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UCAS graduates urged to align scientific pursuits with national needs

By Li Menghan | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2026-06-21 21:52

The University of Chinese Academy of Sciences holds its 2026 graduation ceremony at the Yanqi Lake Campus in Beijing on Sunday. [Provided to chinadaily.com.cn]

Both Yi and Su plan to continue research in high-energy physics after graduation.

"It still has some distance from practical applications," Su said. "But as research deepens, perhaps in one or two centuries, it will become cutting-edge technology that people use in daily life."

Undergraduate representative Gao Aiqi echoed that spirit of perseverance.

In the electron microscopy laboratory, she faced repeated setbacks, studying unfamiliar concepts and coping with disappointing results.

"There is no shortcut to breaking through bottlenecks — only diligent study and calm analysis," said Gao, whose graduation thesis was rated the best in her major.

She said UCAS allows students to grow at their own pace and encourages steady accumulation of knowledge.

"The pioneers here understand better than anyone that the path to scientific pinnacles is inevitably strewn with thorns," she said.

The ceremony also marked a milestone for the university's School of Advanced Interdisciplinary Sciences, established in February 2025.

Its first five graduates received customized degree certificates on Sunday annotated with the names of participating institutes, schools and innovative enterprises, along with mentor signatures, serving as official recognition of their interdisciplinary training and professional competence.

"Interdisciplinary study is not a patchwork of fields, but a methodology for solving problems," said Liu Fangrui, a doctoral graduate whose research integrates computer science, artificial intelligence and fluid mechanics.

He said he and the other four graduates will bring their interdisciplinary expertise to universities, aerospace research institutes and other institutions after graduation, contributing to major national programs.

Doctoral graduate Zhong Tianhua said the university's integration of research and education gave him the opportunity to participate in the national lunar exploration program, where he analyzed lunar surface data from the Chang'e 6 mission.

"Our every breakthrough relies on the support of major national programs and the world-class research platform UCAS provides," Zhong said. "Only when personal academic interests resonate with national needs can one unleash one's greatest potential."

"Scientific innovation is never the struggle of one individual or one generation; it is a legacy passed down through time," Zhou said.

"I hope you will uphold integrity while innovating, forging ahead with steady and sustained progress," he added.

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