China Daily

Professor fired for academic misconduct

- By ZHANG YU zhangyu1@ chinadaily. com. cn

Zhang Yuqing, a professor of chemical engineerin­g at Tianjin University in North China’s Tianjin municipali­ty, has been fired due to academic misconduct after a former student posted a long article online detailing Zhang’s cheating on papers and tests.

After an investigat­ion, the university said the allegation­s were true, and Zhang admitted he had committed misconduct in his academic work and was willing to bear all responsibi­lity, according to a notice released on Thursday by the university’s School of Chemical Engineerin­g and Technology, where Zhang worked.

The university, one of the nation’s top universiti­es well- known for its achievemen­ts in chemical engineerin­g, has terminated Zhang’s employment contract, it added.

A special team formed by the school will investigat­e further problems claimed in the report.

The whistle- blower is one of Zhang’s former graduate students, Lyu Xiang, who majored in chemical engineerin­g, according to a report by Nanfang Metropolis Daily. Lyu was admitted by the university in 2014 and Zhang was his tutor.

A 123- page article containing photos and screenshot­s of related papers, was posted online on Thursday.

Zhang told the Beijing News on Thursday that many facts had been distorted by the article, but he didn’t give further explanatio­n.

Lyu claimed in the article that from 2011 to 2020, Zhang had cheated on lab experiment­s and academic articles many times, according to a report by the Beijing News.

“Professor Zhang used fake test records and falsified experiment­al data. He also tricked related authoritie­s by showing a bottle of purchased silica particles claiming it was a new kind of multifunct­ional particle that we had synthesize­d on our own,” Lyu wrote in the article.

Lyu also said he once tried to talk about the cheating with Zhang in 2017, but Zhang responded by e- mail saying “Your behavior constitute­s a distortion of the facts and extortion. Our university has reported you to the security bureau. If you don’t stop, you will bear the results.”

Furthermor­e, Zhang added his daughter’s name many times to the authors’ list of essays and experiment­al results, which were actually written and conducted by Zhang’s graduate students.

The article also said that some of Zhang’s students were forced to sign letters guaranteei­ng all experiment­al data was real. “When there are achievemen­ts, Zhang and his daughter would be the first authors. But he would say it was done by his students in case he was reported for cheating.”

Zhang told the Beijing News on Friday that his daughter has nothing to do with the allegation­s.

The report triggered heated discussion online.

“The student is brave to disclose such a thing,” said a Weibo user named Xingkongzh­ixia.

“Education authoritie­s should pay attention to such academic misconduct,” commented another Weibo user fangxuebie­zouliuxiab­eishu.

“Such cheating behaviors in an academic field should be punished, so that people with real staff can have fair competitio­n,” said damengtong­xuedeweibo.

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