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8 - 10 June 2024

Venue sponsor dalton school hong kong, application closed, event categories, nursery rhyme.

The piece performed must be memorised and recited in spoken format, without melody. No props are allowed.

Age 3 years

Ages 4 - 10 years, ages 5 - 12 years, reading aloud.

The piece performed must be read aloud from the text which should be held in the hand and referred to, not memorised. No props are allowed.

Ages 6 - 10 years

Public speaking.

Each speaker may speak for up to 3 minutes. An easel will be available if the speaker wishes to use a presentation board but this is not compulsory. Cue cards are allowed and optional.

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Find your event, the event age is the age your child will be on 11 june 2024.

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The Bad Beginning

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Mary Had a Little Lamb

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The Wonderful Wizard of Oz

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The Secret Garden

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The Dragon in the Cellar

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Henny Penny

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The Sun and the Wind

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Eletelephony

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St. Joseph High School

2022 Speech Festival

Posted on March 14, 2022 in: General News

2022 Speech Festival

This year's Speech Festival took place on March 11, 2022. The event was held in the gymnasium with the Jr./Sr. High Division students in attendance. The theme was Slam Poetry. All those who particpated had exellent performances and showcased some great talent.

Special recognition goes to the the following students who performed: 7th grade - Olga Arianoff / Perseas Vanebo, 8th grade - Raylee Mateo / Michaela Costales, 9th grade - Star Kubby / Irie Moreau, 10th grade - Kirra Low / Grant Newman, 11th Grade - Daniel Eftink / Kayliah Whittington-Ramirez, 12th grade - RyAnne Raffipiy / Mifu Nishinakazono

The Speech Festival was broadcast live on the St. Joseph School YouTube page. Click HERE to watch a replay of the live stream.

Thank you to Kumu Kipapa, the English teachers (Mrs. Moreau, Ms. Sugiyama, Mr. Dagdag, and Mrs. Wright-Reed), the Senior Class, Mrs. Villena, Mr. Galves, and everyone who contributed to making the speech festival a success. Most of all, thank you to all the students for working hard and allowing their God-given talents to shine! 

Congratulations to the top three performers this year:

3RD Place: Daniel Eftink - "Politics"

speech festival 2022 video

2ND Place: Irie Moreau - "The Greatest Enemy"

speech festival 2022 video

1ST Place: RyAnne Raffipiy - "Being Micronesian in Hawaiʻi"

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[Read More...]

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Speech Festival Poems 2022

Secondary 1-6 Speech Festival Poems (GIRLS)

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Opening of the 75th Festival de Cannes: the speech by Vincent Lindon, president of the Jury

  • published on 18.05.2022

speech festival 2022 video

The 75 th edition of the Festival de Cannes opened last night.

A moving, outward-looking Ceremony with a conscience, and speeches that will resonate across the 12 days of the event, such as the one given by Vincent Lindon, president of the Feature Films Jury.

"Alone, just me here with myself in the limelight, condemned to freedom, I am deeply moved, proud and overwhelmed to be leading this exceptional jury, and so very grateful to have been chosen by Pierre Lescure and Thierry Fremaux, over many others of no lesser merit, but more used to living in the solitude of their work.

It would undoubtedly make sense, or would at least be human, to declare my joy to you here this evening, as I preside over the 75 th edition of this extraordinary festival, the greatest film festival in the world, celebrating the event and openly relishing the honour bestowed upon me. But would that be right?

Should we not rather, from this stage, upon which, for a brief moment, the eyes of the world are focused, decry the torments of a planet that is bleeding and in pain, a planet that is suffocating and burning as the powers that be look on indifferently? Yes, we probably should. But what can we say that hasn’t already been said? That might at least be useful?

This question is one which all artists have been, are, and shall ever battle with. Should we use our fame, however minor, to enable the words of the voiceless to be heard, or the contrary – should we refuse to publicly take a stance in fields in which we have no legitimacy or competency?

