China Daily

Enjoying the pursuit of perfection

- Xue Qikun spoke with Zhang Zhihao.

vice-president of Tsinghua University and winner of first prize in the State Natural Science Award

Xue Qikun,

As a physicist, it is always a great joy to cross fresh frontiers and offer new directions for research. My scientific accomplish­ments have made me very proud and I am highly respected, but what makes me most happy is tutoring many excellent students.

In 1999, I returned to China after studying in Japan for eight years. Since then, I have trained more than 20 postdoctor­al fellows and 72 doctoral students, many of whom are now professors. I am happy to know they are passing on my research philosophi­es and traditions when teaching their students.

I am not a good speaker, sadly. My oral English used to be terrible and my heavy accent certainly did not help.

However, in 1996 I was invited to give a 20-minute speech at one of the biggest physics meetings in the United States.

It was a huge challenge for me. So I got a room, and practiced my speech more than 80 times, not just to perfect my pronunciat­ion, but also to practice my hand gestures and interactio­n with the audience.

The speech was a success, and many physicists I admire came to congratula­te me. It was a huge moment for a young fellow like me who comes from humble origins. The feeling was like drinking a glass of cool water on a hot day — so satisfying.

The incident gave me the mental fortitude to pursue perfection in the face of challenges and a willingnes­s to enjoy the rigorous process.

After all, no one’s journey to success is smooth sailing. I took my graduate school entrance exam three times. I also took seven years to complete my doctorate, whereas nowadays my students typically take five.

I am a professor at one of China’s leading universiti­es, and my job is to train top talent. I once had a very talented student, but his written English was terrible. Almost every sentence in his scientific papers had errors.

Then again, if students could write a perfect paper at the first attempt, they wouldn’t need professors. I asked him to correct his paper 10 times, each time focusing on one aspect of writing, such as grammar or sentence structure.

This pursuit of a perfection­ist mentality eventually helped him to overcome his shortcomin­gs in English, and now he is a professor at a top university in China. It is my duty as a teacher to nurture my students to become scientists who can tirelessly pursue perfection.

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