
the
knowledge
and
problem-solving
skills
you
learn
in
science
and
math
to
cure
diseases
like
cancer
and
AIDS,
and
to
develop
new
energy
technologies
and
protect
our
environment.
You'll
need
the
insights
and
critical-thinking
skills
you
gain
in
history
and
social
studies
to
fight
poverty
and
homelessness,
crime
and
discrimination,
and
make
our
nation
more
fair
and
more
free.
You'll
need
the
creativity
and
ingenuity
you
develop
in
all
your
classes
to
build
new
companies
that
will
create
new
jobs
and
boost
our
economy.
We
need
every
single
one
of
you
to
develop
your
talents
and
your
skills
and
your
intellect
so
you
can
help
us
old
folks
solve
our
most
difficult
problems.
If
you
don't
do
that
--
if
you
quit
on
school
--
you're
not
just
quitting
on
yourself,
you're
quitting
on
your
country.
Now,
I
know
it's
not
always
easy
to
do
well
in
school.
I
know
a
lot
of
you
have
challenges
in
your
lives
right
now
that
can
make
it
hard
to
focus
on
your
schoolwork.
I
get
it.
I
know
what
it's
like.
My
father
left
my
family
when
I
was
two
years
old,
and
I
was
raised
by
a
single
mom
who
had
to
work
and
who
struggled
at
times
to
pay
the
bills
and
wasn't
always
able
to
give
us
the
things
that
other
kids
had.
There
were
times
when
I
missed
having
a
father
in
my
life.
There
were
times
when
I
was
lonely
and
I
felt
like
I
didn't
fit
in.
So
I
wasn't
always
as
focused
as
I
should
have
been
on
school,
and
I
did
some
things
I'm
not
proud
of,
and
I
got
in
more
trouble
than
I
should
have.
And
my
life
could
have
easily
taken
a
turn
for
the
worse.
But
I
was
--
I
was
lucky.
I
got
a
lot
of
second
chances,
and
I
had
the
opportunity
to
go
to
college
and
law
school
and
follow
my
dreams.
My
wife,
our
First
Lady
Michelle
Obama,
she
has
a
similar
story.
Neither
of
her
parents
had
gone
to
college,
and
they
didn't
have
a
lot
of
money.
But
they
worked
hard,
and
she
worked
hard,
so
that
she
could
go
to
the
best
schools
in
this
country.
Some
of
you
might
not
have
those
advantages.
Maybe
you
don't
have
adults
in
your
life
who
give
you
the
support
that
you
need.
Maybe
someone
in
your
family
has
lost
their
job
and
there's
not
enough
money
to
go
around.
Maybe
you
live
in
a
neighborhood
where
you
don't
feel
safe,
or
have
friends
who
are
pressuring
you
to
do
things
you
know
aren't
right.
But
at
the
end
of
the
day,
the
circumstances
of
your
life
--
what
you
look
like,
where
you
come
from,
how
much
money
you
have,
what
you've
got
going
on
at
home
--
none
of
that
is
an
excuse
for
neglecting
your
homework
or
having
a
bad
attitude
in
school.
That's
no
excuse
for
talking
back
to
your
teacher,
or
cutting
class,
or
dropping
out
of
school.
There
is
no
excuse
for
not
trying.
Where
you
are
right
now
doesn't
have
to
determine
where
you'll
end
up.
No
one's
written
your
destiny
for
you,
because
here
in
America,
you
write
your
own
destiny.
You
make
your
own
future.
That's
what
young
people
like
you
are
doing
every
day,
all
across
America.
Young
people
like
Jazmin
Perez,
from
Roma,
Texas.
Jazmin
didn't
speak
English
when
she
first
started
school.
Neither
of
her
parents
had
gone
to
college.
But
she
worked
hard,
earned
good
grades,
and
got
a
scholarship
to
Brown
University
--
is
now
in
graduate
school,
studying
public
health,
on
her
way
to
becoming
Dr.
Jazmin
Perez.
I'm
thinking
about
Andoni
Schultz,
from
Los
Altos,
California,
who's
fought
brain
cancer
since
he
was
three.
He's
had
to
endure
all
sorts
of
treatments
and
surgeries,
one
of
which
affected
his
memory,
so
it
took
him
much
longer
--
hundreds
of
extra
hours
--
to
do
his
schoolwork.
But
he
never
fell
behind.
He's
headed
to
college
this
fall.
And
then
there's
Shantell
Steve,
from
my
hometown
of
Chicago,
Illinois.
Even
when
bouncing
from
foster
home
to
foster
home
in
the
toughest
neighborhoods
in
the
city,
she
managed
to
get
a
job
at
a
local
health
care
center,
start
a
program
to
keep
young
people
out
of
gangs,
and
she's
on
track
to
graduate
high
school
with
honors
and
go
on
to
college.
And
Jazmin,
Andoni,
and
Shantell
aren't
any
different
from
any
of
you.
They
face
challenges
in
their
lives
just
like
you
do.
In
some
cases
they've
got
it
a
lot
worse
off
than
many
of
you.
But
they
refused
to
give
up.
They
chose
to
take
responsibility
for
their
lives,
for
their
education,
and
set
goals
for
themselves.
And
I
expect
all
of
you
to
do
the
same.
That's
why
today
I'm
calling
on
each
of
you
to
set
your
own
goals
for
your
education
--
and
do
everything
you
can
to
meet
them.
Your
goal
can
be
something
as
simple
as
doing
all
your
homework,
paying
attention
in
class,
or
spending
some
time
each
day
reading
a
book.
Maybe
you'll
decide
to
get
involved
in
an
extracurricular
activity,
or
volunteer
in
your
community.
Maybe
you'll
decide
to
stand
up
for
kids
who
are
being
teased
or
bullied
because
of
who
they
are
or
how
they
look,
because
you
believe,
like
I
do,
that
all
young
people
deserve
a
safe
environment
to
study
and
learn.
Maybe
you'll
decide
to
take
better
care
of
yourself
so
you
can
be
more
ready
to
learn.
And
along
those
lines,
by
the
way,
I
hope
all
of
you
are
washing
your
hands
a
lot,
and
that
you
stay
home
from
school
when
you
don't
feel
well,
so
we
can
keep
people
from
getting
the
flu
this
fall
and
winter.
But
whatever
you
resolve
to
do,
I
want
you
to
commit
to
it.
I
want
you
to
really
work
at
it.
I
know
that
sometimes
you
get
that
sense
from
TV
that
you
can
be
rich
and
successful
without
any
hard
work
--
that
your
ticket
to
success
is
through
rapping
or
basketball
or
being
a
reality
TV
star.
Chances
are
you're
not
going
to
be
any
of
those
things.
The
truth
is,
being
successful
is
hard.
You
won't
love
every
subject
that
you
study.
You
won't
click
with
every
teacher
that
you
have.
Not
every
homework
assignment
will
seem
completely
relevant
to
your
life
right
at
this
minute.
And
you
won't
necessarily
succeed
at
everything
the
first
time
you
try.
That's
okay.
Some
of
the
most
successful
people
in
the
world
are
the
ones
who've
had
the
most
failures.
.
Rowling's
--
who
wrote
Harry
Potter
--
her
first
Harry
Potter
book
was
rejected
12
times
before
it
was
finally
published.
Michael
Jordan
was
cut
from
his
high
school
basketball
team.
He
lost
hundreds
of
games
and
missed
thousands
of
shots
dur
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