Tongji University has fired Yang Jie, its former dean of the
Life Science and Technology Institute, from his current positions
as professor and researcher after an investigation showed that he
had faked academic qualifications on his resume, Shanghai media
reported today.
In March, the university removed Yang from the position of dean
of the university's Life Science and Technology Institute because
of his poor administrative management performance, but Yang
continued to work as a professor and researcher on campus.
Later, an investigation showed that Yang lied to be the major
author of a paper published in the magazine "Lung Cancer," when
applying for PhD qualification in March 2005 and also when
competing for a professorship in July 2005. In March 2006, he
listed other's achievements as his own research to apply for
national funds.
Tongji announced yesterday that it has ended the three-year work
contract with Yang and removed him from his job as professor.
Yang was appointed as one of the eight new deans by Tongji in
September 2004 after the university launched a global recruitment
drive in 2003.
China has set up a special commission to monitor academic fraud
and plagiarism in higher-learning institutes, following a series of
academic scandals in recent months.
In May, Chen Jin, a dean at Shanghai Jiao Tong University, was
fired for faking research on the Hanxin digital signal processing
chip, a state-funded program.
Liu Hui, a professor at Beijing's Tsinghua University, was
removed from his post in March for faking academic and work
records.
(Shanghai Daily June 22, 2006)