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What does academic fraud mean?
Academic fraud refers to plagiarism, plagiarism, possession of other people's research results, or forgery or modification of research data. Academic fraud is first of all a violation of academic ethics and scientific spirit, and it is the product of impetuous and quick success in the academic field.

In recent years, the phenomenon of fraud in colleges and universities in China is more serious. Academic corruption has spread to most academic fields. Yang Yusheng, a professor at China University of Political Science and Law, said that almost all universities in China have scholars suspected of academic fraud or corruption.

Professor Tang Anguo, an expert in higher education research and East China Normal University, pointed out that the academic environment is impetuous, some people lose their balance in the face of the temptation of fame and fortune, and some supervision systems are seriously lacking, which opens the door for them; In addition, in order to compete for rankings, it is generally difficult for schools to effectively audit scientific research projects and researchers.

On August, 2065 438+08 10, Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security solicited opinions from the society on the Regulations on the Administration of Professional Title Evaluation. The "Regulations" put forward that the evaluation of professional titles should be based on morality first, and academic fraud should be "rejected by one vote" and included in the "blacklist" of credit.

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Related events:

April 2009

Wang Fengyang, a 38-year-old professor, doctoral supervisor and academic leader of Hainan University, was involved in the whirlpool of "academic fraud" just after being appointed as the vice president of the Agricultural College of Hainan University.

May 2009

A master's degree thesis of Dongbei University of Finance and Economics in 2007 is strikingly similar to that of Nanjing University of Finance and Economics in 2006. The overall framework of the two papers is exactly the same, except that the word "Jiangsu" was replaced by "Shandong", which was called "the best plagiarism in history" by netizens.

June 2009

Lu Jierong, Vice President of Liaoning University, published "What is the Theory" in the core journals? The article "was exploded and suspected of plagiarism. Later, the school of Liaoning University said that Lu Jierong, the first signatory of the paper, did not know. The second signer, Yang Lun, a 2006 doctoral student majoring in foreign philosophy in the School of Philosophy and Sociology of Beijing Normal University, admitted that he had copied it before giving it to his former teacher Lu Jierong for signature.

August 2009

Zhou Zude, the 64-year-old president of Wuhan University of Technology and the candidate of China Academy of Sciences in 2009, and his student Xie Ming included a plagiarized paper in the first edition of the second national academic conference on intelligent manufacturing. After plagiarism was detected, the conference launched the "official version" and deleted the article.

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