Tin tức

The teacher is strict but sincere

Sunday - September 27, 2015 22:55
During more than 40 years of research and teaching, he has focused deeply on a number of fields such as: Agricultural Ethnology, Tay - Thai language groups in Vietnam, ethnic relations, and ethnic groups in Asia. The results of his tireless work in the field of Ethnology are extremely impressive: about 100 works, including general Ethnology textbooks, monographs, magazine articles, and scientific reports for domestic and international conferences.
Người thầy nghiêm khắc mà chí tình
The teacher is strict but sincere

Memories to remember forever

Writing an introduction about a scientist is difficult, introducing your own teacher is even more difficult, especially when in terms of age and career, I am a long way behind him.

According to his documents, he was born in 1949. According to astrology books, people born in this year are often hot-tempered but cool down quickly. After more than 20 years of being his student, I realized that this statement is not entirely true, at least for him.

I don’t necessarily think of him as a hot-tempered man. Perhaps stern and direct would be a more accurate description of his character. Like his predecessors, he believed that “If you raise someone without teaching them, it is your fault. If you teach someone without strictness, it is your fault.” [If you don't raise someone, it's the father's fault; if you don't teach someone strictly, it's the teacher's fault.Perhaps that's why in the eyes of his students (at least from my generation and before), he was a strict, severe teacher.

But no matter how he tried to hide it, I still felt the word “love” in his strict attitude towards his students. At the end of 1997, when I was writing my university thesis, I was lucky to have him as my supervisor. My inexperience made me “innocently” go to practice before approving the research proposal. Honestly, at that time, I did not understand why I forgot this very basic operation. Perhaps the eager psychology of going far away, of “doing science” of a student who thought he was about to become an “adult”, or perhaps the hypnosis and attraction of the beauty of Thai girls from the Northwest (which I imagined through his lectures and other teachers) made me “bewitched”, immediately “packing a backpack” and leaving Hanoi during the Lunar New Year holiday, going up the road to Muong So, Phong Tho of the White Thai land of Lai Chau.

Associate Professor, Doctor, Meritorious Teacher Le Si Giao

After a month of fieldwork, when I returned to Hanoi, I was still leisurely, not paying any attention to the teacher. Then, late one evening, I met a classmate, the same teacher as my supervisor, who was as stiff as if he had just lost his scholarship. He dragged me to the Pho restaurant of Fatty Chi, ordered a bottle of wine and asked for some bones left at the bottom of the pot of broth (which we called “grave-removed” bones). He said, “I’m dead”, the teacher “beat” me so hard. Before leaving, I had approved the outline, reported to the teacher, written my best but still received a “red-faced” criticism. Honestly, I will never forget the shivering feeling at that moment. I cared less for my friend and more for myself.

Then the day I submitted my thesis, the teacher was so angry that I felt like I was sitting on hot sand for the next week. I thought this time would be even more “humiliating” than the other friend. Luckily, after reading the thesis, the teacher only gently scolded me, “You wrote well, if only you had worked with me before going to the field, it would have been better…”. With just that one sentence, I understood his heart for me and for his students.

Later, I also learned that he had also quietly helped many people, in one way or another. Although, in many cases, for some reason, people had “gently forgotten” those favors. He rarely cared and I have never heard him blame anyone.

The impression on the outside can easily make people who first meet him think he is a difficult, dry person. Only those who are observant, really observant and really close can understand that he is actually an introverted, emotional person. Perhaps that is why he had a rather "quiet" period in his life after his close friend passed away. That day, one time we visited, the teacher and students sat quietly next to a few bottles of beer that could not be finished for hours, constantly picking them up and putting them down. At those times, his eyes were so sad, as if drawn to some invisible point. Some people said he was so infatuated and weak. I don't think so. He is more like a person with deep feelings. People can control their minds, but who can control their hearts in this world?