I do not know the answer!

To make up for having too generous a fate, ill at ease with its comforts and privileges, and yet too human to give them up, I have often stuck my neck out to speak, sometimes naively, against the pain experienced by others, which, although sparing my flesh, tortures my conscience.

The only unquestionable stances taken by artists – and filmmakers in particular – are surely the very works into which they pour their efforts.

As a mere actor, I portray characters who bear other names than my own, who do other jobs. Sometimes they are powerful. More often they are beaten down types, because these are the ones who move me and inspire me to try to reach their essence. That is our craft. I am fully aware it has brought me many more honours than I deserve. But I also know, like anyone who has had the extraordinary fortune of being able to live off their art and to live freely, that we are just a tiny part of a huge and essential whole we call Culture. For Culture is not some amiable growth, nor a futile ornament of society. It lies not on the edges, but sits at its very heart. Culture is all we will leave behind.

What would remain of the reign of Joseph II without Mozart, of Louis XlV without Molière, Racine or Corneille, of the papacy of Julius II without Michelangelo?

Nation states and their leaders owe their place in History to the ties they succeed in weaving with artists whose works are the sublimation of human genius.

The Cannes International Film Festival continues this same secular tradition. Born from a desire to fight against the fascism that had deformed European cinema, it has never stopped embracing, protecting, and bringing together the greatest filmmakers of their time.

Open to all cultures, demanding nothing more than the highest of standards, its selections comprise films that aspire to more than merely selling tickets.

That is the Festival de Cannes’ reason for being. That is its glory. It is this inflexible vision, a guiding line that is both artistic and community-led, that renders essential what would otherwise be obscene: projecting glorious images over the top of the abominable ones coming to us from the heroic and martyrised Ukraine, or burying under a melody of joy the silent massacres that rip through Yemen or Darfur.

Finally, to conclude, a question:

What else can we do, besides draw on the weapon of mass emotion that is film, to awaken consciences and shake up indifference?

I don’t see what!

How can the evocative power of these great filmmakers not influence the future of the earth?

I cannot imagine that, either!

Even if that means we have to use a thimble to bale ourselves out of the hull of a ship being flooded by waves, our strength is that we have faith, because our works will live on forever.

Although when we are crushed under the weight of current affairs, and I find myself discouraged, I do sometimes wonder if we are not currently dancing on the Titanic…

So maybe, if we listen carefully, we might hear amidst the crashing of empires and nations the soft and low brushing of wings, and the sweet murmur of life and hope.

The time of artists and responsible filmmakers has come, to bear us up and to nourish our imaginations, to help us repeat to ourselves, at every opportunity, in honour of all those who are suffering and fighting in this world: ‘be alive and be aware of it’."

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  • Copy URL https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/watch-live-trump-speaks-at-national-association-of-black-journalists-conference-in-chicago

WATCH: Trump speaks at National Association of Black Journalists conference in Chicago

CHICAGO (AP) — Donald Trump falsely suggested Kamala Harris had misled voters about her race as the former president appeared before the National Association of Black Journalists in Chicago Wednesday in an interview that quickly turned hostile.

Watch the event in the player above.

The Republican former president wrongly claimed that Harris, the first Black woman and Asian American to serve as vice president, had in the past only promoted her Indian heritage.

“I didn’t know she was Black until a number of years ago when she happened to turn Black and now she wants to be known as Black. So, I don’t know, is she Indian or is she Black?” Trump said while addressing the group’s annual convention.

Live fact check: Trump at the National Association of Black Journalists conference

Harris is the daughter of a Jamaican father and an Indian mother, both immigrants to the U.S. As an undergraduate, Harris attended Howard University, one of the nation’s most prominent historically Black colleges and universities, where she also pledged the historically Black sorority Alpha Kappa Alpha. As a U.S. senator, Harris was a member of the Congressional Black Caucus, supporting her colleagues’ legislation to strengthen voting rights and reforming policing.

Trump has leveled a wide range of criticism at Harris since she replaced President Joe Biden atop the likely Democratic ticket last week. Throughout his political career, the former president has repeatedly questioned the backgrounds of opponents who are racial minorities.

Michael Tyler, the communications director for Harris’ campaign, said in a statement that “the hostility Donald Trump showed on stage today is the same hostility he has shown throughout his life, throughout his term in office, and throughout his campaign for president as he seeks to regain power.”

“Trump lobbed personal attacks and insults at Black journalists the same way he did throughout his presidency — while he failed Black families and left the entire country digging out of the ditch he left us in,” Tyler said. “Donald Trump has already proven he cannot unite America, so he attempts to divide us.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre was asked during her briefing with reporters on Wednesday about Trump’s remarks and responded with disbelief, initially murmuring, “Wow.”

Jean-Pierre, who is Black, called what Trump said “repulsive” and said, “It’s insulting and no one has any right to tell someone who they are how they identify.”

Trump has repeatedly attacked his opponents and critics on the basis of race. He rose to prominence in Republican politics by propagating false theories that President Barack Obama, the nation’s first Black president, was not born in the United States. “Birtherism,” as it became known, was just the start of Trump’s history of questioning the credentials and qualifications of Black politicians.

He has denied allegations of racism. And after Biden picked Harris as his running mate four years ago, a Trump campaign spokesperson then pointed to a previous Trump political donation to Harris as proof that he wasn’t racist.

“The president, as a private businessman, donated to candidates across all aisles,” the spokesperson, Katrina Pierson, told reporters. “And I’ll note that Kamala Harris is a Black woman and he donated to her campaign, so I hope we can squash this racism argument now,” Pierson said.

During this year’s Republican primary, he once referred to former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley, the daughter of Indian immigrants, as “Nimbra.”

Later Wednesday, Trump did not repeat his criticism of Harris’ race at a campaign rally in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, although he called her “phony” and said she has been trying to change her image. He also repeatedly mispronounced her first name.

“If she becomes your president, our country is finished,” Trump charged.

Before he took the stage, Trump’s team displayed what appeared to be years-old news headlines describing Harris as the “first Indian-American senator” on the big screen in the arena.

Trump’s appearance Wednesday at the annual gathering of Black journalists immediately became heated, with the former president sparring with interviewer Rachel Scott of ABC News and accusing her of giving him a “very rude introduction” with a tough first question about his past criticism of Black people and Black journalists, his attack on Black prosecutors who have pursued cases against him and the dinner he had at his Florida club with a white supremacist.

“I think it’s disgraceful,” Trump said. “I came here in good spirit. I love the Black population of this country. I’ve done so much for the Black population of this country.”

Trump continued his attacks on Scott’s network, ABC News, which he has been arguing should not host the next presidential debate, despite his earlier agreement with the Biden campaign. He also several times described her tone and questions as “nasty,” a word he used in the past when describing women, including Hillary Clinton and Meghan the Duchess of Sussex.

The Republican also repeated his false claim that immigrants in the country illegally are “taking Black jobs.” When pushed by Scott on what constituted a “Black job,” Trump responded by saying “a Black job is anybody that has a job,” drawing groans from the room.

At one point, he said, “I have been the best president for the Black population since Abraham Lincoln.”

The audience responded with a mix of boos and some applause.

Scott asked Trump about his pledge to pardon people convicted for their roles in the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol and specifically whether he would pardon those who assaulted police officers.

Trump said, “Oh, absolutely I would,” and said, “If they’re innocent, I would pardon them.”

Scott pointed out they have been convicted and therefore are not innocent.

“Well, they were convicted by a very, very tough system,” he said.

At one point, when he was defending his supporters who entered the Capitol on Jan. 6, he said, “Nothing is perfect in life.”

