Joke Collection Website - News headlines - In Yuan Longping, artemisinin was selected as a high school textbook. What can high school students learn from it?

In Yuan Longping, artemisinin was selected as a high school textbook. What can high school students learn from it?

Grandpa Yuan Longping's artemisinin was selected as a textbook for senior high school, from which senior high school students can learn the great spirit of pursuing a better life, being far-sighted and daring to make contributions, as well as the noble character of Do not forget your initiative mind, simplicity and tenacity.

The "100 Million" Super Hybrid Rice Project directed by Yuan Longping, an academician of China Academy of Engineering, enjoyed a bumper harvest in dadian town, Junan County, Linyi City, Shandong Province. At the site of production measurement and acceptance, an expert group headed by Xie Huaan, an academician of Chinese Academy of Sciences, randomly selected three key fields, harvested them by machines, and got the yield data after deducting water according to the standard. The measured result is1013.8kg per mu, which sets a new world record for hybrid rice yield in high latitudes. Yuan Longping once again set a spiritual benchmark for the times with the spirit of bold exploration, innovation and persistent pursuit; His professionalism and innovative spirit are worth learning. ?

We should not only learn from Yuan Longping's professionalism and innovative spirit, but also the China researchers headed by Yuan Longping deserve our praise. Even in the most difficult times, Yuan Longping didn't do research alone. He is always surrounded by a group of relatives, students and friends who share the same vision and ambition. It is this spirit of cooperation that makes hybrid rice technology research far ahead of the world and makes important contributions to world food security.

It is never too old to learn, and labor is a kind of growth. In the eyes of teachers and students, great scientists even work until they are old. In order to find the ideal rice plant, Grandpa Yuan Longping, the father of rice, went to work in the fields after breakfast and didn't come back with a kettle and steamed bread until around 4 pm. In the weather in June and July, he held a magnifying glass every day, row by row, ear by ear, looking for a needle in a haystack among thousands of ears of rice. Sweat formed salt frost on his back and his skin was tanned. Even the farmers who have been trapped in rice fields all the year round sighed.