There is one thing I think the astrology book is right about, at least for him. That is, he is considered intelligent and articulate. If you read his articles, you can easily see a clear and systematic way of thinking, a precise and humorous writing style, and a way of using words that are both scientific and very “real”. I really like his “silly” writing style, a way of writing that does not bore the reader or listener, makes people think before they can understand thoroughly, a way of writing that if not “strong enough” will easily fall into confusion…

He is also a person with a humorous way of expressing himself, always "tickling" others with words, with a way of speaking that not everyone has. In college, we students were most "bored" when listening to "endless" speeches during festivals. However, his speeches always brought refreshing, gentle laughter to the listeners. He was very skillful in turning "dry" slogans into soft, close, humorous ones.

Contributions to Ethnology

Among the current permanent lecturers of the Department of Anthropology, University of Social Sciences and Humanities, Vietnam National University, Hanoi, Associate Professor, Dr. Le Sy Giao is the one with the longest working experience. After graduating from Hanoi National University in 1973 (4.5-year program), he was retained at the Faculty of History as a lecturer. From 1983 to 1987, he was sent to study as a PhD student at Leningrad State University in the Soviet Union.

During more than 40 years of research and teaching, he has focused deeply on a number of fields such as: Agricultural Ethnology, Tay - Thai language groups in Vietnam, ethnic relations, and ethnic groups in Asia. The results of his tireless work that he contributed to the field of Ethnology are:very impressive: over 100 works, including textbooksGeneral Ethnology, monographs, magazine articles, scientific reports for domestic and international conferences. He has also guided over 20 PhD students, 20 master's students, over 70 students to write their graduation theses, over 30 students to write scientific reports (including 2 people and a group of students who won the Third Prize of the Ministry of Education and Training).

Not only teaching, he has also been involved in management for many years: over 10 years as Secretary of the History Department, 8 years as Vice Head of the History Department, 8 years as Head of the Ethnology Department, 4 terms as a member of the Central Executive Committee of the Vietnam Ethnology Association, one term as General Secretary of the Vietnam Ethnology Association. He is also one of the 4 founders of the Thai Hoc Program (along with scholars Cam Cuong, Cam Trong and Hoang Luong).

With such comprehensive contributions, he received the Certificate of Merit from the Prime Minister in 2001 for his many achievements in work, contributing to the cause of building socialism and defending the Fatherland; 2 Certificates of Merit from the Director of Hanoi National University (1999: for outstanding achievements in training, education, building and developing Hanoi National University; 2001: achieved the title of Excellent Teaching Staff at the grassroots level in the 1999-2000 school year)... Especially in 2012, he was awarded the title of Excellent Teacher, an accurate recognition for his contributions in his career of more than 40 years of "growing people".

Over 40 years of being a teacher and scientist, the life of Associate Professor, Dr. Le Sy Giao can be divided into two periods. The first period was from the time he started his career to the mid-2000s. This was the time when the image of an exemplary, strict teacher, a careful, sharp scientist emerged clearly. The second period from the mid-2000s to the present, people saw a "new vitality" rising in him. His work and life became more "real". It seemed that after many ups and downs in life, he had "realized" his "reason for living".

ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR, DOCTOR, MERITORIAL TEACHER LE SY GIAO

  • Year of birth: 1949.
  • Hometown: Thanh Hoa.
  • Graduated from the Faculty of History (Hanoi University) in 1973.
  • Major: Ethnology
  • Received a PhD in Ethnology (Leningrad State University, Soviet Union) in 1987.
  • Recognized as Associate Professor in 1992.
  • Awarded the title of Excellent Teacher in 2012.
  • Time working at school: 1974-present.

+ Work unit:

Faculty of History (1974-2010).

Faculty of Anthropology (2010-2015).

+ Management position:

Deputy Head of the Department of History (1996-2004).

Head of Department of Cultural Anthropology (2010-present).

  • Main research directions: Thai linguistic ethnic groups in Vietnam; Agricultural ethnology; Ethnic composition and ethnic relations in Vietnam; General ethnology.
  • Typical scientific works:

+ Course materialsGeneral Ethnology(editor-in-chief) (reprinted 18 times).

Author:MSc. Nguyen Cong Thao

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