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教授对党史的概括心得体会及感悟 学党史体会心得结尾(八篇)

来源:互联网作者:editor2024-02-021

当我们备受启迪时,常常可以将它们写成一篇心得体会,如此就可以提升我们写作能力了。心得体会对于我们是非常有帮助的,可是应该怎么写心得体会呢?下面是小编帮大家整理的心得体会范文大全,供大家参考借鉴,希望可以帮助到有需要的朋友。

主题教授对党史的概括心得体会及感悟一

我是xxx同学本科期间导师制活动的教授,对于她在各方面取得的优异成绩我感到很欣慰,下面我将就其在实验室学习期间的表现进行介绍。自20xx年10月份进入实验室以来,***同学能按照培养计划,及时向老师、研究生请教问题,积极参与科研项目,为今后的专业学习打好了良好的基础。该同学专业兴趣浓厚,动手能力极强。刚进入实验室时,她的主要工作是偶氮苯的合成,虽然是很简单的合成工作,她也很认真的对待。

起初她做的合成反应产率偏低,她便向研究生请教以往的合成方法,通过对比实验条件,她发现该反应是在室温下进行,外界坏境温度的改变使影响了反应产率。从去年起,她开始接触多肽固相合成,这对于她来说是一个全新的领域,于是她去图书馆查阅资料,自学了很多多肽合成的知识,目前已经可以独立地完成多肽合成、纯化的一整套流程。作为主要成员,她正在参加大学生创新训练项目,在项目的实施过程中,每当她遇到困难,她都会登陆到各大数据库,查阅文献。在这个过程中我发现她有很强的文献信息检索能力,同时其外文文献的阅读能力得到了很大的提高。

此致

敬礼!

推荐人:

20xx年xx月xx日

主题教授对党史的概括心得体会及感悟二

尊敬的领导:

我是xxx同学本科期间导师制活动的教授,对于她在各方面取得的优异成绩我感到很欣慰,下面我将就其在实验室学习期间的表现进行介绍。自20xx年10月份进入实验室以来,***同学能按照培养计划,及时向老师、研究生请教问题,积极参与科研项目,为今后的专业学习打好了良好的基础。该同学专业兴趣浓厚,动手能力极强。刚进入实验室时,她的主要工作是偶氮苯的合成,虽然是很简单的合成工作,她也很认真的对待。

起初她做的合成反应产率偏低,她便向研究生请教以往的合成方法,通过对比实验条件,她发现该反应是在室温下进行,外界坏境温度的改变使影响了反应产率。从去年起,她开始接触多肽固相合成,这对于她来说是一个全新的领域,于是她去图书馆查阅资料,自学了很多多肽合成的知识,目前已经可以独立地完成多肽合成、纯化的一整套流程。作为主要成员,她正在参加大学生创新训练项目,在项目的实施过程中,每当她遇到困难,她都会登陆到各大数据库,查阅文献。在这个过程中我发现她有很强的文献信息检索能力,同时其外文文献的阅读能力得到了很大的提高。

此致

敬礼!

推荐人:

20xx年xx月xx日

主题教授对党史的概括心得体会及感悟三

尊敬的各位来宾、领导、老师们、同学们:

大家好!我是朱嘉,本科毕业于南京大学物理系,在海外留学、工作十年,又回到母校成为现代工程与应用科学学院的一名老师。很高兴能有机会作为南大的老师同时也是你们的学长在这里欢迎各位小蓝鲸加入我们南京大学的大家庭!

时间不算久远,不由让我想起自己当年刚入学时的情景,一下子没有了父母的唠叨和饭菜,有些窃喜也有些失落。当不再有长辈在你旁边安排、教导、催促,你突然发现一个事实摆在你面前:你独立了。总算摆脱了,终于做主啦!可狂喜之余,也伴随着一份不期而遇的压力,一份不曾谋面的责任。如何选择,如何安排,如何相处,如何处理?若干次挫折与打击之后,随之而来会是纠结、彷徨、不知所措。别着急,因为这时你才真正会发现,你非常幸运,因为来到了南大。

南大这个地方,真的是太赞了,有吃,有喝,有一堆小伙伴陪你一起玩,你毕业临走前还会再送给你一个金饭碗。开个玩笑,刚才说的只可能是游乐园而“金饭碗”也只存在于童话故事里。

