Chinese university presidents on Thursday called for harsher
penalties for academics responsible for dishonest or fraudulent
research results after a spate of recent fraud cases.
"Plagiarism and other profit-driven acts are common in China's
academies, tarnishing our international image," said Wu Jianmin,
president of the Foreign Affairs College.
Wu, a former Chinese Ambassador to France, urged the government
to take serious action to discourage deception. "We should not go
soft on academic fraud. If we let one fraudster go today, there
will be ten more tomorrow."
In most of China's universities, post-graduates students are
required to publish a certain number of theses in key academic
journals before they are granted a master or a doctoral degree.
Many desperate students turn to plagiarism in order to graduate,
said Ji Baocheng, president of the People's University. This
reflected the loss of morality and credibility across society.
Post-graduate students guilty of plagiarism at the People's
University were denied their degrees.
"Even the deception is discovered after the conferring of the
degree, the degree will be revoked," he said.
Xu Xianming, president of China University of Political Science
and Law, said the fundamental purpose of academic research was the
pursuit of truth, which was denied in the event of plagiarism.
Dieter Lenzen, president of the Berlin Free University of
Germany, said plagiarism was easy to commit, but difficult to
discover, in the age of rapidly developing Internet technology.
"Plagiarism is an insult to academic study," he said, adding a
dozen institutes investigating plagiarism had been set up in
Germany.
Ian Chubb, president of the Australia National University,
expressed his "great regret" yet "certain understanding" for
plagiarism under an academic-degree-oriented educational
system.
Plagiarism awareness was more important than punishment, he
said. In his school, an institute had been set up for investigation
and education.
Earlier this year, the Chinese Ministry of Education also set up
a special committee to build a sound environment for academic
research.
In May, Chen Jin, a dean at Shanghai Jiaotong University, was
fired for faking research on the Hanxin computer chip, which had
received state-funding.
Chen, who formerly chaired the Micro-electronics School at
Shanghai Jiaotong University, was found to be deceiving
technological appraisal teams from the government, Shanghai
Jiaotong University, Shanghai municipal government and relative
ministries, which invested public funds in his research
project.
In late April, Yang Jie, former director of the Life Science and
Technology Institute, was sacked from the prestigious Tongji
University in Shanghai after the veracity of his academic record
was questioned.
Liu Hui, of the Beijing-based Qinghua University, was dismissed
as professor and assistant to the director of the university's
medical school in March for faking his academic achievements and
work experience.
(Xinhua News Agency July 14, 2006)