Numbers are "basic element(s) of mathematics used for counting, measuring,
solving equations, and comparing quantities," according to the online Concise
Encyclopaedia Britannica.
In almost every aspect of our society, numbers are also used to evaluate
work, academic and administrative performances.
Students are naturally judged, mostly by their test scores.
Teachers and researchers who wish to climb the academic ladder must publish
certain numbers of scholarly papers.
Numbers themselves are impartial. However, they don't always reflect genuine
value.
For instance, an English-language teacher from Fuyang in East China's Anhui
Province obtained the top ranking for a high school teacher because he had
published numerous essays and even several books on teaching English in Chinese
high schools. With that title, he is able to make his way up into some sort of
national committee for English teaching, according to the results of an online
search and a leading high school in Beijing.
However, his signature work, entitled "How to Teach English in Mother
Tongue," is in itself questionable. It preaches the memorization of numeric or
lettered drills that he has devised in Chinese which have little to do with
English language itself.
In one class, which my daughter attended, he asked his students to answer a
few multiple-choice questions. For one problem, my daughter selected C, but the
correct answer was B. When my daughter asked him why her choice was wrong, he
couldn't explain it and merely repeated why B was the correct.
For some time, scientists who want to measure up have been required to gain a
certain number citations in the Science Citation Index (SCI).
Records from this internationally registered system were deemed important as
it provides some form of international recognition by summarizing "bibliographic
information, author abstracts, and cited references" from 3,700 of the world's
leading scholarly science and technical journals covering more than 100
disciplines, according to Thomsonscientific.com.
That was why some people questioned whether Yuan Longping, the father of
Chinese hybrid-rice whose research has helped relieve possible the hunger of
hundreds of millions of people, should deserve the national science and
technology award, because Yuan had not been cited in the SCI.
For five years, Zhu Xiping, professor of mathematics at Guangzhou-based
Zhongshan University, did not publish a single research paper. However, early
this month, Professor Zhu, in collaboration with Professor Cao Huaidong from
Lehigh University in Pennsylvania, published a 300-page paper, putting the final
pieces into one of the world's so-called toughest mathematical jigsaws.
Professor Zhu emphasized that what he and Professor Cao had accomplished was
based on the tremendous work done by Richard Hamilton, professor of mathematics
at Columbia University, and Russian mathematician Grigori Perelman.
All the above illustrates that numbers should not be the only criteria for
evaluating people's work and performance.
However, in our society, numbers have played such a dominant role in
appraisals that they have partly contributed to plagiarism, cheating and the
neglect of comprehensive judgment.
For instance, a certain young scholar was praised by the media for publishing
a huge amount of books and papers. Then a few people with mathematical minds
carefully calculated the number of words in the so-called publications and
discovered that the young man couldn't possibly have made this accomplishment.
He was later found to be copying and pasting from others' works.
Government agencies at various levels also use numbers, for instance, GDP
figures, to show how well they have carried out their administrative duties.
But if the figures do not take into account, for instance, the loss of human
lives or the amount of environmental pollution or the impact of pollution and
other damages to nature, the earth and our heritage, they cannot measure the
true value of what we have accomplished so far.
Email: lixing@chinadaily.com.cn
(China Daily 06/29/2006 page4)