南大不是游乐园,她是你梦想启航的地方。

如果你想做个书虫,南大不但有着百余年藏书历史和几百万册藏书量的现代化图书馆,海量的电子图书资源,更有专家、教授精心遴选推荐的“悦读经典计划”;

如果你关注能源、环境、生命、南海等重大问题、国际热点,南大可以提供给你从历史哲学、社会行为、政治经济到科学基础、工程应用的全方位视角;

如果你有志于从事科研事业,南大那些拥有世界一流设备的实验室将对你开放。而且请相信,哪怕你只是本科生,只要你努力,也能在世界顶级的学术期刊发表你的成果;

如果你志在产业报国,大可在“挑战杯”先一展拳脚;南大今年更是入选国家首批“双创示范”基地,可以为你提供全方位的孵化与支持;

如果你想成为一名新新人类,精彩纷呈的第二课堂会为你打开大学生活的另一扇门。到贝加尔湖畔发掘自然奥秘,在激情辩论的赛场上舌战群儒,与剧场、乐团的伙伴共同演绎高雅、甚至再创佳作;

如果你梦想站到世界的舞台,成为国际化的人才,中美文化研究中心、海外孔子学院、国际化示范学院、各种海外交流项目,南大在国际化的道路上正大踏步前进。

南大这所百年名校之所以神奇,是因为她会让你相信,在法律和道德的界限之内,只要你有梦想,只要你愿意付出,一切皆有可能。

南大不是兵工厂,一个模子,批量生产;她是发掘你个性的地方。同学们,如果说有一天,你发现你的棱角被磨掉,那是一种悲哀;那么如果你发现自己从来不曾长出棱角,那更会是你的悲哀。南大在国内独树一帜的“三三制”人才培养模式就是为了探索出一条个性化、多样化人才培养途径,赋予你们充分的选择权,打破院系壁垒,开放课程平台,为你们全方位的成长发展插上飞翔的翅膀!

南大不是角斗场,只能有一个赢家,只允许一个胜利;她是百草园,把你托起在中国乃至世界的舞台,管你千姿百态,让你尽情芬芳。在这里,你们不但学会优秀,还会学会如何欣赏同伴的优秀;在这里,你不但要努力让自己成为耀眼的明星,还同时要为集体的荣誉贡献一份力量!

同学们,你们是幸运的,因为生活在这样一个伟大的时代。这不是一句空话,我昨天刚从美国访学回来,那里十多年前跟现在,基本看不出任何差别,已经非常成熟。而在中国,时时刻刻你都能感受到时代的脉搏,中华民族的伟大复兴从未如此接近,前方有太多的机遇与挑战等待着你们。

同学们,你们是幸运的,因为在人生最美好的年华,来到南大这么一所百年名校。在五四讲话中强调:“办好中国的世界一流大学。”并且相信世界上会有第一个南大,这是对南大的高度认可,是光荣,更是使命。当南大学子们作为人文、科技、产业的先锋自信地站在世界的舞台上的时候,世界上也就有了“第一个南大”。

同学们,你们是幸运的。经过激烈的竞争和选拔,能来到这里,来到南大,你们已经证明了自己。希望你们用这接下来的四年,寻找到自己,找到你的兴趣,找到你的梦想和去实现梦想的勇气和力量。

放心吧!这世界从来不是完美的,完美的世界,还需要你们干什么?!苦点、累点、委屈点、碰个壁、遭受挫折,对于朝气蓬勃的你们,又算得了什么。春华秋实,四季轮回,当你迈出校园那一刹那,如果你能对自己讲出四个字“不负青春”,那么请相信,大学这几年时光一定会变成最美好的记忆,存在你心底深处最温暖的地方;大学这几年的历练也会铸就你坚韧的臂膀和强大的心脏,抵抗前进中的风风雨雨,助你成为社会的中坚、国家的栋梁。

相信吗?在人生的某个时刻,你心底的那份温暖会牵引着你再次回到南大,看着校园年轻的面孔,就像我看到今天的你们,或许你届时还能记得今天的话:“同学们,你们是幸运的;在人生最美好的年华,来到南大!”

似水流年,青春不负。祝愿你们能够有一段充实而又美好的南大时光!

谢谢大家!

