China Daily

Actor says sorry after plagiarism accusation

- By ZOU SHUO zoushuo@chinadaily.com.cn

In a public apology on Thursday, actor Zhai Tianlin, who had been hit by plagiarism accusation­s over his doctoral research papers, said, “I lost myself amid a mentality of vanity and good luck.”

Education authoritie­s in Beijing have launched an investigat­ion into Zhai, who has been the target of plagiarism allegation­s online.

The Beijing Education Commission and the Education Work Committee of the Beijing Committee of the Communist Party of China sent an investigat­ive team to the Beijing Film Academy — where Zhai got his PhD — to look into the matter, the academy said on Thursday.

Zhai, 32, is also a postdoctor­al candidate at

Peking University. He found himself in hot water last week on social media after a netizen accused him of plagiarism.

The academy launched its own investigat­ion on Monday. It completed its preliminar­y collection of evidence and notified Zhai, it said, adding that it has zero tolerance for academic misconduct and will look into other matters uncovered by netizens.

“After I starred in a few films and TV series, I became full of myself and forgot that honesty is the most important principle,” Zhai said in his apology letter posted on Sina Weibo on Thursday.

“Vanity misled me, and I brought this attitude into writing academic papers. I will withdraw from postdoctor­al research at Peking University and I am deeply sorry to my school, teachers, fans and the public,” he wrote.

Zhai raised a flurry of chatter online in August when he said in a live video appearance he did not know what the China National Knowledge Infrastruc­ture was. CNKI is the largest and most widely used online academic library in China for university students writing theses and dissertati­ons.

A post by a Sina Weibo blogger claimed one of Zhai’s papers, which was published in an academic journal, was uploaded to CNKI and the 2,783-word article showed a 40.4 percent similarity with other people’s work.

Another post by the same netizen claimed Zhai’s doctoral dissertati­on could not be found in the CNKI database, while all the graduation dissertati­ons written by his classmates were there.

Zhai’s studio said on Feb 8 that he obtained a PhD from the Beijing Film Academy in June, and all his academic papers and dissertati­on were written by him under the guidance of supervisor­s.

He had met all graduation requiremen­ts from the academy and was willing to be held accountabl­e for any academic misconduct, the studio said.

Netizens later said that Zhai’s supervisor, Chen Yi, former director of the academy’s performanc­e institute, has only a bachelor’s degree and has not published any academic papers. Doctoral supervisor­s at the academy are supposed to have a doctorate themselves and should have published at least eight academic papers and two academic monographs in the past five years.

Peking University notified Zhai in person of the results of its preliminar­y investigat­ion on Wednesday, the school said on Thursday.

The university is aware of Zhai’s desire to withdraw from the postdoctor­al program and will act appropriat­ely, it said.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong