Resource link:
link:/s/ 1 zs 7 ekprihw 6 zrrtivd-BTW
Password: 76zw Title: I only care about my talents.
Author: Zhang Wuchang
Douban score: 8.2
Publishing House: CITIC Publishing House
Publication year: 2010-11-22.
Page count: 38 1
Content abstract: Professor Zhang Wuchang once lived in the United States and returned to Hong Kong, China to teach in 1980s. He wrote a book about his learning experience and the differences in educational ideas between China and the United States in different educational environments. This book expounds the differences between Chinese and western educational systems and ways of thinking from the perspectives of educational theory, methods of studying, personal experience of studying, educational system and methods of educating children, and makes a profound comparative analysis, such as sharply attacking HKU's "off-campus examiner" system and the disadvantages of public universities.
Professor Zhang's point of view is unique. He believes that education should start with the interest in learning, so as to get better and better. Just like he forgot to eat and sleep in the library of UCLA, he studied day and night, and cultivated personal creativity without relying on traditional educational ideas and rules. This is the future prospect of education development.
About the author: Zhang Wuchang, a Hong Kong economist, is one of the representatives of new institutional economics. 1967 After receiving his doctorate, he taught at the University of Chicago and the University of Washington in Seattle. He further developed the theory of property rights and the concept of transaction cost, and thought that as long as property rights are well defined, resources can be used most effectively. He is well-known in academic circles with two articles: On Tenants and The Myth of Bees. Since 1980s, he returned to teach in the Department of Economics of the University of Hong Kong, and began to analyze the current situation of the press in Hong Kong with the theory of property rights, which aroused strong academic repercussions in the Mainland and Hong Kong. He has published several books, such as On Tenants, Question and Answer Room of the Five Permanent Members, Missing Links in Economics, Economic Explanation, China's Prospect, Orangemen's Talk, and China's Future.