He compared the 2021 insurrection to the protests in Minneapolis and other cities in 2020 following the death of George Floyd by Minneapolis police and to more recent protests at the Capitol last week by demonstrators opposed to the war in Gaza. Trump falsely claiming that no one was arrested in those other demonstrations and that only his supporters were targeted.

As Trump made the comparison, a man in the back of the room shouted out: “Sir, have you no shame?”

The former president’s invitation to address the organization sparked an intense internal debate among NABJ that spilled online. Organizations for journalists of color typically invite presidential candidates to speak at their summer gatherings in election years.

As he campaigns for the White House a third time, Trump has sought to appear outside his traditional strongholds of support and his campaign has touted his efforts to try to win over Black Americans, who have been Democrats’ most committed voting bloc.

His campaign has emphasized his messages on the economy and immigration as part of his appeal, but some of his outreach has played on racial stereotypes, including the suggestion that African Americans would empathize with the criminal charges he has faced and his promotion of branded sneakers.

Trump and NABJ also have a tense history over his treatment of Black women journalists. In 2018, NABJ condemned Trump for repeatedly using words such as “stupid,” “loser” and “nasty” to describe Black women journalists.

The vice president is not scheduled to appear at the convention, but NABJ said in a statement posted on X that it was in conversation with her campaign to have her appear either virtually or in person for a conversation in September.

Harris addressed Trump’s comments briefly Wednesday night while speaking in Houston at a gathering of Sigma Gamma Rho, a historically Black sorority in Houston.

“It was the same old show,” she said. “The divisiveness and the disrespect.”

Harris added: “And let me just say, the American people deserve better.”

— Matt Brown and Michelle L. Price, Associated Press

Price reported from New York. Associated Press writers Aaron Morrison and Steve Peoples in New York, Gary Fields in Chicago and Will Weissert and Farnoush Amiri in Washington, Marc Levy in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania and Chris Megerian in Houston contributed to this report.

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In Yolŋu cuture, fire brings renewal — and seeds are sprouting at this year's Garma Festival after the defeat of the Voice

Analysis In Yolŋu cuture, fire brings renewal — and seeds are sprouting at this year's Garma Festival after the defeat of the Voice

A young child participates in the opening ceremony of the 2017 Garma Festival.

From humble beginnings as a community barbecue in north-east Arnhem Land, Garma has become an internationally recognised event drawing thousands of visitors to this distant corner each year.

Note to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers: Yunupingu's last name and image are used in this story in accordance with the wishes of his family.

Over the past 25 years, people have come to experience first-hand the rich and powerful gift of Yolŋu culture provided by the festival's hosts, the Gumatj clan, at their ceremonial site, Gulkula.

This place speaks to the enduring thread of the spiritual, cultural and physical presence of Yolŋu people woven through manikay (song), bunggul (dance) and miny'tji (art). 

The land holds the echoes of incalculable discussions, debates and shared ideas. Ganbulapula is the ancestor who presides as the master of ceremony here.

A dancer in traditional body paint and garb kicks sand in a dramatic pose.

But this year, the lead-up to Garma 2024 has felt distinctly different to that of the past two years.

Anticipation of a referendum on an Indigenous Voice to Parliament had been presented by the Albanese government as a nation-building moment to recognise First Nations Australians in the Constitution and mark a significant step towards reconciliation.

The call to the nation was met with an overwhelming 60.1 per cent 'no' vote in October 2023.

In its wake, many longstanding campaigners for the Voice stood back from public life and those small communities where the vote had been a resounding yes stood in stark contrast to the national majority.

More recently, the IPSOS Issues Monitor for May this year saw only 3 per cent of those surveyed show an interest in Indigenous issues.

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people make up 3.8 per cent of the Australian population. Numbers like these make it seem as though a gulf between First Nations and non-Indigenous Australians has opened up and now looms insurmountable.

From this, though, glimmers of a fresh start have emerged.

Gurtha-Wuma Worrk-gu is this year's Garma theme: Fire. Strength. Renewal.

