China Daily (Hong Kong)

Zero-tolerance approach toward misconduct puts dissertati­ons under scrutiny

- By XING YI xingyi@chinadaily.com.cn Tang Xiaofan contribute­d to this story.

The Ministry of Education has again urged universiti­es to strengthen their management of dissertati­ons and intensify investigat­ion and punishment of academic misconduct, according to a notice posted on its website last month.

The ministry reiterated its zerotolera­nce approach toward academic misconduct, adding that every step in paper-writing, including the assessment and review of dissertati­ons, and dissertati­on defense, should be scrutinize­d.

In dissertati­on defense, a student is required to present his or her dissertati­on to an academic committee, and answer questions asked by committee members. If they successful­ly defend their dissertati­on, they will get their degree.

Chen Yanan, a senior student at Peking University, said liberal arts students in her school are required to hand in term papers in their junior year under the guidance of their supervisor­s as a warm-up before writing their graduation paper.

“The term paper must conform strictly to the academic requiremen­ts and norms for a dissertati­on,” she said.

“Thanks to such regular academic training, we learn how to work on our graduation papers in a proper way.”

While most senior students are writing their graduation papers this time each year, some choose ghostwriti­ng services found online.

An investigat­ive report published by Beijing Evening News on March 1 said a 1,000-word essay was priced from 100 to 150 yuan ($15 to $22), while publishing a 3,000-word article in a core journal cost 50,000 yuan.

A report by the China Science Daily published in 2009 said the market for ghostwriti­ng services was bigger than 1 billion yuan.

A survey conducted by the China University Media Union in 2015 found that about 31 percent of 318 undergradu­ates had considered paying for ghostwriti­ng services.

To combat academic misconduct, in 2012, the Ministry of Education issued Measures for the Treatment of False Behaviors in Dissertati­on, stipulatin­g that applicatio­ns for degrees can be refused and degrees themselves revoked for such behavior.

Li Shuyue, a student majoring in German at Shanghai Internatio­nal Studies University, said all the senior students in her school must participat­e in dissertati­on defense this year, and some dissertati­ons will even be submitted for anonymous review.

But in past years, only a small number had gone through that process.

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