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Tiong Cock Kia with 4 PHDs & 4 Masters shun Singapore

8::::::D

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A young Chinese man has astonished mainland social media with his remarkable academic accomplishments, which include two postdoctoral degrees, four PhDs, four master’s degrees, and more than 20 memberships in academic organisations.

Zhao Zijian, 29, sparked intense public debate after the Inner Mongolian National Culture and Art Research Institute announced his appointment as a researcher and shared his incredible academic credentials.


Zhao stated that he earned doctoral degrees in performing arts, psychology, education, and biblical studies. He specifically mentioned two institutions where he completed his doctoral studies: a “Catholic university” in South Korea and Lyceum of the Philippines University, a private school.

He also claimed to hold multiple master’s degrees in communications, Buddhist studies, and mindfulness studies from the University of Hong Kong, Baptist University, and both the University of Zaragoza and Miguel de Cervantes European University in Spain.


In addition to his degrees, Zhao has 22 memberships in various academic societies spanning diverse fields such as economics and medicine, and he has published 24 “high-level” academic articles, aggregating an impact factor of “28+” - a metric indicating how frequently the articles were cited in a given year.

Many people questioned Zhao’s academic credentials as being “against common sense”, since most PhDs typically take at least four years to complete.

The institute stated that it had suspended its collaboration with Zhao and launched an investigation into his academic qualifications.

On October 12, Yin Fujun, the head of the institute, informed China Newsweek that no “obvious counterfeiting” was found. He confirmed that all of Zhao’s four master’s degrees passed official verification from the Chinese Service Centre for Scholarly Exchange (CSCSE).

However, only one of Zhao’s PhDs had passed verification, while one was still in the process, and Yin mentioned that Zhao “did not plan to verify the other two”.

Yin noted that Zhao met their requirements for the researcher position and expressed regret for the trouble caused to him.

Zhao has not addressed the ongoing controversy.

Online commentators raised concerns about the legitimacy of his academic credentials.

It has come to light that some of his degrees were obtained online, and Miguel de Cervantes European University is not listed on the official verification roster.

The CSCSE had also designated the Lyceum of the Philippines University’s Batangas Campus, where Zhao’s psychology department operates, as one of the 13 lower-ranked overseas institutions that require rigorous verification as of July this year.

Many of the 22 academic memberships he claimed were public or student memberships, which can be obtained with a membership fee.

“What is the point of having so many titles without making actual contributions to academic research?” questioned one online observer.

China has been intensifying its efforts to crack down on academic short cuts that some individuals have used to advance their careers in academia.

In August last year, a government-affiliated research organisation on university information and Renmin University of China co-published a directory that categorises overseas universities and their social sciences programmes as a guide to assess education quality.

In 2022, a university head in southern China’s Hunan province was dismissed after the institution spent over 18 million yuan (US$2.5 million) sending 23 educators to Adamson University in the Philippines to obtain doctoral degrees in just 28 months. - SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST



https://www.thestar.com.my/aseanplu...asters-degrees-probed-for-dubious-credentials
 
When Tiongs commit fraud in these things, they go big and make it seem as though it's real. It's like those fake branded goods marketed as genuine.

When ah nehs commit fraud, it's simple and they don't pretend e.g. Uptron ACL. If they get their way, it's only because the gatekeepers chose to close one eye or are accomplices and co-collaborators.
 
Remember this Tiong uncle who was once spotted with a camera crew at a Sinkie hawker centre years ago?

This is what trashy Tiongs do: puff themselves up with no shame.

chen-guangbiao.jpg
 
View attachment 208420


A young Chinese man has astonished mainland social media with his remarkable academic accomplishments, which include two postdoctoral degrees, four PhDs, four master’s degrees, and more than 20 memberships in academic organisations.

Zhao Zijian, 29, sparked intense public debate after the Inner Mongolian National Culture and Art Research Institute announced his appointment as a researcher and shared his incredible academic credentials.


Zhao stated that he earned doctoral degrees in performing arts, psychology, education, and biblical studies. He specifically mentioned two institutions where he completed his doctoral studies: a “Catholic university” in South Korea and Lyceum of the Philippines University, a private school.

He also claimed to hold multiple master’s degrees in communications, Buddhist studies, and mindfulness studies from the University of Hong Kong, Baptist University, and both the University of Zaragoza and Miguel de Cervantes European University in Spain.


In addition to his degrees, Zhao has 22 memberships in various academic societies spanning diverse fields such as economics and medicine, and he has published 24 “high-level” academic articles, aggregating an impact factor of “28+” - a metric indicating how frequently the articles were cited in a given year.

Many people questioned Zhao’s academic credentials as being “against common sense”, since most PhDs typically take at least four years to complete.

The institute stated that it had suspended its collaboration with Zhao and launched an investigation into his academic qualifications.

On October 12, Yin Fujun, the head of the institute, informed China Newsweek that no “obvious counterfeiting” was found. He confirmed that all of Zhao’s four master’s degrees passed official verification from the Chinese Service Centre for Scholarly Exchange (CSCSE).

