Literature DB >> 25471839

China's postgraduate education practices and its academic impact on publishing: is it proportional?

Yuan Zhu1, Chun-jie Zhang, Cheng-liang Hu.   

Abstract

Though postgraduate education started before the founding of new China in 1949, it was not until the implementation of the policy reform and the opening-up in 1978 that China's postgraduate productivity began to take off. Since the introduction of Regulations of the People's Republic of China on Academic Degrees in 1981, the number of graduate students enrolled each year has increased 50 times since 1978. China is now the second largest producer of publications indexed by the database of Science Citation Index (SCI) (Web of Science™, Thomson Reuters), which reflects great strides being made in the postgraduate education. In this paper, we discuss the relationship between the increasingly high enrollments of graduate students and the quantity (the number) and quality (the academic impact and the originality) of their publications, to see whether there is a correlation.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 25471839      PMCID: PMC4265564          DOI: 10.1631/jzus.B14a0331

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Zhejiang Univ Sci B        ISSN: 1673-1581            Impact factor:   3.066


  2 in total

1.  China's graduate students need better education in scientific writing and publishing.

Authors:  Chun-Jie Zhang; Yuan Zhu
Journal:  J Zhejiang Univ Sci B       Date:  2016-05       Impact factor: 3.066

2.  Modified task-based learning program promotes problem-solving capacity among Chinese medical postgraduates: a mixed quantitative survey.

Authors:  Yanping Tian; Chengren Li; Jiali Wang; Qiyan Cai; Hanzhi Wang; Xingshu Chen; Yunlai Liu; Feng Mei; Lan Xiao; Rui Jian; Hongli Li
Journal:  BMC Med Educ       Date:  2017-09-07       Impact factor: 2.463

  2 in total

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