From: TKeating on
http://www.economist.com/node/16646212

Academic fraud in China
Replicating success
Widespread academic fraud may hamper a drive for innovation
Jul 22nd 2010 | beijing

CHINA’S president, Hu Jintao, speaks often and forcefully of the need
to foster innovation. He makes a strong case: sustaining economic
growth and competitiveness requires China to get beyond mere labour-
driven manufacturing and into the knowledge-based business of
discoveries, inventions and other advances.

Yet doing so will be hard, not least because of the country’s well-
earned reputation for pervasive academic and scientific misconduct.
Scholars, both Chinese and Western, say that fraud remains rampant and
misconduct ranges from falsified data to fibs about degrees, cheating
on tests and extensive plagiarism.

The most notable recent case centres on Tang Jun, a celebrity
executive, a self-made man and author of a popular book,“My Success
Can Be Replicated”. He was recently accused of falsely claiming that
he had a doctorate from the prestigious California Institute of
Technology. He responded that his publisher had erred and in fact his
degree is from another, much less swanky, California school.

Other cases involve accusations of plagiarism against well-known
Chinese scholars which have provoked the authorities to talk of
investigations. A Western scholar recounts how a social-science
project was jeopardised recently when data collection was contracted
out to a Chinese company—its researchers simply filled out the survey
forms themselves.

Such lapses of integrity are not unique to China, but poor peer-review
mechanisms, misguided incentives and a lack of checks on academic
behaviour all allow fraud to be more common. China may be susceptible,
suggests Dr Cong Cao, a specialist on the sociology of science in
China at the State University of New York, because academics expect to
advance according to the number, not the quality, of their published
works. Thus reward can come without academic rigour. Nor do senior
scientists, who are rarely punished for fraud, set a decent example to
their juniors.

The implications of widespread academic misconduct could be great. Dr
Denis Fred Simon of Penn State University argues that growing evidence
of fraud “calls into question the overall credibility of the
scientific enterprise in China—and unfortunately feeds negatively into
the related concerns about the safety of Chinese products and the
integrity of information coming out of China.”

In practical terms foreign scientists may be deterred from China, as
they worry about getting caught up in scandals. Early this year, after
it was found that 70 papers on crystal structures submitted to an
international journal by Chinese scientists had been fabricated, the
Lancet medical journal called on China’s government to “assume
stronger leadership in scientific integrity”. The measures taken so
far, it suggested, had failed to get to the root of why some Chinese
scientists lie.

Another direct cost may be felt by Chinese students looking for
college places abroad. Admissions officials are suspicious of near-
perfect scores on standardised tests and glowing recommendations from
professors, which are common to many applications from China. The risk
is that genuinely qualified students are turned away because of
general suspicion about fraud. But at least China’s growing academic
integration with the outside world may help. As more academics earn
degrees abroad and go back to posts in China, informal networks are
created that help outsiders check on the quality of applicants. That
is a small innovation, but perhaps one that will benefit China.

Asia

///

Al Gore would do well to apply for a research grant in China.
From: T. Keating on
On Mon, 9 Aug 2010 18:31:53 -0700 (PDT), TKeating
<TKeating(a)hushmail.com> wrote:

>http://www.economist.com/node/16646212
>
>Academic fraud in China
snipppy...

To the Criminal FF/drug addicted ID troll, posing as Mr. Keating..

Learn to properly cite and quote articles without copy and pasting
them in their entirety!

http://www.economist.com/rights/index.cfm/?area=home&CFID=134930788&CFTOKEN=97853004
http://www.economist.com/rights/index.cfm/?area=oneoffpermission

"The Economist is pleased to grant one-off permission for the
republication of articles, special reports, charts and maps from The
Economist, in both print and electronic format, subject to a copyright
fee."