commencement

May Wrap Up: Virtual Commencements Worth Watching

by Shelby Clark, researcher at The Good Project

As the 2020 academic year comes to a close we at the Good Project, like many across the country, have been thinking about what it is like to graduate during the COVID-19 pandemic. Some of us have high school seniors of our own who have had to navigate what it means to graduate during a global pandemic, whereas others of us just grieve for those who have to celebrate #fauxmencement with friends. Yet, through it all, virtual commencement speeches still took place, and the annual deluge of advice was given. 

Below are some of virtual commencement speeches we found interesting to watch this year. As you view them, how do you think the speakers view good work? What do they have to say about the ideas of ethics, engagement, and excellence? 

Dr. Fauci’s speech at Johns Hopkins

In his short introductory speech to the 2020 Johns Hopkins graduates, Dr. Fauci reminds the new graduates that as they move into the future they will need to draw on their talent, energy, resolve, and character in order to adapt to the challenges posed by the COVID-19 pandemic. He urges the graduates to go out and “enhance global society.” 

Oprah Winfrey’s #graduation2020 speech on Facebook

Oprah reminds the class of 2020 that “never has a graduating class been called to step into the future with more purpose, vision, passion, energy, and hope.” She tells the graduates to think about how they want to define success, but reminds that that “inequality is a pre-existing condition” and that graduates have the power to vote for healthier conditions for all. After applauding those offering essential services during the COVID-19 pandemic, she leaves the graduates with the question: “What will your essential service be?”

President Barack Obama’s 2020 commencement speech for #graduatetogether

President Barack Obama wants 2020’s graduates to know that they get to decide what is important to them and what values they want to live by. But, he reminds them, they need to “ground themselves in values that last.” He too urges this year’s graduates to think about how they can make the world better, noting that “If the world’s gonna get better, it’s gonna be up to you.” However, he reminds this year’s graduates that they can do this only through building community: “no one does big things by themselves.” 

Bill and Melinda Gates from I Heart Radio’s Commencement: Speeches for the class of 2020

Bill and Melinda Gates’ commencement speech echoes many themes of President Barack Obama’s. Like the President, they urge 2020’s graduates to remember “If you want to get things done, you need a team.” They too remind this year’s graduates that they “do have a role to play in improving the world… progress didn’t happen by accident.” A main theme of their speech, though, was the creativity and “shared mission” that the world will need in order to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic. They tell this year’s graduates that the world will need innovators and “ingenuity as we recover,” and that this years graduates can bring their skills to bare in bringing this future about. 

Mathew McConaughey on Good Morning America 

Matthew McConaughey spoke with a group of graduates from the Urban Assembly School for Emergency Management-- graduates who will immediately be joining the workforce as essential employees during the global pandemic. He shared with them some of his advice for living, noting that “we all have a role to play in making this world a better place.” McConaughey reminded the graduates to “act in ways you’ll respect tomorrow” and to not “be afraid to fail,” noting later “how do we ever know what was right if we didn’t screw up.” In total, he reminds the graduates, “just keep living.” 


What were some of your favorite commencement speeches this year? Let us know in the comments. 

Commencement Speech Roundup!

by Margot Locker

With graduation season officially coming to a close, we have compiled a roundup of the some of the top graduation speeches from around the country. We noticed many speakers touched on GoodWork threads in their words to graduating seniors. What were your favorite speeches this year?

President Barack Obama, Barnard College

“So don’t accept somebody else’s construction of the way things ought to be. It’s up to you to right wrongs. It’s up to you to point out injustice. It’s up to you to hold the system accountable and sometimes upend it entirely. It’s up to you to stand up and to be heard, to write and to lobby, to march, to organize, to vote. Don’t be content to just sit back and watch.”

Jane Lynch, Smith College

“If I could do so much of my early life over, I would have taken more moments like this to breathe. I would have spent more time focusing on what was right in front of me, instead of recoiling from what is because it didn’t look or feel exactly as I imagined it. I wouldn’t have been forever trying to look around the corner to see “What’s next, what’s next?!”

Oprah Winfrey, Spelman College

“You must have some vision for your life. Even if you don’t know the plan, you have to have a direction in which you choose to go,” Winfrey said. “What I learned is that that’s a great metaphor for life. You want to be in the driver’s seat of your own life because if you are not, life will drive you.”

Aaron Sorkin, Syracuse University

“Develop your own compass, and trust it. Take risks, dare to fail, remember the first person through the wall always gets hurt”

“Don’t ever forget that you’re a citizen of this world, and there are things you can do to lift the human spirit, things that are easy, things that are free, things that you can do every day. Civility, respect, kindness, character.”

Michael Bloomberg, UNC Chapel Hill

“Don’t be afraid to shoot the long ball. Take the risk. Life is too short to spend your time avoiding failure. If I had worried about failure – or listened to those who do – I would never have started my company, and never run for mayor. I can’t imagine my life if I hadn’t taken those risks. Not every risk will work out, but that’s ok. Failure is the world’s best teacher.”

Adam Savage, Sarah Lawrence College

“Stay obsessed. That thing you can’t stop thinking about? Keep indulging it. Obsession is the better part of success. You will be great at the things that you can’t not do.”

“Be willing to be wrong. Don’t fight for your idea just because you want the credit. Fight for your idea because it’s the right one. If it’s not, let it go and put your muscle behind the right one. Trust your instincts.”

Colin Powell, Northeastern University

“Make public service a part of your life.”

“Do something that gives you satisfaction every day and makes our society a better place.”

Bob Woodruff, Boston College

“Let me say that I do understand that not every single person gets to find passion in their job—for some people what they do is a vocation—but people find passion in other aspects of their life, whether it’s playing music or writing books, building boats, cooking or running marathons.  Whatever it may be, I urge you to find and feed a passion.”