Transcript: Sheryl Sandberg at the University of California at Berkeley 2016 Commencement
The Lean In author addressed loss and resilience at UC Berkley's commencement. · Fortune

Sheryl Sandberg, chief operating officer of Facebook , author of Lean In, and founder of LeanIn.org, addressed the Class of 2016 at the University of California at Berkeley on Saturday, May 14th. She spoke on loss and resilience in the wake of her husband Dave Goldberg’s passing. The address comes sooner after recent comments concerning how her Lean In philosophy has evolved since her husband’s death.

If you’d like to watch live, you can see her commencement speech on the UC Berkeley website or in the live stream below.

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY 2016 Commencement Address
Thank you, Marie. And thank you esteemed members of the faculty, proud parents, devoted friends, squirming siblings.

Congratulations to all of you...and especially to the magnificent Berkeley graduating class of 2016!

It is a privilege to be here at Berkeley, which has produced so many Nobel Prize winners, Turing Award winners, astronauts, members of Congress, Olympic gold medalists.... and that's just the women!

Berkeley has always been ahead of the times. In the 1960s, you led the Free Speech Movement. Back in those days, people used to say that with all the long hair, how do we even tell the boys from the girls? We now know the answer: manbuns.

Early on, Berkeley opened its doors to the entire population. When this campus opened in 1873, the class included 167 men and 222 women. It took my alma mater another ninety years to award a single degree to a single woman.

One of the women who came here in search of opportunity was Rosalind Nuss. Roz grew up scrubbing floors in the Brooklyn boardinghouse where she lived. She was pulled out of high school by her parents to help support their family. One of her teachers insisted that her parents put her back into school--and in 1937, she sat where you are sitting today and received a Berkeley degree. Roz was my grandmother. She was a huge inspiration to me and I'm so grateful that Berkeley recognized her potential. I want to take a moment to offer a special congratulations to the many here today who are the first generation in their families to graduate from college. What a remarkable achievement.

Today is a day of celebration. A day to celebrate all the hard work that got you to this moment.

Today is a day of thanks. A day to thank those who helped you get here--nurtured you, taught you, cheered you on, and dried your tears. Or at least the ones who didn't draw on you with a Sharpie when you fell asleep at a party.

Today is a day of reflection. Because today marks the end of one era of your life and the beginning of something new.