As with much that flows through Yolŋu culture, there is a cycle at work with this focus. A return to timeless themes of connecting the past with its lessons for the present while laying the groundwork for the future. 

This was the story lived by the revered late leader of the Gumatj, Yunupingu, who along with his brother, Dr Yunupingu, began the Garma Festival back in 1999.

The very name Yunupingu means 'the rock that stands against time'. 

Yunupingu with Gumatj children at Garma in 2019.

As with the spirit of his name, Yunupingu remained unwavering in his mission to keep Yolŋu culture strong and seated in truth. His quest as a man educated in two worlds, Yolŋu and Western, was to seek peace and harmony, as has been the way of the Yolŋu people through makarrata over countless generations.

Makarrata encompasses a complex system for Yolŋu people that at its essence defines a process of conflict resolution, peacemaking and justice. It requires two parties to come to an agreement that settles disharmony.

The potential for makarrata as outlined in 2017's Uluru Statement from the Heart has failed to materialise in the form of an Indigenous advisory body enshrined in the Constitution, the Voice.

Two other components of the statement are yet to bear fruit: Treaty and Truth. It is striking to see these words written by Yunupingu in the lead up to the Uluru gathering.

"So the task remains: to reconcile with the truth, to find the unity and achieve the settlement," Yunupingu wrote in an essay for The Monthly in 2016.

This was a task led for the past two years by the former minister for Indigenous Australians, and proud Wiradjuri woman, Linda Burney.

From the high hopes of Labor's May 2022 election victory, when a referendum was promised, to a period of reflection on a loss that represented for many a painful rejection by the wider Australian community.

In her speech on the night of the referendum loss, Burney strove to find a path through the apparent chasm reflected in the no vote.

"I know this outcome will be hard for some. But achieving progress is never easy. Progress doesn't always move in a straight line. There are breakthroughs. And there are heartbreaks. But I am confident that because of this campaign, and the millions of conversations it sparked, that a new generation of Indigenous leaders will emerge."

Among them now stands the newly appointed minister for Indigenous Australians, Malarndirri McCarthy, ready to pick up the torch. 

Federal MP Linda Burney with Marion Scrymgour, Luke Gosling, Malarndirri McCarthy and Chansey Paech.

The Yanyuwa Garawa senator from the Northern Territory acknowledged the contribution of her predecessor at the announcement of Burney's retirement last week. 

"She has fought the fight with grace and dignity. As the first Aboriginal woman to enter New South Wales parliament and then federal parliament. She has blazed such a trail. And we all share the responsibility to keep blazing it," McCarthy said.

In his lifetime, the task for Yunupingu was left unfinished. But he foretold of what this moment in history means.

"If there is unfinished business it is no longer for that man to carry that business, others who have taken responsibility and who have taken leadership must then bear the burden of creation."

The burden of creation. How remarkable and profound? 

Yunupingu's vision offers a radical reset from political agendas driven by a three-year electoral cycle and the devastating ease of tear-down strategies containing little in the way of constructive alternatives. 

It requires effort, honesty, and a conviction to make a shared future.

McCarthy has signalled in her first days that she will strive to build bipartisan support around policy and reach out across the aisle to opposition spokeswoman for Indigenous Australians, Jacinta Nampijinpa Price, and First Nations spokesperson for the Greens, Dorinda Cox.

Fire in Yolŋu culture clears a path for something new, brings energy, and unleashes potential just as the Australian bushfire forms a vital role in releasing seeds for our hardy native flora to germinate.

The scene is set for creation to flow, for ideas to flourish and be exchanged and for new leadership to rise.

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From tv journo to one of australia’s most important roles: the rise of malarndirri mccarthy.

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'I won't be the last': Indigenous Australians Minister Linda Burney bows out after a trailblazing career

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How Disinformation Fed a Far-Right Riot After a Deadly Stabbing in England

More than 50 police were injured in an outbreak of violence driven by false reports that the suspect in the stabbing attack on a children’s dance class was a migrant.

