A talent program just sounds weird
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Does this make China look bad and why?
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Quote:
FROM: https://www.science.org/content/arti...ng-about-those China aggressively recruited foreign scientists. Now, it avoids talking about those programs BY DENNIS NORMILE (2022-01-20 2:35 PM) Information on talent programs that drew U.S. scrutiny has disappeared The criminal charges against Harvard University chemist Charles Lieberand dozens of others ensnared in the U.S. Department of Justices China Initiativehave put a spotlight on the Thousand Talents Program (TTP), a Chinese government effort that brought Lieber and other scientists from overseas to Chinas universities and research institutes. U.S. authorities have portrayed the program as an effort to pilfer know-how and innovation, a claim many scientists dispute. But as the scrutiny of the TTP grew, the program slipped out of sight. Official mentions of the TTP have disappeared, and lists of TTP awardees once posted on government and university websites are no longer available. But experts say the TTP has simply been folded into other programs, and recruitment is continuing. More than ever, the effort focuses on scientists of Chinese origin, and part-time appointments of the type that Lieber had have become rare. China launched the TTP in 2008, aiming to boost the countrys research output and quality. At the time, more than 90% of Chinese who earned Ph.D.s in the United States remained there for at least 5 years after completing their studies, according to a May 2020 report by David Zweig and Siqin Kang of the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. The TTP offered returneesand foreign researchers willing to relocatecompetitive salaries and funding to establish labs. Although some half-time appointments were allowed, the program aimed for full-time researchers. There were few takers. So in 2010 the part-time option was expanded, allowing recruits to maintain their jobs overseas if they spent at least part of the year in China. In 2011, close to 75% of 500 TTP scholars Zweig and Kang identified were on part-time agreements. (A 2019 U.S. Senate report claims the TTP had attracted more than 7000 high-end professionals by 2017 but didnt specify how many were part time.) The program has paid off for China. A 2020 study by Cong Cao, a China science policy specialist at the University of Nottinghams campus in Ningbo, China, showed scholars in China with overseas experience published more papers, and with higher impact, than stay-at-home peers. Universities also benefited from the association with star scientists. Liebers presence, for example, may have helped the little-known Wuhan University of Technology (WUT) attract prospective students, says Futao Huang, a higher education scholar at Hiroshima University... (SNIP) A version of this story appeared in Science, Vol 375, Issue 6578. |
Does this make China look bad and why?
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