However, only one of Zhao’s PhDs had passed verification, while one was still in the process, and Yin mentioned that Zhao “did not plan to verify the other two”.

Yin noted that Zhao met their requirements for the researcher position and expressed regret for the trouble caused to him.

Zhao has not addressed the ongoing controversy.

Online commentators raised concerns about the legitimacy of his academic credentials.

It has come to light that some of his degrees were obtained online, and Miguel de Cervantes European University is not listed on the official verification roster.

The CSCSE had also designated the Lyceum of the Philippines University’s Batangas Campus, where Zhao’s psychology department operates, as one of the 13 lower-ranked overseas institutions that require rigorous verification as of July this year.

Many of the 22 academic memberships he claimed were public or student memberships, which can be obtained with a membership fee.

“What is the point of having so many titles without making actual contributions to academic research?” questioned one online observer.

China has been intensifying its efforts to crack down on academic short cuts that some individuals have used to advance their careers in academia.

In August last year, a government-affiliated research organisation on university information and Renmin University of China co-published a directory that categorises overseas universities and their social sciences programmes as a guide to assess education quality.

In 2022, a university head in southern China’s Hunan province was dismissed after the institution spent over 18 million yuan (US$2.5 million) sending 23 educators to Adamson University in the Philippines to obtain doctoral degrees in just 28 months. - SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST



https://www.thestar.com.my/aseanplu...asters-degrees-probed-for-dubious-credentials

What he's lacking is a GCE O Levels cert in English from Sinkieland as proof of his proficiency in the English language.
 
Hahaha.
I won't believe in this fraud.
He is a fraud.

What's the use of having a Doctorate ,let alone so many ?
 
When Tiongs commit fraud in these things, they go big and make it seem as though it's real. It's like those fake branded goods marketed as genuine.

When ah nehs commit fraud, it's simple and they don't pretend e.g. Uptron ACL. If they get their way, it's only because the gatekeepers chose to close one eye or are accomplices and co-collaborators.
Where have you been? This guy may have multple degreess but none of them has been proven fraudulent yet. (I know a PRC here who obtained a PhD in Engineering and an MD before the age of 35, both in our unis).

And as for the Chinese being 'bigger' in paper fraud, it's obvious your prejudice has blinded you to how 'big' your favourite race can be:


* * *

Ex-NUS professor in resume fraud scandal in US​

A former assistant professor at the National University of Singapore who landed a prestigious position at the West Virginia University (seen in picture above) is now at the centre of a sensational fraud investigation. -- PHOTO: About.WVU.DUE

A former assistant professor at the National University of Singapore who landed a prestigious position at the West Virginia University (seen in picture above) is now at the centre of a sensational fraud investigation. -- PHOTO: About.WVU.DUE
Melissa Sim Us Correspondent In Washington

PUBLISHED

SEP 12, 2014, 08:08 AM

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A former assistant professor at the National University of Singapore (NUS) who landed a prestigious position at a United States university is now at the centre of a sensational fraud investigation.

According to his resume, Mr Anoop Shankar, 39, has a doctorate in epidemiology, graduated from India's top medical school when he was 21, was a member of the prestigious Royal College of Physicians and had been awarded a "genius" visa to America.

But US media outlets now report that these credentials began to unravel after West Virginia University (WVU) handpicked him in 2012 for the first endowed position in a new School of Public Health.

In that position, he would have controlled millions of dollars in federal funding and research grants.

What was to have been a routine pre-appointment review revealed that Mr Shankar did not have a doctorate degree, and did not graduate from the All India Institute of Medical Sciences in New Delhi.

What he does have is a master's degree in epidemiology from the University of North Carolina.

The case, among the most serious of its kind, has now also sparked scrutiny into the larger issue of fraud that goes unchecked at some institutes of higher education.


Associate Professor Koh Woon Puay of Duke-NUS Graduate Medical School said she was taken aback by the allegations as she had not found any reason to question his credentials.

"Personally, I did not have any reason to suspect at that time that he was not trained in epidemiology or statistics to carry out his research," said Prof Koh, who stood by the three papers they had worked on together.

The alleged lies were exposed by Dr Ian Rockett, who is chair of the promotion and tenure committee at the School of Public Health at WVU and a tenured professor in the Department of Epidemiology.

But even though Mr Shankar was dismissed by the university in 2012, the school did not address the case publicly.

He was even able to find employment as an associate professor of family medicine at the Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) in Richmond.

Reports say he even published three papers in the last year, including one in the prestigious Journal Of The American Medical Association.
Mr Shankar has since quietly parted ways with VCU as well, and his current whereabouts are unclear.

The university said in a statement: "Shankar was employed by VCU and is no longer employed here."

WVU officials also told NBC News that it would make "a complete and full public statement" when "all the facts are clear and known", though they were unable to provide a timeline.

NUS confirmed that Mr Shankar was an assistant professor with the Department of Community, Occupational and Family Medicine at NUS' Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine from 2005 to 2008, but did not provide further comment.

https://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/education/ex-nus-professor-in-resume-fraud-scandal-in-us
 
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