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Police officers in riot gear line up on a street with a fire burning behind them.

By Megan Specia

Reporting from London and Southport, England

Less than two hours after mourners gathered in Southport, England, on Tuesday evening to honor three children killed in a brutal stabbing attack, hundreds of rioters flooded the streets of the already traumatized town.

More than 50 police officers were injured in the ensuing violence, as demonstrators threw bricks at a mosque, attacked the police, set cars on fire and damaged a convenience store.

Although some details of the unrest remain opaque, one thing is clear, according to the police, lawmakers and experts in online extremism: Disinformation and far-right agitators fueled the violence.

Supporters of the English Defence League, an extremist anti-Islam organization, were part of a large group that attacked a mosque in Southport around 7.45 p.m., according to a statement from the Merseyside Police Service , which covers the region.

The targeting of the mosque, and the subsequent riot, came after false rumors circulated on social media on Monday, soon after news emerged that a man had stabbed multiple children and two adults at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class.

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Hong Kong Schools Music and Speech Association

  • HKSMSA History
  • Past Winners and Festival Statistics
  • Press Release
  • Job Vacancy
  • 75th Hong Kong Schools Speech Festival (2023) (Chinese Speech)
  • 75th Hong Kong Schools Speech Festival (2023) (English Speech)
  • Music Festival
  • Member Login
  • 70th Anniversary Celebrations
  • Prize-winners’ Concert
  • Prize-winners’ Recital
  • Grantham Music Awards
  • Major Sponsors and Partners

File : Elektrostal, Moscow Oblast, Russia - panoramio (154).jpg

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DescriptionElektrostal, Moscow Oblast, Russia - panoramio (154).jpg Elektrostal, Moscow Oblast, Russia
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speech festival 2022 video

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IMAGES

  1. Speech Festival 2022

    speech festival 2022 video

  2. SIS Speech Festival 2022 (1 Corinthians 13)

    speech festival 2022 video

  3. SIS Speech Festival 2022 (Lion Class Dance)

    speech festival 2022 video

  4. 24 pictures from Portadown Speech Festival 2022

    speech festival 2022 video

  5. 74th HK Speech Festival 2022- speak your poem in perfect 'BBC" English

    speech festival 2022 video

  6. HK Schools Speech Festival 2022

    speech festival 2022 video

VIDEO

  1. Chocoholic by Carol Ann Duffy

  2. Challenger Fourth Grade Speech Festival Student Showcase

  3. Suffolk 2022: Commencement Ceremony Highlights

  4. Senior English Address

  5. Breakfast by P.H. Kilby

  6. National Tribal Festival 2023

COMMENTS

  1. 74th English Speech Festival (2022)

    The Whistler by June Crebbin

  2. Speech Festival

    Past Winners and Festival Statistics; Committee; Staff; Press Release; Job Vacancy; Tender; Speech Festival. 75th Hong Kong Schools Speech Festival (2023) (Chinese Speech) 75th Hong Kong Schools Speech Festival (2023) (English Speech) Music Festival; Membership; Member Login; Key Events. 70th Anniversary Celebrations; Prize-winners' Concert ...

  3. 75th Hong Kong Schools Speech Festival (2023) (English Speech)

    List of Universities and Post-secondary Institutes Eligible to Enter the Speech Festival (Rules and Regulations Annex 1) (LCM) 2023-08-21: Enrolment Link for Universities/ Post-secondary Students (English Speech) (Ended) ... Video Shooting Tips (VSM) 2023-10-03: Own Choice Form and Piece Submission (Ended) 2023-11-01:

  4. Frequently Asked Questions

    Class Description of the online Syllabus (note is added for VSM classes). There are total 7 classes to be held in "Video Submission Mode" in English Speech Festival: N1 - Solo Verse Speaking, Open, Ages 5 and 6, Boys and Girls. N2 - Solo Verse Speaking, Open, Ages 7, Boys and Girls.