主题教授对党史的概括心得体会及感悟四

“who will tell your story?”

may 24, 20xx

greetings, class of 20xx.

and so it is here—the week of your commencement. the days of miracle and wonder when your theses are written, classes have ended, and you still have free hbo. and so it may seem strange to be gathered here today, as we pause for this ancient and curious custom called the baccalaureate—but here we are, me in a pulpit and you in pews, dressed for a sermon in which i am to impart the sober wisdom of age to the semi-sober impatience of youth. now, it is a daunting task. especially since over the course of four years i have succeeded in disconcerting people on all sides of the many issues that you will soon be discussing with parents and grandparents over dinner—so in addition to a speech, for handy reference i’ve created a placemat for commencement, filled with useful phrases. such as, “it’s ‘final club,’ without an ‘s.’”

now, i am truly privileged today, for you are an extraordinary group. your 80 countries of origin do not begin to describe you.

you may remember the day when we escaped the rain at your freshman convocation, and you heard from me and a phalanx of elders in dark robes: connect, we said, make harvard part of your narrative. take risks, we told you. don’t always listen to us.

and for four years you have distinguished yourselves with dazzling variety: in what may be harvard’s most pergent dozen, you produced six rhodes scholars, including one who broke the world record for standing on a “swiss” exercise ball, plus six athletes invited to the national football league to play ball, players whose interests range from the ministry to curing infectious diseases.

you were good at long distances: you probed the atmosphere of an exoplanet; researched antibiotic use on a pig farm in denmark; and you created a pilot program that cut shuttle times from the quad by half.

you experienced old traditions: the mumps. a class color, orange. and the time-honored lampoon theft of the crimson president’s chair—this time transporting it across state lines to manhattan’s trump tower, for a staged photo op with a then dark-horse presidential candidate.

you found your way: on campus, through a maze of renovations and swing housing; onstage, doing stand-up comedy on nbc, dancing in bogota, and mounting black magic at the loeb; through the halls of business and finance, running an intercollegiate investment fund; and exposing a privacy issue with facebook’s messenger app.

you won, with style and grace: as you captured the first national trophy for harvard mock trial—by being funnier than yale; and then you shellacked the bulldogs in the game for—yes—the 9th straight year; you produced the first ivy “three-peats” in football and women’s track; and brought home the first ivy crown in women’s rugby—how “fierce and beautiful” was that!

and, of course, all this was powered by huds, since 20xx, powered with ceaseless servings of swai.

and you were just plain good: you wrote prize-winning theses on sea level change, a water crisis in detroit; you engineered a better barbecue smoker—and tested it in a blizzard; you joined the fight to end malaria; and earned the award for best hockey player in the ncaa for strength of character as well as skill; you became well connected—to alzheimer’s patients, to kids in kenya, to homeless youth; and, as the inaugural class of ed school teacher fellows, 20 of you are preparing to help high-need students rise.

and i understand you even rested with ambition, as you tried to “netflix and chill.”

you made it all look easy—all while facing blows to the spirit that have tempered and tested you. you arrived just after a breach of academic trust that, by your senior year, produced the first honor code in harvard’s history, events that raised hard questions for all of us: what is success? what is integrity? to whom, or what, are we accountable?

when a hurricane prompted the first harvard closing in 34 years, you rallied with generosity and goodwill—and did so again when we closed for snowstorm nemo—the fifth largest in boston history. and that was just a warm up, so to speak, for the winter of our misery—the worst in boston history—when you sledded the slopes of widener in a kayak.

and when the bombs went off at the boston marathon, in just your second semester, we considered still larger questions: who are we? what matters most? what do we owe to one another? you told me that you became bostonians that day, bonded to a city beyond harvard square, and to each other during the manhunt and lockdown, when the university closed for an unprecedented third time in 6 months.

who can forget the images—of the mayhem, of the people who ran, not for safety, buttoward the danger, into the chaos? the army veteran, who smelled cordite, and expecting more bombs, saved a college student’s life; the man in the cowboy hat, who ripped away fencing in order to reach the most injured. and who can forget the moment when red sox first baseman david ortiz stood in the center of fenway park and said in eleven words of fellowship and defiance that the fcc chose not to censor, though i will today—“this is our [bleeping] city and nobody[’s] gonna dictate our freedom.”

a few months ago as i was lucky enough to be sitting in a broadway theater, absorbing the final number of the musical hamilton, i thought of you, and that fierce spirit of inclusion and self-determination. i watch

教授对党史的概括心得体会及感悟 学党史体会心得结尾(八篇)

当我们备受启迪时,常常可以将它们写成一篇心得体会,如此就可以提升我们写作能力了。心得体会对于我们是...
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