VietNamNet Bridge – Vietnamese scientists have been criticized heavily for their modest scientific research achievements. However, it is really unfair to condemn them.
Vietnam produces many PhDs and few inventions
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“Stop criticizing Vietnamese scientists. They are living in difficulties and
working in poor conditions, but they still have been working and devoting
themselves to scientific research, and they are not bad at all,” said Nguyen
Phung Quang, a lecturer of the Hanoi University of Technology.
It seems to be accidental when a series of local newspapers recently have driven
spearhead to Vietnamese scientists. The authors of the articles published on the
newspapers over the last few months, citing statistics and reports, came to a
conclusion that Vietnam has many scientists, but it has not got any benefits
from the scientists. Vietnam has many PhDs, but has little grey matter. Vietnam
has many scientists, but has few inventions.
Vietnamese scientists have become the subjects of the criticisms, because they
are believed to spend too much money of the state, while their contribution to
the country’s development is still very modest.
The articles quoted Pham Bich San, Secretary General of the Vietnam Union of
Science and Technology Associates VUSTA, as saying that the number of the
scientific research articles published internationally by Vietnamese scientists,
who come from a country with 90 million people, is just equal to that of a
university in Thailand.
The figures show the modest achievements gained by the Vietnamese scientists,
which is now seen as the shame for the scientists.
Scientific articles are the ruler that measures scientists’ achievements?
Quang from the Hanoi University of Technology affirmed that Vietnamese
scientists have few scientific articles published on international journals, but
he doesn’t think it is a problem.
Quang stressed that one should not consider the number of published scientific
articles as a measurement of the achievements of Vietnamese scientists, and that
few articles means weak capability.
“It’s unfair to hear the criticism about the weak capability of Vietnamese
scientists which is reflected in the number of scientific articles. Have ever
the critical people tried to find out the reasons behind this?” Quang wrote on
VnExpress.
No one in the world can say that Vietnamese mathematicians are weaker than
others in the world. The number of scientific research works in the field is not
modest as people think. It is a noteworthy thing that one can publish his works
on mathematics journal free of charge, but articles would be only published
after going through a very strict examination process.
There’s little difference in the procedures for publishing scientific articles
in basic sciences and in applied sciences and technologies. In order to publish
articles on prestigious journals (the ones with high ISI), one would have to pay
high fees.
IEEE Transactions on Power Electronics, for example, sets up the basic fee at
$110 per page for the first eight pages, and $162 for the ninth and subsequent
pages.
A physician working for the Military Hospital 103 has also affirmed that
Vietnamese scientists have fewer scientific articles published on international
journals simply because they don’t have money, while this should not be blamed
on their weak ability.
In fact, even foreign scientists, who have the incomes higher by tens of times
than that of Vietnamese scientists, also don’t spend their own money to publish
articles on the journals. The fees for the publishing are all sourced from the
budgets allocated to the projects they implement.
Quang has blamed the modest number of scientific articles on international
journals on the lack of the support from the State.
South Korea, just after a short time, has listed itself in the top 10 countries
with the highest numbers of published scientific research works, which has been
explained by the effective support from the state. And Quang believes that a
similar encouragement mechanism should be applied in Vietnam.
VNE