  5. 6th LCM Hong Kong Speech Festival 2022

    This playlist provides young learners with poem demonstrations for home practice.

  6. IKTMC English Department

    Speech Festival 2022 was once again in pre-recorded form But that didn't prevent our particpants from a strong showning. Rizvi-Putri- Setiamawan (4c 22) placing 3rd in her group for her Solo recital of a 'Televised surprise' by David Harmer. Teacher in Charge: Ms. Aisha.

  7. Speech Festival

    This section records our schools' results in the English section of the Speech Festival since the year 2006-2007. You may also check our Videos section for some of the video-recorded pieces performed by our solo and group award-recipients. 75th Hong Kong Schools Speech Festival (2023-2024) Solo awardees: Winners 23. 2nd places 27.

  8. PDF Chiu Sheung School, Hong Kong

    1. Due to the COVID-19 epidemic, the 74th Hong Kong Schools Speech Festival (2022) will be held in "Video Submission Mode" instead of live performance. Competitors are required to prepare the video of their own performance according to the prescribed format and submit the video by completing an on-line "Video Submission Form" before 24th ...

  9. Culmination of English Speech Festival

    ENGLISH SPEECH FESTIVAL 2022 Theme: "Learning, Living and Loving English Amidst The Pandemic" ** No copyright infringement. The audio and video belongs...

  10. 8th LCM Speech Festival

    The London College of Music (LCM) and Hotung Mills Education Foundation are delighted to announce the 8th LCM Speech Festival in Hong Kong from 8 - 10 June 204 is leading event, while receiving a certificate and useful feedback from the LCM adjudicators. The London College of Music (LCM) and Hotung Mills Education Foundation are delighted to ...

  11. Speech &Drama Festival 2022 is back, and live! On the 27th ...

    Speech &Drama Festival 2022 is back, and live! On the 27th of June, we kick off the Harare leg, with Gweru starting bright and early tomorrow, the 22nd....

  12. 2022 Speech Festival > St. Joseph High School

    The Speech Festival was broadcast live on the St. Joseph School YouTube page. Click HERE to watch a replay of the live stream. Thank you to Kumu Kipapa, the English teachers (Mrs. Moreau, Ms. Sugiyama, Mr. Dagdag, and Mrs. Wright-Reed), the Senior Class, Mrs. Villena, Mr. Galves, and everyone who contributed to making the speech festival a success.

  13. IKTMC English Department

    Speech Festival Poems 2022. Secondary 1-6 Speech Festival Poems (GIRLS) s1 girls poem. S2 girls poem. S3 girls poem. S4 girls poem. S5 girls poem. S6 girls poem. Secondary 1-6 Speech Festival Poems (Boys) S1 boys poem. S2 boys poem. S3 boys poem. S4 boys poem. S5 boys poem. S6 boys poem [Islamic Kasim Tuet Memorial College] [[email protected] ...

  14. Speech &Drama Festival 2022 is back, and live! On the 27th ...

    Speech &Drama Festival 2022 is back, and live! On the 27th of June, we kick off the Harare leg, with Gweru starting bright and early tomorrow, the 22nd. We are excited to be back on stage after the festival had to be held online for the past 2 years. We wish all the performers the very best! #niaa #SD2022 #Cabs #pcd CABS PCD Consumer SHOP

  15. Opening of the 75th Festival de Cannes: the speech by Vincent Lindon

    The Festival de Cannes demands the immediate release of filmmakers Mohammad Rasoulof, Mostafa Aleahmad and Jafar Panahi On Friday, July 8, 2022, Iranian filmmakers Mohammad Rasoulof and Mostafa Aleahmad were arrested and imprisoned at an unknown location for protesting against violence against civilians in Iran. Mohammad Rasoulof...

  16. 2022 Speech Festival

    Xenia Community Schools is now accepting submissions for the 2022-2023 Speech Festival! For this annual competition, individual K-12 students are invited to compose a speech of two to three minutes on the chosen topic: Kindness, Empathy, and Compassion! Each student will record and submit their speech virtually, following the age guidelines below.To submit your entry, the v ideo should be ...

  17. Unearthed Video Shows Trump Praising Project 2025 In 2022 Keynote Speech

    A shocking unearthed video unearthed by Slingshot News shows former President Donald Trump praising Project 2025 in a speech he delivered to the Heritage Foundation in 2022. Trump has since ...

  18. Donald Trump Accused of Having 'Empty Seats' During Georgia Rally

    In a video, Trump also said that "the school administration stopped us from getting another 500, 600, even 1,000 people in" to the event. Another clip, posted by left-wing news network Meidas ...

  19. WATCH: Trump speaks at National Association of Black Journalists ...

    Donald Trump falsely suggested Kamala Harris had misled voters about her race as the former president appeared before the National Association of Black Journalists in Chicago Wednesday in an ...

  20. Hong Kong Schools Music and Speech Association

    24 June 2024, Monday. Time: 7:00 p.m. Venue: Recital Theatre, China Congregational Church (6/F, Congregation House, 119 Leighton Road, Causeway Bay, Hong Kong) Ticket: Free Admission. Ticket Obtainment: A self-addressed stamped envelope should reach the Association by 17 June 2024; please indicate "GMA Recital" and the number of tickets ...

  21. File : Elektrostal, Moscow Oblast, Russia

    From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository. Jump to navigation Jump to search. File; File history; File usage on Commons; Metadata

  22. Zhukovsky International Airport

    Zhukovsky International Airport, formerly known as Ramenskoye Airport or Zhukovsky Airfield - international airport, located in Moscow Oblast, Russia 36 km southeast of central Moscow, in the town of Zhukovsky, a few kilometers southeast of the old Bykovo Airport. After its reconstruction in 2014-2016, Zhukovsky International Airport was officially opened on 30 May 2016.

  23. Places to Visit in Elektrostal

    Hotels near Electrostal History and Art Museum Hotels near Park of Culture and Leisure Hotels near Statue of Lenin Hotels near Museum and Exhibition Center Hotels ...

  24. In Yolŋu cuture, fire brings renewal

    Over the past 25 years, people have come to experience first-hand the rich and powerful gift of Yolŋu culture provided by the festival's hosts, the Gumatj clan, at their ceremonial site, Gulkula.

  25. Female fighter's relief after facing boxer who failed gender tests

    This was Imane Khelif fighting in Mexico in December 2022 against a Mexican woman. Three months later, a test apparently revealed the XY chromosome. Note the force of the punching.

  26. Where Kamala Harris Stands on the Issues: Abortion, Immigration and

    In a speech in 2022 marking the anniversary of the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol, she said that day had showed "what our nation would look like if the forces who seek to dismantle our ...

  27. Disinformation Fed Far-Right Riot in England After Deadly Stabbing

    The video has been viewed more than 14.9 million times. As misinformation about the suspect spread, the police issued statements saying that he was born in Cardiff, Wales. But false claims ...

  28. Arts funding model is 'utterly broken', warns Edinburgh festival chief

    The International Festival ran a pre-tax deficit of £1.75mn in the financial year ending October 2022, which last year widened to £2.26mn, the largest deficits in its history.

  29. Syllabus

    Past Winners and Festival Statistics; Committee; Staff; Press Release; Job Vacancy; Tender; Speech Festival. 75th Hong Kong Schools Speech Festival (2023) (Chinese Speech) 75th Hong Kong Schools Speech Festival (2023) (English Speech) Music Festival; Membership; Member Login; Key Events. 70th Anniversary Celebrations; Prize-winners' Concert ...

  30. File : Elektrostal, Moscow Oblast, Russia

    From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository. Jump to navigation Jump to search. File; File history; File usage on Commons; Metadata